Consent of the Surveilled
I've been interested in the question of governance under conditions of mass physical mobility for a while. The interest is partly selfish, since I am one of those people with a romantic longing for a nomadic lifestyle. But now, there are better reasons to ask the question.
In 2012, for the first time in history, there were over a billion international tourist arrivals worldwide. Chinese tourists led the way, spending $100B of a market of over a trillion dollars. The data isn't in yet, but it seems like 2013 might turn out to have been another record-breaking year. And that's just the beginning. What has started as a tourism boom is likely to end as a secular lifestyle shift enabled by mobile digital technologies. In a few decades, we might be living in a world where at any given time, only half the nominal population of a country is actually living and working in that country. A world with far fewer "vacations" but a lot more (and more extended) travel. At least, I hope that's the direction we're headed.
Mobility, especially across jurisdictional boundaries, both domestic and international, is a problem for governments because it interrupts or complicates their ability to govern. This is why the forced settlement of illegible nomadic peoples is an essential part of any serious history of governance.
As Julius Caesar once said, "hold still dammit, so I can see and rule you!"
But thanks to surveillance technologies -- and this is the silver lining to the Snowden affair -- soon we might not need to hold still. Those of us who want to might be able to become nomads without dropping out of society.
When a few fringe minorities such as gypsies are globally mobile, governments experience it as a tolerable annoyance that can be contained, like a nagging cold.
When the travel bug turns into an epidemic, and populations mobilize en masse, governments are likely to experience an existential crisis.
This is why I am not overly concerned about the rise of surveillance states in the long term. I suspect population mobility will catch up with, and possibly overtake, surveillance capabilities, and the social contract will be a pretty sweet deal once again.
We'll accept more surveillance in exchange for more physical mobility. Virtual mobility online, which is already pretty unrestricted in liberal democracies, will not be as important in the renegotiation I suspect, but for what it is worth, it too is being actively renegotiated in the form of the Net Neutrality debate, among other things.
So it is a good thing that the social contract is being actively renegotiated along digital lines worldwide, via the surveillance debates. Because governance, rather than work/life blending technology, is the bottleneck in increasing physical mobility for humans today. As a personal example, I recently signed up for the TSA pre-check program, and I think the increased level of surveillance is totally worth it in return for more pleasant air travel.
Agriculture may have immobilized humanity, but what is keeping us under-mobile today is the inability of governments to track moving objects competently. Not crops that need cultivating, machines that need monitoring or cubicles that need occupying.
So a crucial question for the future of the mobile revolution is whether governments can get better at tracking moving governance targets. Surveillance technologies provide the means, but not necessarily the skills or principles. While governance skills are catching up to available capabilities, we must expect a good deal of incompetence (malice at the level of individuals and agencies can usually be attributed to incompetence at other levels, so in the larger scheme of things Hanlon's Razor prevails and it is all incompetence).
Whether we can (or even should) get governments to stop tracking us altogether is, in my opinion, a different and much less serious question, because the answer is almost certainly "No" (and "No").
The answer to the competence question has to do with the basic needs of governments.
What Governments Want
How governments see is a complex question, but one for which there is a surprisingly good answer. What governments want is a more difficult question that has no such good answer as yet.
To answer it, you have to start by recognizing that governments have a unique corporate nature (usually embodied by a bureaucratic civil service) that makes them different from other corporate entities such as individual citizens, businesses and non-profits. While they share self-perpetuation as their basic drive with other biological and artificial entities, what makes (organizationally embodied) governments different is that their basic survival needs are different.
We like to pretend that the basic needs of government derive from the desire to fulfill the nominal social contract and current mandate of elected representatives, which we believe confers legitimacy on the existence of governments. We like to pretend that governments ought to exist solely to serve us. This is seeing like a citizen, the flip side of seeing like a state. A view of the state as, ideally, something like the bovine creature in Douglas Adams' Restaurant at the End of the Universe, which had been carefully bred to want to be eaten.
The social contract isn't a contract between one kind of entity and another kind that exists solely to serve it. It is between two distinct kinds of entity with partially conflicting intrinsic needs. Needs that drive a non-trivial ongoing renegotiation of the contract at all times. The faster the pace of technological evolution, the more active the perennial renegotiation. The only asymmetry is that one side cannot help seeing the other in limited ways, while the other chooses to do so.
So citizens believing that states exist to serve them is as misguided as states believing that citizens and businesses exist to serve them. Except that citizens voluntarily choose that belief (a choice characteristic of incompetent parents and managers) while states are necessarily constrained by it.
As with any negotiation, to understand the current state of highly active renegotiation of the social contract, we need to understand the needs of the other party. We need to understand the unique way a state satisfies its self-perpetuation drive, driven by its constrained ability to see and understand what it is doing.
We need to appreciate what it means to struggle for survival like a state, fumbling and stumbling about with limited intelligence in semi-darkness, dimly aware that our existence depends on our ability to satisfy the capricious needs of entities called citizens.
