The solution to the accumulation of authoritarian power enhanced by the Internet will not emerge from within the Internet itself; rather, the only radical and enduring response to the kind of networked authoritarianism that is becoming pervasive globally must regard attacking the extractivist foundation of Internet materiality as the primary and most effective antifascist tactic. Far from being a recent emergence of authoritarian infrastructure, however, the Internet was developed by the US military‐industrial complex and has always carried the imprint of authoritarian utility. The Internet is now a pervasive infrastructural feature of global capitalism and its state accomplices, and the deliberate temporary stoppage of Internet functioning by state actors, a so‐called Internet “shutdown” or “kill switch,” illustrates the primary purpose of this infrastructure is to defend state power and capitalist commerce. Liberal attempts to reform the Internet are misguided, and anti‐authoritarians should adopt an abolitionist position regarding the Internet as infrastructure. The primary strategy for such a form of abolitionism should focus its efforts on shutting down the extractive industries that provide the material substrate of the Internet.
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October 1, 2023
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Research Article|
October 01 2023
The Internet Shutdown and Revolutionary Politics: Defining the Infrastructural Power of the Internet
Michael Truscello
Michael Truscello is associate professor in English and general education at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta. He is author of Infrastructural Brutalism: Art and the Necropolitics of Infrastructure (2020) and coeditor with Ajamu Nangwaya of Why Don't the Poor Rise Up? (2017).
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South Atlantic Quarterly (2023) 122 (4): 811–826.
Citation
Michael Truscello; The Internet Shutdown and Revolutionary Politics: Defining the Infrastructural Power of the Internet. South Atlantic Quarterly 1 October 2023; 122 (4): 811–826. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-10747811
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