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Geek Researcher Spends Three Years Living With Hackers | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com

By Robert McMillan

11.28.12 6:30 AM

Follow @bobmcmillan

When you’re starting off as an anthropologist, you aim is to explore a
subculture your peers have yet to uncover, spending years living with the
locals and learning their ways.

That’s what Gabriella Coleman did. She went to San Francisco and lived with
the hackers.

Coleman, an anthropologist who teaches at McGill University, spent three
years living in the Bay Area, studying the community that builds the Debian
Linux open source operating system and other hackers — i.e., people who pride
themselves on finding new ways to reinvent software. More recently, she’s
been peeling away the onion that is the Anonymous movement, a group that
hacks as a means of protest — and mischief.

When she moved to San Francisco, she volunteered with the Electronic Frontier
Foundation — she believed, correctly, that having an eff.org address would
make people more willing to talk to her — and started making the scene. She
talked free software over Chinese food at the Bay Area Linux User Group’s
monthly meetings upstairs at San Francisco’s Four Seas Restaurant. She
marched with geeks demanding the release of Adobe eBooks hacker Dmitry
Sklyarov. She learned the culture inside-out.

Now, she’s written a book on her experiences: Coding Freedom: The Ethics and
Aesthetics of Hacking. It’s a scholarly work of anthropology that examines
the question: What does it mean to be a hacker?

Earlier this month, she dropped by Wired’s offices to talk about the book.
Here’s an edited transcript of the conversation:

Wired: What made you decide to live with the hackers?

Gabriella Coleman: I did want to be somewhere with a high density of hackers.
I didn’t want to just do online research — which a lot of my Anonymous
research has been. I was like: “No, there are hackers and they’re in places,
so let me go to San Francisco. There seem to be a lot of them here.”

What I quickly discovered was that there is a lot going on in hacking which
has very little to do with open source. You know, like Infosec, and the
transgressive tradition, and — a little later on — the hardware explosion.
And that became the focus of my teaching. Because while the book is on open
source, I wanted to grapple with and grasp the different dimensions of
hacking, and I got really interested in what divided hackers.

It was interesting when I started hanging out with info security hackers in
New York. That’s a really different beast. They’re like, if you’re a builder,
you’re not a hacker. You’ve got to be breaking something. But the Infosec
really tend to police their boundaries quite a bit.

Wired: What did your peers in the academic world think about your work?

Coleman: They, I think, thought that it was interesting and kind of great
that someone was moving forward. But I think there was this idea that the
geek hacker world, especially in the context of the west, was culturally thin
and anemic. “Oh very interesting politically — they’re coming up with these
alternative licenses — but isn’t it just about white men tinkering with their
computers?”

And in some ways, I think I thought that too. But then, I was like, wait a
minute, when it comes to the culture of computer hacking and the aesthetics
of hacking, I was blown away by how culturally deep it was.

There’s a whole chapter on joking, humor and cleverness among hackers. And
that, to me, was one of the fascinating areas. And I feel that I’ve just
scratched the surface with that chapter — to how deep and complex their oral
histories are and their folklore is. And how they record it in everything
from how they name pieces of software, which are often historical references
to the past, to just the enormous amount of writing that computer hackers do
in the non-technical sense: manifestos and zines and science fiction, you
know

And I was just kind of astounded by that at some level. And astounded by the
way in which on the one hand the hacker world was the place where the culture
of civil liberties was on fire. And that’s something that anyone can relate
to because people beyond the hacker world know about free speech and privacy.
And on the other hand, there was this aesthetic world that was intensely
focused on itself and was very difficult to translate to the general public.

And so that kind of melding of the deep pleasures of hacking and the cultures
of civil liberties were something that I thought was quite anthropological.
But my peers were really unconvinced of it.

Wired: Did you get grief for not traveling to somewhere exotic?

Coleman: Yes. All the time. They just kind of laughed at it. They were like,
‘You’re so lucky. You get to be in San Francisco going to cafes and hanging
out with hackers. I had to really sweat it out and be in the jungle. It was
really difficult.’

It’s funny because my committee loved my dissertation, and it did very well
and won all these prizes, but I always had trouble getting job talks in
anthropology departments. Even today, I rarely get invited to give talks in
anthropology departments.

Wired: What is the funniest hacker joke you know?

Coleman: I absolutely love the Mutt flea one. The man page for Mutt, in the
man page, the bug category is flea, because fleas are on mutts.

Wired: It’s hard to tell a good geek joke because there are all these layers
to them.

Often, the humor you talk about is used as a way of identifying like-minded
people. I think that a lot of people from that community spend a lot of their
time not being understood or talking to people who don’t care about the same
things that they do. So they need a shorthand to figure out, “OK we can have
a conversation.”

It’s actually a hack that allows you to connect with people who it’s worth
your time time talk to.

Coleman: One of the things in that chapter that I argue is that hackers,
first of all, are good at joking because to hack is to rearrange form. That’s
what jokes are. That’s a pragmatic utilitarian argument, but they really
culturally value it for all sorts of reasons.

Even a wonderful piece of code is up for debate, but a very funny joke, it
gets affirmed with laughter and then it’s kind of indisputable.

Wired: Do you think that it’s possible to convey what’s interesting about
hackers in film?

Coleman: I have generally thought that it’s really difficult. And I was
pretty impressed with We Are Legion. He [Director Brian Knappenberger] did a
very good job. And one of the reasons why he did a good job is because the
world of Anonymous has a very rich visual vocabulary that they’ve created
through their artifacts. They come from the meme world.

But let’s just say that you’re trying to convey the open source geeks and the
transgressive hackers. Man, I have thought about this and I think it would
take a kind of genius filmmaker to do it. I’ve talked to a lot of filmmakers
to try to kind of inspire them to do it, and to spend time at CCC and the
camps to get a sense of what it’s like and be, like, ‘Can you convert it?’”
Because I haven’t seen any film yet that I think does it well. *Robert
McMillan

Robert McMillan is a writer with Wired Enterprise. Got a tip? Send him an
email at: robert_mcmillan [at] wired.com.

Read more by Robert McMillan

Follow @bobmcmillan on Twitter.
 
Piled upon with books on accounting and Organizational Behavior.. I would have no comment other than..
"wish it was that easy"

But Ive said goodbye to that world.. no more codes or architecture for me..
After all, all dem coders and engineers need someone to sit on top of them and manage em..
Id rather take that position.
 

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