Hackers: The Art of Abstraction 130
scubacuda writes "Wired: Inspired by McKenzie Wark's The Hacker Manifesto , Madrid's MNCARS's exhibit, Hackers: The Art of Abstraction , explores the connections between hackers, artists and anyone engaged in any kind of creative work. The centerpiece of the exhibition are documentary films and videos made by independent filmmakers and hackers from all over the world, including Freedom Downtime by Emmanuel Goldstein, Free Radio by Kevin Kayser, The Hacktivist by Ian Walker, Unauthorized Access by Annaliza Savage, New York City Hackers by Stig-Lennart Serensen and Hippies From Hell by Inne Pope."
CHAOS (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:CHAOS (Score:5, Insightful)
It really depends on what you are trying to create. If you want to create strictly art then maybe chaos drives teh creative process but much of the creative process is due to there being something needed to be created. Like something an engineer creates. An engineers creating something has little to do with Chaos and a lot to do with structure.
Re:CHAOS (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:CHAOS (Score:3, Interesting)
When the microwave was invented was it chaos? Or was it someone wanted a quicker way to cook? The tools to do the same things already existed but weren't as easy. Where is the chaos in that?
Re:CHAOS (Score:1)
my meaning was that the materials the things were made of were in a state of chaos, do you find microwave cookers just growing from the ground?
Chaos, definetly (Score:3, Interesting)
The Microwave heating abilities were discovered when fried pigeons kept falling down around a radar-center somwhere. (No, I didn't bother to google)
It was definetly not an invention out of a ingenious mind, more like a random discovery when doing something completely unrelated.
Out of chaos/not-chaos, this would have to be chaos. But I'd rather say coincidental.
Re:CHAOS (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:CHAOS (Score:1)
Re:CHAOS (Score:1)
Re:CHAOS (Score:1)
In a creativ
Re:CHAOS (Score:2)
"Chaos is what drives the creative process." This seems to be true, but we need not use such grandiose terms. If we consider chaos to be simple earthly strife, such as the need for food or better tools
with limitations (Score:3)
The most creative things I've seen/done involved some kind of restriction on the methods, tools, subject, viewpoint, etc.
In that sensem, it's chaos and limitations, like pouring plaster (chaotic) into a mold (limitation). Like sculpture, it's not what you put in, but what you leave out.
Re:CHAOS (Score:2)
Re:CHAOS (Score:1)
1
01
11
001
101
011
111
Immagine 1 as creation, 0 as destruction and read from up to down. Observing one digit's place there is an infinite loop of creation & destruction while advancing the number value as complete.
Assuming that analogue states unsupported binary resolution, chaos is the most obvious inte
Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is it really more of a skill?? The coding itself may be a skill but the way you do it isn't. Sure maybe for your average joe who knows little but for your hacker the way you code can be art. It's your own style and flavor. I guess the way you code could be considered art. Just like writing poetry.
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:2, Insightful)
Hackers do not poets make
They just don't have the time
To think for hours upon end
To make their coding rhyme
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Insightful)
When you decide, hey I don't like using loops, lets write 10,000 if statements, you aren't creating art, you're creating a bad program and ugly code. You don't have much freedom in code, I guess you could say efficient code with as few lines as possible is art, but not the same way poetry is an art.
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ever read The Story of Mel [watson-net.com]?
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:2)
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:2)
Secondly, it would be quite easy (almost trivial, in fact) to write a programming language that could interpret any string of characters as a syntactically legal program. (IIRC Malbolge comes close). The fact that the program wouldn't make any sense semantically shouldn't matter, since the "random letters with weird shape" poem presumably doesn't make much sense either.
I think that invalidates your conclusion.
You sir, are mistaken. (Score:3, Informative)
You sir, are mistaken [stud.ntnu.no] :)
Ok, the letters themselves may not be random, but it's still a nice piece of code!
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:1)
In your way of thinking, the poem has to compile in a human mind too. The compilation then being that the person in question understands it.
