On October 29, 2021 Mark Zuckerberg gave a video presentation across hundreds of platforms, announcing the change of the Facebook corporation name to Meta, and the inauguration of what was being called “the metaverse”. The metaverse, Zuckerberg explained, was a new totalising online environment in which people and groups were free to meet, explore, change where they were, who they were, etc.
To demonstrate, Zuckerberg suddenly appeared as a cartoon avatar — looking, it must be said, not significantly different from the man himself — moving around a landscape, standing next to a roasting fire, playing cards with a robot and a unicorn, and so on.
The resulting reaction was a mixture of relief and anxiety. Relief because it was clear that what was being proposed was on the face of it, a next-generation Second Life, that alternative dreamscape of clunky avatars and bizarre pseudo-events against rigid backgrounds.
Second Life had appeared just as distributed computing power made multiple interaction in real time possible; the metaverse has come along just as this sort of interaction can be rendered smooth-flowing and naturalistic in real time.
Relief then, because it seemed that this was all they had — this nerd vision of cool straight out of 1998. Anxiety, because of a suspicion that no matter how bad it was, they would impose it on us anyway.
Were there some 10-year-olds somewhere for whom the metaverse looked pretty cool?
Unlikely, because they’re more likely to be on TikTok, a far more kinetic site, or on something you or I haven’t heard of yet. It’s difficult to imagine anyone outside of Meta’s minions getting excited about it. And many of them will simply be pleasing the great god Zuck.
The question is, what sort of thing like this could possibly be cool and attractive? Am I jaded, or would even a complete Sensurround 3D experience still meet with a lack of excitement? Why do such ever-more elaborate offerings fall short? Is the internet moving in the other direction — always towards the lo-fi of TikTok, Instagram and Twitter?
If that’s the case, then it’s bad news for Facebook… arrrgggh, I mean “Meta”.
The group has recently made a major commitment to the metaverse, moving thousands of new engineers from old Facebook into VR, and hiring thousands more VR specialists. The drive towards a wholly new environment seems less to do with a promethean drive to seize the heavens than it is with the fact that Facebook usage is stalling and falling.
This year for the first time, its accumulation of users and user-time has stalled. Facebook was a hit with youth when it came out, and then became a staple of the middle-aged as youth became tired of it. It has compensated for falling first world use with growth in India and Africa. That its expansion would stall has been prophesied for years, and now it is here.
To a degree this was inevitable. Facebook began as a text-and still-picture-heavy platform, with the promise of multiple forms of expression — personal messages, broadcast updates, pictures, forwards, curations, etc — mixed with a dose of narcissistic self-enhancement.
One was broadcasting a pic from holidays to all one’s friends, not sending it to a few; expressing one’s opinion like an op-ed writer, not just having a conversation. The simple act of calling its lists of addressees “friends” rather than “contacts” gave it an extra burst of sugar-water, a tiny serotonin hit, that was then often removed by the site’s FOMO effect — the curated presentation by others to suggest exciting and complete lives.
But Facebook’s ensemble of effects now looks archaic, a host for more exciting media. What had barely been technically possible before the inception of social media is now its lingua franca, its glue. There is the question as to whether the take-off of a media form like Facebook can only occur if it is the cutting-edge for the entire sphere, and not merely for a section of its audience. Once the edge has been lost, the uptake by new groups will always start to fall away proportionally.
Once that process starts, the mathematics of networks take over. The less comprehensive it is, the faster it is relinquished, and a landslide ensues, as it did with MySpace.
Social networked media is inherently monopolistic. On the one hand, it gestures towards a post-capitalist framework, in which such a universal network is run and owned democratically. But as long as it exists within a capitalist framework, its trajectory and orientation is inherently totalitarian. Facebook could not simply stop and be what it is; its first stage was a mere prelude to what it must become, which is the ownership of as much of the experience of interconnection and collective life as possible.
But what Meta/Facebook may start to run up against is not the technical limits of reality-simulation, but the existential limits of such. The inability of purely scientific-mathematical communities to understand this distinction is what has driven decades of failure in simulation and AI.
Ultimately in derives from the fundamental standpoint of Anglo-American philosophy, which, over a century, has sought to deny the founding notion of “continental” philosophy, that the world is a thing-in-itself, or a collection of such — that reality presents itself to us as being beyond the sum total of its appearances to us.
Not only is the metaverse reduced to two senses out of five (unless they are going to revive the various ’50s-era experiments in Smell-O-Vision, or the satirical notion in Huxley’s Brave New World in which people attend the “feelies”, movies that use two handles to communicate touch), but the simple contingency of the real is absent.
