Research Lab: Behind the Smart World

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For most of us consumers electronic devices such as smartphones, tablets, notebooks, printers or microwaves are a fundamental and indispensable parts of our daily lives. As a result of rapid growth and constant innovation the electronic industry is the world’s fastest growing industry. The “Internet of things” is increasingly adding electronic devices onto our shopping list. Devices that are adding up to a 24h surveillance system that are tracking every aspect of our life and are containers for private data. The life cycle of these products are considerably short and when they break we do not know how to fix them. When it is cheaper to buy a new one than to repair the old one we move on to a upgraded model.

But where do these electronic devices go to die?

Some of them end up in regulated e-waste centrals in Europe, yet lot of them are dumped illegally on electronic-wastelands in developing countries where they become a serious environmental threat. A privacy issue is that these devices still contain personal data that can be reanimated and abused when falling into wrong hands. In the ‘Behind the smart world’ – research lab we question

‣ what happens to our electronic waste?

‣ What environmental and privacy threats exists? And

‣ how can we become more responsible users of technology.

In 2014 KairUs visited the biggest e-waste dump in the world, Agbogbloshie in Accra, Ghana. There we bought 22 hard drives. As a hads-on part of this research lab we tried to reanimate the hard drives and explore what kind of data traces are revealed of their prior owners.  We also made a number of excursions and meet some experts to understand how electronic waste is taken care of in Austria.

The Research lab had different outcomes:

An Artlab and a symposium, May 2015 in Linz/Austria.

‣ Several presentations at conferences and festivals (ISEA 2015, 32C3, Stuttgarter Filmwinter)

A publication called “Behind the smart World”

An exhibition that was part of the “AMRO – Art meets radical openness festival 2016.

Another research lab called “Mapping the smart world was organised in Innsbruck and presented at Ars Electronica 2016

Further exhibitions and research workshops are planned for 2017-2018. Stay tuned!

 

A documentation video created for Ars Electronica 2016 explaining main points of the lab in 8min:


A project organised by Linda Kronman and Andreas Zingerle (kairus.org) and Us(c)hi Reiter and servus.at team.