Surviving Like a State
Governments are agents too, but they don't seek life, liberty and happiness as citizens do. They don't seek to maximize shareholder value, serve customers or serve a core group either.
All the complex needs of governments arise from three basic ones: counting, conscripting and taxing the citizenry. This is what governments do to survive in their day-to-day lives as artificial organisms, just as humans eat and sleep and corporations buy and sell, in order to live another day.
When we speak of consent of the governed from an everyday perspective, we don't really mean an implied contract based on ceding a monopoly on legitimate violence to the state, in exchange for some security. That's too abstract.
What we actually consent to at an everyday level is being counted, potentially conscripted and being taxed through specific mechanisms such as periodically showing up at the DMV, to renew our drivers license, a point that the creators of South Park instinctively understand.
- Counting (more generally, tracking), at any level from the simplest once-a-decade census to brain-implanted chips wired to the NSA's thought-monitoring quantum computers, is basic. Without knowing the size and social/cultural structure of the governed population, and being able to effectively locate and communicate with any specific individual, a state cannot survive anymore than humans can without being able to tell poisonous and edible berries apart.
- Conscription is equally basic because a monopoly on legitimate violence is useless without the ability to recruit some citizens to exercise it against others, or against foreign powers, through specific organs of state (military and police forces and more subtle kinds of violence through non-physical weapons such as central banks).
- Taxation, being the raison d'être of all governments from pure kleptocracies to pure welfare states, is basic as well, and is embodied by organs of state devoted to collection, redistribution and regulation.
- Counting should be easy. So long as there is a nominal record of nearly all individuals based on a unique way to contact every individual (such as a registered cellphone or some sort of verified email address), and a way to keep that contact information current (such as requiring periodic cellphone verification), it should be possible to keep an accurate and current view no matter where in the world a person wanders. If the state actually provides some geographically portable benefits with sufficiently high frequency, such as a basic income or healthcare, that should be enough of a carrot to track nearly everybody. If not, a stick will be required, such as more frequent (but less painful) license renewal requirements, or some sort of meatspace verification mechanism modeled on parole rather than prison (perhaps in-person check-ins at DMVs in place of proof-of-address requirements to conduct any sort of business). No significant institutional changes are necessary. Just more competence at buying and operating software infrastructure. Models of constructs such as household may need to be updated, but there is nothing making counting functions fundamentally harder.
- Conscription is a harder capability to maintain with a mobile populace, but is increasingly irrelevant in a world of automated warfare waged by small and highly professionalized military and police forces. Even if (say) half the population of America happens to be traveling in other parts of the world at any given time, that should not significantly affect the ability of the American government to wage war on some unfortunate little country. Again, no significant institutional changes are necessary. Since governments will most likely only need to conscript individual specialists in the future (such as say the top drone hacker in 2030, call him D'Rambo, who happens to be temporarily living in a Thai Buddhist, monastery fixing human-driven cars), conscription transforms from a problem of large-scale logistics to special-ops find-and-recruit logistics.
- Taxation as you might expect, is the actual difficult problem (along with its alter-ego, regulation). If you've ever moved states within the US during a tax year, or worked significant periods in different states while being based in one, you know what I am talking about. Governments tend to be so bad at efficiently taxing mobile populations (and corporations) that citizens and businesses limit how they move merely to simplify their tax lives. Not all kinds of taxation are equally unfriendly to mobility. In the US for example, federal income and sales taxes do not limit national mobility at all. State taxes do. City taxes may or may not, depending on whether or not they over-reach into burdensome licensing models. Corporate taxes follow the same rough pattern. When you get to international mobility, taxation is messy enough that it can be a show-stopper.
17 Comments
Do you think privacy/opacity will become a luxury only the rich can afford?
It seems that physical mobility is how the wealthy now most set themselves apart, so I could imagine a reversal where mobility is broadly available but privacy is much more scarce and thus valuable.
I've heard a few people suggest that. Freemium world. Poor pay attention taxes via advertising in exchange for mobility and lower direct taxes, rich opt-out of advertising (and therefore surveillance) through higher cash taxation somehow. Good scenario to think through. I suspect it would be unstable.
I've been arguing that the flip side of losing privacy is increasing accountability. Accountability OF big brother will increase as well. This builds trust in the system. But only as long as we can actually monitor the monitorer. Not doing that is Orwellian.
To provide a counterfactual example: the Netherlands is traditionally a nation of very high database density most of which are interlinked these days to provide more seamless services to the inhabitants of the Netherlands (and to remove the possibility of playing one social service against the other).
Recently a case surfaced where a woman was deregistered from a house she owns (being let to others) because she had not fulfilled the criterium of being in the Netherlands for at least 4 months. She was traveling the world and freelancing to her heart's content. After the deregistration all kinds of services started failing: government functions such as getting a new passport but also banks and the companies register would not recognize a suitable mailing address.
This does not even touch taxation since in most of Europe you are taxed in the place where you have been registered for at least 365/2 days in a year. Somebody who is sufficiently mobile like the woman above could possibly be exempt but nobody knows for sure and the tax agencies do not volunteer this information.