Forms of simulation and media always fade en masse as they reach the limits of novelty. Marshall McLuhan’s point about “hot” media yielding to “cool” media (film yielding to TV) applies here: there have been three attempts to normalise 3D cinema and all have failed, as did the immersive sound systems of the 1970s. All add too much to the representation, in ways that smaller changes (i.e. from black & white to colour) do not.
But that does not mean that an utterly inadequate, threadbare metaverse would not be enforced by intersecting powers of monopoly capital and the state. In this scenario, the metaverse would be hooked up to workplace communication, state-citizen communications — i.e. having to become a unicorn avatar to get your vaccine certificate — and for-profit global education corporations so it can be normalised into children’s development and create a generation dependent upon it, impoverished as it is.
Thus there is definitely an attempt with the development of the metaverse to create an environment in which every aspect of existence over passages of time is wholly owned — an answer to the problem that capitalism can never fully totalise its control, because of the pesky residual reality of the real.
But it is more likely to be a partial futurism, as satirised in films and books such as Brazil and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, where the future is determined by the accumulation of unintended consequences which silt up, so that nothing works.
For young people, Facebook has become a machine which revives the collective oppression of the closed village, amidst an atomised world of the city.
The argument for the city was that, whatever loneliness and isolation it involved, it did offer the chance for mobility and reinvention, while the village, whatever the surveillance, judgment and shaming it wielded, also offered collective life and rich meaning. Facebook extends the persecution, shunning and scapegoating of the schoolyard — schools are essentially villages of teenagers — and extends them to the wider world.
In the two decades of operation of social media, we have watched adolescence go from being a period of liberation — combined with a mix of danger, psychic and otherwise — to be a period of life, in which extreme anxiety, radical psychological isolation and suicidality (attempted, acted-out and real) have become endemic, turning the period into a white-knuckle ride to early adulthood for many parents and kids alike.
Cowed by largely overblown false moral panics of the past, we have failed to interrogate the possibility that social media’s acceleration of processes has taken us across a threshold.
Such technologies, which required a level of understanding of social processes which we to some degree acquired in the 1960s and 1970s, have come along, as decades of neoliberalism substituted simplistic and demonstrably false ideas of what social life is.
Hence the gap between technological advance and understanding is large, and much of the discourse is about corporate monopoly dominance. Whatever the impossibility of the metaverse becoming dominant, it could certainly do mass mayhem in further damaging the capacity to fully socialise youth — the very teenagers most in need of being “flung” into the real would be those most likely to crawl into the alternative reality of the metaverse.
The upshot? The failure of the metaverse — its visible process of failing now — may create a moment of recognition in which an understanding that technology is not a non-neutral development in human life, and a real process of thinking it through can begin.
It’ll take a couple of decades, though…
My kids are now in their 20’s and were at the vanguard of social media. It has been very white knuckled indeed and many of their friends haven’t made it, mostly by their own hand. They continue to struggle with the cost of living and the likelihood that they’ll never own their own home. Add to that the existential threat of global catastrophe in thw next 5 – 10 years and it’s a miracle they didn’t follow the same road as their friends. And the pandemic…
Not surprised most young adults are choosing to remain childless. I would too.
For young people, Facebook has become a machine which revives the collective oppression of the closed village, amidst an atomised world of the city.
Spot on, the worst of Gesellschaft and Gemienschaft. Apart from all the negatives listed here, it remains fascinating how the capacity of social media fails to create solidarity and movements for emancipation to any great degree. Atomisation, anxiety, distraction seem to outweigh healthy community formation and organisation. Perhaps because, while they are near universal mediums, they replicate and promote competitive structures, not least in consumption. Also when collective organisation starts to happen, as it certainly does in authoritarian regimes, the state steps in and the corporations cooperate.
I’m sure there are hard drives of writing on this but would welcome your thoughts Guy.
Well, social media doesn’t nurture teal collective activity because it’s individually narcissistic and performative, not self-effacing and outcome driven. All the merit metrics are superficial: clicks, likes, friends, algorithmic search position, e-petition volumes, meme speed and teach…it’s nothing new, the abe teal lineage to the legacy media is direct: circulation, byline numbers, ad rates. It’s the same old timeless bolted-on fake ‘community’ racket of the professionalised, monetised epistemically snake oil grifter. This latest ersatz ‘collective’ vibe – of ‘Meta’ online communities , whether Zuck’s or any of the other Billionaire Nerd Creep Geeks – is just the latest iteration of monotheistic epistemic sleight-of-hand: the multitude ersatz ‘i’ s of the atomised masses duped into joining an ersatz ‘we’…which is really the manufactured corralling instrument of the true, omniscient, concealed ‘I’.
