The Net
Lutz Dammbeck
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Zusammenfassungen
At any given second, millions of people are making their way through cyberspace, navigating the paths of the Internet without a second thought, walking the virtual corridors of knowledge and information with consummate ease.
From its origins in the 1960s, its birthright the ethos of hippies, anti-Vietnam War protest and Free Love then permeating the laboratories of Stanford and MIT, and Cold War contracts from the Department of Defense, how did it all now come together?
"The film is an investigation and reflection on the history of the Net," says Lutz Dammbeck, the man behind the project. "It looks at current developments in this digital and scientific revolution, computer development, data processing and the communications media, where images of a new world are being drawn."
Dammbeck also looks at the biographies, experiences and aims of the Net's important agents, the cyber elite. His particular interest is "the role of the spirit of the '60s, in the run-up to the realization of the first technical networks like the Arpanet."
Also under examination is the significance of modern art of the 1960s and its concepts of interactivity and networking. The Net investigates the role and significance of philosophy, and, says Dammbeck, "the walk between art, science and defense."
His choice is personal, his inspiration that of cultural criticism, not journalism.
"I'm particularly interested in the latest developments in the field of computer-business and ideas concerning new economic forms, the free flow of ideas in the Net," he says, "and the previous notions of intellectual property, copyright, value, ownership which are being thrown into question by the Internet."
How can the invisible aspects of these processes be made visible? What is the Net? Is it possible to touch it, see it, switch it on and off at will? Who operates it? Who does it belong to? Where is it, or its individual components, situated?
In order to find out, award-winning documentary maker Dammbeck escapes the advertising world of virtuality and employs concepts and images from the pre-net period. Located between those who commercialize the Net and the intellectuals' euphoria or cultural pessimism stands the silent power of the engineers. Their voice is also heard.
Shooting in Hamburg, Berlin, Karlsruhe, Vienna, San Francisco, Pescadero, Los Angeles, San Jose, Boston, New Haven, New York from March through June 2002
Von Klappentext im Film The Net (2002) From its origins in the 1960s, its birthright the ethos of hippies, anti-Vietnam War protest and Free Love then permeating the laboratories of Stanford and MIT, and Cold War contracts from the Department of Defense, how did it all now come together?
"The film is an investigation and reflection on the history of the Net," says Lutz Dammbeck, the man behind the project. "It looks at current developments in this digital and scientific revolution, computer development, data processing and the communications media, where images of a new world are being drawn."
Dammbeck also looks at the biographies, experiences and aims of the Net's important agents, the cyber elite. His particular interest is "the role of the spirit of the '60s, in the run-up to the realization of the first technical networks like the Arpanet."
Also under examination is the significance of modern art of the 1960s and its concepts of interactivity and networking. The Net investigates the role and significance of philosophy, and, says Dammbeck, "the walk between art, science and defense."
His choice is personal, his inspiration that of cultural criticism, not journalism.
"I'm particularly interested in the latest developments in the field of computer-business and ideas concerning new economic forms, the free flow of ideas in the Net," he says, "and the previous notions of intellectual property, copyright, value, ownership which are being thrown into question by the Internet."
How can the invisible aspects of these processes be made visible? What is the Net? Is it possible to touch it, see it, switch it on and off at will? Who operates it? Who does it belong to? Where is it, or its individual components, situated?
In order to find out, award-winning documentary maker Dammbeck escapes the advertising world of virtuality and employs concepts and images from the pre-net period. Located between those who commercialize the Net and the intellectuals' euphoria or cultural pessimism stands the silent power of the engineers. Their voice is also heard.
Shooting in Hamburg, Berlin, Karlsruhe, Vienna, San Francisco, Pescadero, Los Angeles, San Jose, Boston, New Haven, New York from March through June 2002
Dieser Film erwähnt ...
Personen KB IB clear | Heinz von Foerster , Marvin Minsky |
Begriffe KB IB clear | CyberspaceCyberspace , Internetinternet , Netzwerknetwork |
Externe Links
taz 20.10.03 Auf Muschelsuche und Busschau: In seinem zweistündigen Film "Das Netz" recherchiert der Hamburger Regisseur Lutz Dammbeck dem so genannten UNA-Bomber hinterher. Er spricht mit Leuten aus dem Umfeld des 1996 verhafteten Mathematikprofessors Ted Kaczynski, der Anfang der Siebzigerjahre a ( : 2021-03-21) |
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