Just as the majority of humans probably didnt understand that poem, so the majority of computers wont understand random code. However, thanks to drunk and sleepless people like the designers of whitespace that someone pointed out earlier, some computers do understand it.
Will they interpret it as you meant it? Who knows! Heck
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:1)
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Insightful)
All of that could, possibly, be loosely defined as some sort of art...but not poetry. In order for it to be poetry, you need to obey some basic rules - rules such as writing words on paper. Same thing goes for programming, you need to follow basic rules - such as using valid statements that will actually compile.
Just because the basic rules in programming are somewhat more strict than those of poetry, does not mean that you cannot be creative or artistic with it.
yrs,
Ephemeriis
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:2)
Nope, it's modern art. Ask Jackson Pollock.
"If I crumple up some paper in a big ball, that isn't poetry."
Nope, it's an Origami Boulder. (URL lost; search engine will find it for you.)
"If I run naked through my back yard, it isn't poetry."
Nope, it's performance art. JJ Doonesbury will probably sue you for plagiarism.
See also recent writings on something called "moetry".
Not entirely true.... (Score:5, Funny)
Not entirely true....
Even in poetry you have to remain within the confines of what defines "poetry".
If I just pour some ink on the page, make a big ol' ink blob... that isn't poetry.
If I crumple up some paper in a big ball, that isn't poetry.
If I cut off my ear and stick it in a plastic box, it isn't poetry.
If I run naked through my back yard, it isn't poetry.
-- by Ephemeriis (315124) on Monday March 01, @08:42AM (#8428306)
Now that's poetry...
Q.
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:1)
Sounds like Perl to me...
Of course, code isn't art if you have coding standards. It's more like plumbing or something.
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:2)
Unless you're using perl, of course. TAMWTO [everything2.com].
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Interesting)
But within those restrictions, there's still a lot of freedom to express oneself creatively.
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:5, Insightful)
When designing something it can be both art and architecture. Look at buildings. Many are very artistically done but have great architecture to them. Look at the designs for the new world trade center building. To be the tallest building in the world there is a great amount of detail to the architecture but it is a very beautiful design that is artistically done.
Architecture vs. Engineering (Score:1)
Re:Correct. (Score:1)
Re:Correct. (Score:2)
dave
Re:Correct. (Score:5, Insightful)
The mathematician, contributor to the Manhattan Project -- and a founder of modern computing -- John von Neumann, considered by knowledgeable colleagues to have contributed to all fields of mathematics except topology and number theory, disagreed. Describing the qualities of a good mathematical proof, von Neumann wrote : (John von Neumann as quoted in William Poundstone, Prisoner's Dilemma).
Perhaps unsurprisingly, given von Neumann's seminal influence on computer programming, his description of a good mathematical proof reads to me very much like a qualities I expect to see in a good algorithm, function, or class when I'm reading or writing code. Foe me, elegance is always of first importance when I -- and I use the word consciously -- craft code: a function that does not flow, a class the instances of which cannot be used in an elegant and (at least from the user's point of view) transparent way, is almost always bad code, and illuminates a lack of understanding on the part of the coder.
Kludges are offensive, not because they don't work -- the only justification for a kludge, after all, is that if nothing else, it works -- but because they are indicative of a lack of craft, and because they indicate a lack of understanding, either on the part of the coder himself, or the on the part of framework/clases/language he is coding in or with. A kludge is bad because it is the pulled thread in the fabric of the program, a pulled thread that threatens or exposes a potential for further and MORE disastrous unravelling.
craft is not poor art (Score:2)
And there is great craft that isn't art, Paul Revere, or any comparable silversmith would likely been called a craftsman rather than an artist, although he made beautiful unique objects that reside in fi
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:1, Interesting)
Art is the expression of a feeling. A painter, a poet expresses his feelings thru his artwork, and maybe, sometimes, it reaches the audience, and this audience may (or may not) feel the same.
