Unintended Consequences Of Technology On Distance And Global Communications
from the good-and-bad dept
We tend to be in the camp that believes technology is neither inherently good nor inherently bad -- but, rather, is a tool that can be used for both good and bad purposes. However, we are certainly big believers in the law of unintended consequences. No matter how much you think through how technology will impact something, you can almost never predict many of the resulting consequences (again, for both good and bad purposes). Jeremy Wagstaff has a fantastic post pointing to two articles that highlight these unintended consequences (both good and bad) when it comes to distance and communication. The first article is about how African refugees seeking to get to Europe now find it much easier thanks to GPS. Thanks to GPS, many are now setting sail for the Canary Islands, 60 miles of the coast of Africa. Without GPS, it was quite difficult to find the small islands -- but no longer. No matter what the legality of the situation is, as Wagstaff notes, GPS technology has just made distance much shorter for many Africans seeking to get out. It's unlikely anyone ever thought of that when they were designing GPS systems.The second article suggests that all the modern communication equipment soldiers get to lug around these days could explain why US soldiers are having so much trouble relating to locals in Iraq and Afghanistan. The article focuses on 11 US airmen who were stranded in Borneo during World War II, without contact to the outside world. They quickly learned to adapt to their surroundings, learning the local language and communicating and respecting the local natives who then were an effective force in fighting off the Japanese on the island. The article suggests that thanks to advanced electronic communication tools, our soldiers today are always tethered back to other Americans, and never need to really get to know the people in the regions where they're fighting, meaning they're less able to relate to them or get along with them, in part as an unintended consequence of having all that communications technology available. It's not too hard to see how this could be true. It is always easier to fall back to communicating with people you know or who speak the same language you do and observe the same customs. While this certainly isn't to condemn the use of communications technology, it is worth noting the unintended consequence of it, especially in thinking about how we continue to relate to other cultures around the globe.
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Filed Under: communication, gps, language differences, unintended consequences
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Isolation amongst the locals.
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Re: Isolation amongst the locals.
And on a different note, there are plenty of reasons to forge relationships, even if you do leave in 6 months. Nothing wrong with experiencing a different culture either.
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Another Consequence
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wrong conclusions?
Seems to me that what the guy is actually saying is that 160k GIs don't seem to make as much difference as a smaller number of special forces engaged in hearts&minds.
The average soldier (young, under-educated and from a poor background) is hardly equipped to leap across cultural divides, high-tech or low-tech.
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Re: Another Consequence
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No one thought of navigation
when designing GPS?
That's just the sort of application
on which it works the best.
But using it to Geocache
Is completely accidental.
Looking for a hidden stash?
Totally freaking mental.
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Artificially stranding our solders?
Perhaps if the US military had locked down access to the Internet and global telecom at the beginning, it might have been possible to avoid too many problems. But can you imagine the results if they tried to put those limits in place now? (Even the eleven stranded WW2 airmen weren't isolated on purpose by the military.) The negative reaction would be incredible.
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True for Peace Corps
Can't speak for the military, but I'd imagine that shorter terms (vs. 2+ years in a Peace Corps post, living with the community) would have integration problems just from the short time frame (not to mention if the community doesn't want the military there). But is integration really feasible/desired in military situations?
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Unintended effects of GPS
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unintended effects
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unintended effects
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Re: unintended effects
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