Article 1TZF3 A Prehistory of the Cloud by Tung-Hui Hu review – the reality behind virtual storage

A Prehistory of the Cloud by Tung-Hui Hu review – the reality behind virtual storage

by
PD Smith
from Technology | The Guardian on (#1TZF3)

From old railway tracks repurposed as routes for fibre-optic cables to cold war bunkers retrofitted to store data, Hu shows that the intangible cloud has a solid infrastructure

The cloud is "a system of networks that pools computing power". You may think of it as a mute and ethereal concept but for Tung-Hui Hu it is "both an idea and a physical and material object". His slim yet wide-ranging study attempts to reify and historicise a concept that has "become a potent metaphor for the way contemporary society organizes and understands itself". The idea dates back to a 1922 design for predicting weather using a network of human "computers", or mathematicians, connected via telegraph. From the 19th-century train tracks repurposed as routes for fibre-optic cables and the cold war bunkers retrofitted to store data, Hu shows that the intangible cloud has a solid and polluting infrastructure. He also reveals the human costs, such as the poorly paid foreign workers screening content for Silicon Valley companies, and explores the monetisation of the user: "the cloud is a subtle weapon that translates the body into usable information." Witty, sharp and theoretically aware, Hu deconstructs this much-discussed but poorly understood "cultural fantasy".

" A Prehistory of the Cloud is published by MIT

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