Hacking is not art.
It's "performing a task".
It's "solving a problem".
Even if a hack is well-written code, it does not carry any kind of emotion or feeling. Of course, somebody who watches the code may feel a couple of things
- surprise : hey it works ! waow !
- hate : gush ! I wish I could have written that !
etc.
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:2)
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:1)
Re:Hacking is not an art... (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, maybe for the few true geniuses out there. But for most hackers it's merely a skill, maybe a craft at most.
Everything a human can do is an art. High art is merely the pinnacle. We all strive toward it to some extent. An "artist" may simply be one who works for that specific reason.
Art vs. Craft (Score:3, Interesting)
Throughout most of history there were people who mastered crafts. They might be sculptors, painters, cabnetry-makers... And we might look at what they did and say "Hey, that's art! He's a real artist." But what does that mean?
The programmer who writes a workable kludge is a craftperson, and doesn't aspire to art. Yet if s/he is trying to d
Hackers and Painters (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hackers and Painters (Score:3, Interesting)
What he doesn't seem to have grasped is that Computer Science essentially boils down to algorithmics, no matter which distinct field within Computer Science you are in (be it the study of systems & operating systems, real time systems, networks, graphics, or anything else. The only areas I see as fairly di
This seems like a bad ripoff of the Mentor. (Score:2, Informative)
Apologies to phrack for the lameness filter edits.
==Phrack Inc.==
Volume One, Issue 7, Phile 3 of 10
The following was written shortly after my arrest...
\/\The Conscience of a Hacker/\/
by
+++The Mentor+++
Written on January 8, 1986
Another one got caught today, it's all over the papers. "Teenager
Arrested in Computer Crime Scandal", "Hacker Arrested after Bank Tampering"...
Damn kids. They're all alike.
But did you, in your three-piece psychology
Re:This seems like a bad ripoff of the Mentor. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This seems like a bad ripoff of the Mentor. (Score:4, Insightful)
I wonder to whom and where this animosity is directed?
The events of the late 80's and very early 90's were much different than the world today. The barriers to entry were much higher - there weren't many script kiddies. There was NO free unix. Access to real computers was almost nonexistant - as was free access to almost any telecommunications service. A 'C' compiler could run you real money. The internet did not exist as you know it now, except in the hands of few academics. TeleNet, Datapac, and other networks were the only means to access longhaul data communication.
The exposure of vulerabilities went a long way towards demonstrating that little or no forethought had gone into the security of communications infrastructure. Blue boxing was a driving force to give AT&T a kick in the ass to move to OOB signalling in the late 80's / early 90's.
It's difficult to justify or look back at now, but a lot of the GOOD that you see in the community today came out of the seeds of that movement. Articles and writing such as the Mentor's capture the emotions and motivations behind the hacker mind moreso than any artifical piece of writing ever will.
My $0.02.
Re:This seems like a bad ripoff of the Mentor. (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone know where I can buy some of this? "Come on, have another glass--I'm good for your heart! I reduce cholesterol!"
Re:This seems like a bad ripoff of the Mentor. (Score:5, Insightful)
I didn't go around breaking others' art; I made some of my own.
I was bright enough to figure out that, if I do it the way the teacher wants it done, I don't get hassled. I can always do it my way when I'm doing it for me, and then nobody has the authority to tell me I'm doing it wrong.
I showed some promise and was rewarded with more challenging (and interesting) stuff by teachers who cared. That's how you *find* teachers who care.
You can learn the system and get what you want. Or you can turn your back on it and let it hit you from behind. Your choice.
Art & computers (Score:5, Insightful)
Also known as: (Score:5, Funny)
just the first though that came to me with the description of the book...
Damn, that's funny (Score:2)
Hoffstadter references... what will the world bring next? :)
Q.
Re:Damn, that's funny (Score:1)
dave
Crab Canon? (Score:2)
Actually my Monty Python book is written that way...
Q.