The Netherlands has a very tightly coupled state apparatus which is not at all geared for the mobile class you mentioned above. But I wonder whether the thing the state is trying to prevent is the wealthy world wanderer above. That seems more a Kafka-esque fluke of rules being incompatible and the number of people like her being fairly limited still.
I think these laws are there to protect the state from a mobile class deemed undesirable in most of the EU these days: immigrants from poor states which are too dysfunctional to manage any of the three criteria on their own soil let alone for their people abroad.
Interesting case. I think this sort of thing will become increasingly common, reach a tipping point, and trigger legislation that tries to "see" mobility, desirable immigration and undesirable immigration as distinct categories. See also this piece in the Atlantic.
This post touches on something I've been thinking about for awhile.
What if the technology of surveillance develops to the point where states no longer need to see citizens in limited ways?
A quick thought experiment: What if the state had an AI that when asked about someone would give, not a list of facts about them (eg. birthdate, college degrees) or a set of coarse grained variables (eg. belongs to a certain demographic, has a certain type of psych profile), but a compelling narrative of their life story. One that they could recognize as factual, even if they don't agree with it's implications.
Forget utopia/dystopia, I have no idea what a state would do with this kind of information or what a state that routinely used this kind of information would look like. Would the people in charge even be able to use this information or would they have to throw some of it away in order to pigeonhole people into categories so they could rule effectively? Is it even possible to have a state that sees citizens as philosophic individuals? It's obviously impossible at low tech level, but as we get better and better at networking and compiling information it seems inevitable that we will reach this point? What happens?
That's a great thought experiment, the idea of a state as a sort of perfectly empathetic, listener therapist who can govern you on the basis of the story you tell.
I have no idea how to run that through. Good premise for a sci-fi story.
The more interesting number is days lived outside one's passport country.
1B tourist arrivals contain short and long trips. Also some fly multiple times (i had guess most do. And many trips have multi leg landings)
On the other hand, when counting of the middle class worldwide (say 1-1.5 b), the % becomes much higher.
Nice post
Usa is now cracking down worldwide on any bank account usa citizens hold (they are forcing ALL banks worldwide to inform them. And everyone capitulates now).
It is now only usa that taxes its expats (all other countries do not tax you when you live fully abroad).
But the crackdown on banks shows. 1) that countries are concerned (albeit probably its mostly against usa residents evading taxes). 2) that it is getting possible
I'd like to extend the metaphor to surveillance services provision. So we know that the US shares surveillance capabilities with 'five-eyes' anglophone nations today.
I wonder, will total surveillance tech be mastered by most legacy nations?
Let's say no. I can imagine a small set of geographically overlapping fluid meta-states emerging from an ecosystem of landless tech vendors and enterprising tech-having landed states.
largest "civilian" fleet (and most active?) in the world = USPS.
if the USPS got sufficiently good at passively collecting acceptable metadata (via mail drones), then couldn't this metadata be packaged and sold as a highly lucrative revenue stream?
instead of Lanier's nano-payments for every tracking activity, how about treating data as a "natural resource" like Norway's petrol based national investment fund?
GO BLUE.
droneresearchlab.com
* Surveilled
Title is misspelled. Root word is surveillance, so putting it into the passive keeps the double L.
Fixed, thanks. URL will remain misspelled though, to avoid backlink breakages.
HTTP 301
One travel hack that I've adopted is that I carry around a current Australian ID as I travel around the US. It allows me to opt out of spot ID enforcement systems. There was one time my ticket for the train was expired during an inspection but the inspector knew there was nothing he could do to a seeming Australian person.
Sounds like an update to Discipline & Punish is in order.
Two major issues stick with me: the first is cause I'm a (realist) crank, the second because I think you're handwaving.
First: Potential for more extreme abuse of already-vulnerable populations is significant. Political suppression likewise. I'm more interested in what happens to people on the fringes in a given society than what happens in the median; median solutionism that ignores edges cases tends to get eaten by its own side effects.
Second: If the U.S. were a burgeoning imperial power, rather than one that's likely peaked, this could be plausible; however, barring that, the level of coordination *between competing governments* that is being assumed here is unreal. It seems like your focus is state-level, internal to the U.S., whereas more interesting to me would be genuine globetrotters, and what that means. One interesting implication that I've experienced is functional disenfranchisement (in Canada, you need to have residency to be able to vote, so I've never been legally able to vote anywhere in my life); there are tons of other examples. Many tax systems are based around "country of residency" where residence is > 1/3 of the year; if you move sufficiently, you end up paying taxes nowhere. The EU is probably the closest you'll get to this.
I just found your blog today and it looks fascinating. I do have a concern that you speak of the 'social contract' as if it has some legitimacy. It's made unilaterally, and involuntarily over the barrel of a gun and subject to unilateral changes in the terms and conditions. Why would I consent to be surveilled in order to preserve a social contract that is inherently unjust and coercive?