The surface stuff – the re-badging, the mergers, the new gadgets, the waffling cod-philosophising nerd-tripe if noddy no-friends like Zuckerberg – is just posh street patter to distract from the structural ticket-clipping, as long ago bedded quietly in via such mechanisms as the transition from one-off disc software to rolling cloud subscription, bundled deals across IT sector behemoths, the creeping Fascist (State-Corporate) takeover of public functions by IT stealth (software, apps, operational systemic trojan horsing – even public journalism is now meta-captured by Twitter, Google, SM…). FFS, Google is blatant about it, rebadging itself ‘Alphabet’ years ago.
Essentially these guys cornered the market in communication a decade ago, and they are whacking a toll on everything. Crikey’s quaint claims to independence are poignant: to read Rundle, I still need to be online, with the operational requisites for being so: credit card, data contract, personal information tithes, software bondage…all of which means becoming a virtual bonded serf…but not to Marty Schwartz’s creation (he’s just an honest retailer). To some distant, ticket-clipping Geek Overlord – my clicks, info and algorithmic shaping mass-power the real wealth-creating labour I helplessly surrender to Zuck, Jack, Bill, Sergy…for the privilege of access to GR’s deathless prose.
Not a chance in hell of true collective activity and community, when the ersatz simulacrum is so painless, convenient, seductive and almost-real.
PS as usual Rundle the only byline around with his brains, balls and biro aimed at the truly big sweep of history. Still worth being a serf to the IT Nerd Creeps. Just.
I’m missing something of the Crikey experience, I think. Yes, you need the basics of internet access: a computer with a browser, a connection to the internet. Those cost real money, but they’re real devices and services in a broad market that you can go high or low on. Go with linux and firefox on an inexpensive PC and you’re not in anyone’s “telemetry” network. Yes you need a credit card, or to know someone with one who’ll buy you gift subscriptions. That doesn’t seem much different from any other news source, including those of Mr Schwartz. Where’s the personal information tithe and software bondage? Both services are just web sites. Your account is just based on an email address. Both show advertisements, which means that there’s a certain amount of unavoidable Google tracking involved. Schwartz’ offerings don’t have a comments section, so they miss out on our wit and insight…
The real reason that Zuck (and others: Microsoft, Epic, Nvidia and many others are all very excited to join in) is interested in this “VR” lark, is that it would enable him to monetize everyone’s gaze, something that “clicks” are a poor representation of. As long as everything is advertising-funded, it’s going to be awful.
I’ve offered to pay more for Crikey pages that didn’t have advertising, but they seem incapable or uninterested in selling me that.
VR has failed to go anywhere for about thirty years, now. There have been waves. There have been caves. Could be something to do with the spontaneous vomiting caused by the motion sickness that arises from the mismatch between inner-ear sense of movement and what the eyes are seeing. Could be that it just isn’t all that interesting. Superficiality is only skin deep, and VR skins don’t mean anything at all.
Thanks for such a thoughtful reply. Agree with most of it though also some of Andrew’s dissent from the great determinism of it. I guess I am interested in, and remain persuaded that, this is a social form that does contain emancipatory potential in the Hegel on his head, neo-Marxist, critical theory sense. The question is, is the medium a determining closed system of power, the perspective you provide, or does it also contain potential to empower and even subvert powers that be? Certainly if you look at recent history in countries like Ukraine, Russia and for instance Hong Kong and Thailand now, it has such a role to play, as a social space of organisation when social spaces are closed down elsewhere.
Chrs, AP&, likewise to you (I’ve a follow-up still in moderation, too.)
Unquestionably Teh InterWebz – like all radical new comms frameworks – offers amazing potential. But as always, it’s still just a tool and everything swings on what’s done with it in the material world. I think the seductive ease with which we can create a online facsimile of ‘action’ is a huge potential trap, too. Overwhelmingly, most people on-line are of course DIS-engaged from material politcs by the internet, even as they furiously think otherwise. I am not talking about the mere ‘distracted’ either – gamers, porn, FB, Insta and all the majority other SM useages not remotely political. I mean those online who really do think that, say, a Crikey thread or an e-petition on Murdoch or a Grace Tame Tweet Storm is ‘engagement’, ‘debate’, ‘democracy’ etc. It’s the opposite, really; entertainment, performance, self-advertising, careerism….in fact, I’d even go further and suggest that the impact goes the other way: that this ersatz ‘political activity’ of (most of) us keyboard warriors et al…is starting to have a truly counter-productive effect on actual political engagement. (I just ran for local Council, and it’s quite remarkable how much of ‘politics’ is now virtual, even at this most immediate and real level.) And certainly political journalism, analysis, observation…is rapidly hollowing outself out, in a kind of reactive, competitive imitation of the online stuff. It stuns me, actually, that two year old semi-anonymous texts slagging off ScoMo could so entrance, consume…occupy the entire NPC for several days. That’s now regarded as materially real…and who’s to say it’s not? Our last PM was toppled by, essentially, a Tweet campaign concocted by no more than a few dozen insurrectionists…
So as noted, I do wonder if our very idea of what ‘politics looks like’ – what it can do, and how – is becoming terminally subsumed inside this new epistemic (I think) ‘voluntary prison’. Those various e-generated material movements in genuinely oppressed locations you cite doubtless deployed the subversive new communications instruments with great courage and creativity…but to what lasting effect, I wonder? The history of revolutionary material advance is also, necessarily, the history of over-turning the espistemology of oppression, too: now, you can blow up the government presses, you can burn the official radio/TV station, you can assassinate/execute Goebbels, you can revive a long suppressed pre-colonial language…as a winner, you even get to rewrite the history, too. But the point of Teh Interwebz is…it’s outside everything and it’s dynamic and reactive, gobbling up even the information that’s desperately trying to stay outside it (like this comment); it’s utterly subsuming (taming, hijacking, gazzumping) of all new radical ideas. Where’s the glitch in the Official Narrative V10.5.7 software? How do you hack it? You can’t. Zuck will bobble his pasty NerD Creep avatar-head, utter some deadening platitude like ‘do no harm’…and turn even your fieriest hate-zeal-change-force into just another click-like.