Documentus Legalus (Score:2, Offtopic)
Remember that KISS principle thingamajig.
- IP
Re:Documentus Legalus (Score:3, Interesting)
In the time it would have taken me to read that I could have coded a web server, downloaded the X2 demo and solved the Middle Eastern peace problem.
What ever happened to the art of being concise?
I always thought... (Score:3, Insightful)
..that 'art' was whatever an 'artist' managed to sell for money to someone with even less insight into what art is than myself...
I may know little about art in a formal manner, but I know what I like. To me, a piece of art should in some way speak to the beholder on an emotional level. By that definition, hacking is not an artform - at least not in my eyes. YMMV off course, but I would define it rather more as a skill or a knack than as an (artistic) ability.
Re:I always thought... (Score:2)
By that definition, hacking is not an artform, but a /. article about hacking is! Judging by the often emotional replies such an article receives... ;-)
I agree that hacking isn't art, but I do think that it requires something you might call an
Patents for Creative Hacking? (Score:4, Interesting)
This expansion of the term "hackers" is a great idea. Now if we could just combine it with the idea of making really "creative hacks" patentable, we might have a solution to the whole mess of US Patents, and democratize the gold rush towards the "patent extortion money" pie.
Think about it for a moment. Creativity deserves to be patentable. Once a hack is patented the "hacker" will then try to dissuade others from using it till they pay him for the rights to use it. Thus we have transferred the policing of the hack to the hacker itself! That is advantage number one.
Advantage number 2 stems from the fact that why let SCO (and other similar scum) try to get away with the patent extortion money. Let all the others who are really creative (hackers) get a share of it too. This way, everyone, programmers, artists, musicians, writers, engineers, chemists, and so on, are now eligible for patents (much better than the measley copyrights) and the patent extortion pie.
And the bonus advantage of making the "creative hacks" patentable is that it would flood the US Patent Office and wash away its patenting sins, and maybe force it to stop giving out dumb patents.
.
Plan9 is the fine art of the hacking world (Score:4, Informative)
For the true unbelievers ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Linux, Gnome, KDE, OpenOffice, Mozilla, and ummm lets choose, VI.
These code bases are beautiful works which entail blood, sweat, passion, and thought. There are pieces of Art that I think shouldn't qualify as its not an expression of the creator, yet just a piece of art for arts sake.
Just as not all code is something that is enjoyable for many reasons but some being that the end result sucks or the code is so piss poor the end result sucks.
Is Linus a genuis, nope, is he quite possibly the most creative man in OSS programming, sure. I don't think Linus is a superhuman by any means, but I do know he posses the talent to see something and then make it happen. Just as you can have an artist look at a canvas and then paint the mona lisa on it. Its the coders that can see a picture of what they want the end product to look like and make it happen, is the same as an artist looking towards a canvas and seeing the finished product before anyone else can.
So yes, hacking is an art form, but like any art, not just anyone can do it.
But why? (Score:5, Insightful)
An artist is someone who ignores function and concentrates on form where they think beauty lies. An engineer is someone who sees beauty in pure dedication to achieving a function in the most efficient fashion.
A perfectly calculated arching cantilever is beautiful, a painting of a waterfall is just an inferior copy.
-- An Engineer
Re:But why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now look at the amount of respect society at large bestows on artists and programmers / engineers. Artists are generally well-regarded... even the people who think that most artists are lazy and weird, can muster some respect for them. Contrast that with the amount of appreciation programmers garner these days. Most non-techs have little respect for programmers, or geeky activities in general.
Yet very few 'regular' people will notice the beauty in beautiful bridges... but will fork over good money for that painting of a waterfall. Unsurprisingly... to appreciate the beauty of most engineering works, you have to have at least some working knowledge of the underlying principles. But if you know nothing about painting, proportion, shading and composition, you are still able to be moved emotionally by a piece of art. And that is what art is about.
are you an artist? (Score:1)
engineers get paid. all the great inventors and scientists do get the culture and notice.
einstein? hawking? edison? linus? wozniac?
for every michelango, there is a newton.
if you were an artist you'd know we don't get paid shit for any of the work we care about. most of it goes un-noticed until after we die, and that's only if we were truly ahead of our time and actually a master.
there is no recognition. only authors and musicians and film-makers ever get the
Re:are you an artist? (Score:2)
Re:are you an artist? (Score:1)
m.
Re:But why? Well YOURE no artist.. (Score:2)
"/Dread"
Re:But why? (Score:4, Insightful)
I see that you are suggesting a duplicity in the definition of beauty, yet it is apparent that they are tied together on a fundamental level. One definition is of a mathematical beauty, which values efficiency as an aesthetic. The other capitalizes on organic beauty, the result of human perception and evolved cognitive processes. However, these perceptions are the result of natural forces of evolution which itself values efficiency. Therefore, what is mathematically efficient is also humanly aesthetic: form and function are intimately related. This suggests that there does exist a universal, unified beauty which is present in design, be it functional or not.
This is why programmers can also be artists.
Re:But why? (Score:2)
An artist is someone who ignores function and concentrates on form where they think beauty lies.
Those are the crappy artists, the ones who think art is about "beauty". Unfortunately they're the majority. (And most of them can't even produce what they're trying to produce). The good artists try to communicate what can't be communicated through words. That's much harder than producing everyday beauty.
I will agree with you that artists tend concentrate too much of form, and function is some sort of bas
Re:But why? (Score:2, Insightful)
I have a Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science, bestowed upon me by the University of California at Santa Cruz.
New York City Hackers (Score:2, Informative)
Don't glorify this nonsense. (Score:2, Insightful)
And if anyone is considering reading the article with the lame 'manifesto', just read this one paragraph with its rambling, babbling nonsense...
"Production produces all things, and all producers of things. Production produces not only the object of the production process, but also the producer as subject. Hacking is the production of production. The hack produces a production of a new kind, which has as its result
Re:Don't glorify this nonsense. (Score:3, Insightful)
I've read some bad writing in my day, but this tops 'em all. And I have to agree with the parent post here -- trying to sound intelligent usually nosedives into complete and utter nonsense.
Maybe we should work on the Art of Writing [bartleby.com] first.
To everyone claiming code isn't art... (Score:2, Interesting)
The choices require experience and creativity, and it is truly art and beauty at the design level. If you can't see it as art, then sorry, you lack the design experience to under
Re:To everyone claiming code isn't art... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you can't see it as art, then sorry, you lack the design experience to understand.
Ahh, the old "If you won't think exactly like I do, then you're just a big dummy" defense. That will surely win you some converts.
Re:To everyone claiming code isn't art... (Score:1)
Define art first... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm a traditionally trained commercial artist. (You are welcome to slashdot my site at spanishcastle.com to confirm that pronouncement). I also have done a limited amount of programming. I find them to be two distinctly different experiences, but not altogether different. I think any act of creation done in the pursuit of excellence can be considered art.
However, I tend to prefer my own simple formula for answering the age old question: is it art? They are:
1) Is it beautiful? (which is a loaded question, too, really)
2) Would you have it in your home? (or, in the case of large works, in your town?)
3) Five hundred years from now, when some future archeologist digs it up, will it still be recognizable as art?
Obviously, some art forms are simply too ephemeral (like music or dance) to meet these conditions completely...although you could also argue that the best of them are preserved in one fashion or another (symphonies are committed to paper, and dances are taught to the next generation)
I think programming might be considered more akin to graphic art than fine art.
Fine art is a form of expression. I am not sure how well programming does this. Were it not for commented code, I don't how one could discern the author of a great piece of code from another.
Graphic art is a form of communication, which programming is designed to do, after a fashion. It is a means whereby a person may communicate with a machine.