It’s why I am such an Assange/Wikileaks supporter. They get it. You can only be radical in the Information Age/Internet epistemology by destroying the power of information itself. As ever, information power derives solely from its selective withholding (including online; Zuckerberg’s business model like them all pivots on information exclusivity). So if everyone can have access to all information, all the time…it’s the only epistemic radicalism now available to us, and it’s a doozy. Which is why Assange is still being hounded so viciously. Power is…f**king terrified of the prospect of the e-masses truly grasping the implications of global information ‘dumping’ – conceptually, near-Biblical in its latent, stirring-dragon subversive potential…
Thanks again for the elaboration, very stimulating, we could clearly go on for volumes! Liked the performance insight, a basis for self-criticism to be sure. Though surely also present in all politics and many aspects of life. However, the commercialisation of that desire and the focus on turning it to profit has become truly hyper (sic) in social media world. Underlying this the continuing dilemma, Turning thinking into action, not substituting thinking for action. In the old neo-Marxist debates, is thinking praxis? No but communication might be?
Either way I am sure we shall return to these themes. Oh and I agree, Assange and Wikileaks got it.
Interesting time to be alive snd sentient, chrs AP.
Great read, thanks Guy
Reminds me of the Sirius Cybernetics mis-translated slogan – “go put your face in a pig”. All these gizmos, 3D, VR, Facebook, depend on an artificial interface via, literally, the face. Somehow I feel that this will all go the way of the “portal”, which thirty years ago was the Next Big Thing, and Push. I was working for a software company and they put Push onto all our computers. For about a day. Nobody wanted it. The lure of the Portal has not gone away, Facebook is just one attempt to resurrect it as the route to World Domination. Microsoft have never given up trying lock people into a closed Micro-world, and others, like Adobe, would love to do the same, hence the move to renting software they used to sell, complete with IDs and registrations. Which may explain the rise of Open Source.
The epitome of VR was a clockwork oranged Timothy Leary out here spruiking the vile stuff – 80s?
Obvious why it suits the zux of this world – it should not be forgotten that farcebook was his nerdy attempt to meet girls. Preferably ones who didn’t laugh at him.
Good news today is that the Metamorphis has lost bigly in the share market.
Yes, and the nature of these lunges for immortality is that once they’ve fallen short the once….they struggle to have a second grab. Most of most of these stratospheric fortunes are only virtual, too. Personally, I thought that Bezos’s beyond-parody c*ck-shaped rocketship was the acme and apex of their hyper-narcissism…in the end these Geek Nerd Cod Philosopher Kings, too, will die ridiculous old men, wetting their platinum-plated nappies.
The current hit flick ‘Don’t Look Up‘ has a good ending for the BezoZuk character after the Earth is totalled.
Sorry, new here but WTF does “…promethean drive to seize the heavens…” even mean?
Is it some Lamb’s kiddies’ Greek myths?
Leakage from the Marvelverse?
Prometheus was entirely honourable, he had no desire to usurp Olympus but was opposed with from humans the Key to the universe, Fire.
Like Assange, his remit was Truth wants to be Free!
Tricksters are without honour amongst their kith & kin in their own Time.
well, he wanted to (re) make a real, a next-iteration, humanity from scratch, in boldly creative defiance of the extant order, etc…so…useage seems to fly OK to me.
Prometheus gave man fire, hitherto the preserve of the gods. He was punished and men too, for daring to aspire/attempt to take on godlike powers. Modernity is almost entirely Promethean in this sense.