Perhaps only machines know the difference? Perhaps we are bearing witness to a new form of art: machine art. Maybe one day, sentient machines will look and marvel at the elegance and simplicity of some tidy bit of code with the same fascination and admiration we might admire an artist's rendering of our own universe today.
I'm still waiting for both hardware and software manufacturers to address the issue of permanence, though...
Re:Define art first... (Score:2)
I think you probably could, if you spent as much time analyzing others' code as some people do studying art. I can most definitely recognize certain *ugly* tendencies in code as belonging to particular individuals!
Re:Define art first... (Score:2)
Re:Define art first... (Score:2)
Re:Define art first... (Score:2)
I suppose all art rather depends on context...
Programming is essentially a creative endeavor (Score:4, Insightful)
Programming [silent.se] is essentially a creative [mit.edu] endeavor where beauty emerges from the harmonious [catsspeed.co.jp] implementation of function - i.e. a function (creation) in harmony with the object (material or imagined) which is the program's intention to model [nist.gov] and with a given set of factors or rules (the API, language [ecma-international.org], instruction set.) This kind of creativity is in this sense more akin [berkeley.edu] to that expressed in building architecture [atomix.com] and industrial design than that expressed in the fine arts and philosophy [dpklinik.de].
Terming programming as a fine art is quite a stretch apart from the latter's primary concern - which is the creation of beautiful objects. Programming's primary concern is the creation of interactive models of objects in harmony with their material or imaginary counterparts and the boundaries that define the model space.
In this other sense, the aesthetic pleasure derived from programming or observing beautiful code is similar in nature to that derived from the construction or contemplation of philosophical concepts - both can recur to visual metaphors but are in essence invisible.
creative? (Score:4, Insightful)
Art work is there to create an atmosphere, to procure an emotion, so it has a function.
Its not because the function is psychological that it is inexistent. The summit is to be able to associate beautiful with practical form, and that's what design is all about.
I have seen beautiful designs by hackers, so to me many have artistic concepts, and are inspired.
Hacking a way of slicing reality for mathematical minds?
A good cook is creative in his art so is a doctor undertaking a chirurgic operation, so is, so is so is.....
All professions have their amount of creativity, and some are more creative then others, no matter the occupation.
In all cases, the inventor has to master the rules who define the medium he applies, thus to use the maximum possibilities, for the creation to be well balanced, i.e. ingredients in the case of a dish, colours for a painting, sounds for music, etc...
Redefining hackers (Score:3, Insightful)
The manifesto attempts to redefine "hacker" as pretty much anyone who reworks intellectual material. At this stage of the world, this includes a substantial swath of humanity. Politically, this places a bunch of knowledge workers alongside each other in the trenches, all working to reap the benefits of their insights rather than being victimized by the amusingly named & nefarious "vectorists," who aspire to possess not only all means of communication (vectors) but stocks of information (archives) and flows of information (?just-in-time news coverage?) as well.
Under the banner that information should be free, the manifesto envisages a fairly nebulous post-factional regime that sounds a lot like contemporary anarchism.
To worry about whether or not you like the idea that hackers are artists is to get it exaclty backwards, the point of this is to convince all other knowledge workers that they are hackers. I think that the manifesto author presumes that other knowledge workers should be being flattered by being considered hackers, and that they will be so tickled that they will embrace the notions of the manifesto.
This is not to say that there is not some food for thought here; though sometimes obscurely worded, it really does have some interesting takes on the economy of invention. My caution to readers of the comments, is that whether or not you support this broadening of the term hacker, be careful that you don't accidentally side with a political agenda simply on the basis of that definition.
Business 101? (Score:2)
"To produce is to repeat; to hack, to differentiate."
Art or Not Art (Score:1)
Charles Babbage - Ada Augusta - Lord Byron (Score:2)
Richard Hillesley wrote a great article in issue 36 titled
"The Poetry of Programming".
In it he detailed the connection between E De joncourt,
Charles Babbage, Ada Augusta and Lord Byron.
Truely enlightening.