Survival of the cryptic: Tracing technological imaginaries across ideologies, infrastructures, and community practices

Zotero / D&S Group / Top-Level Items 2024-12-10

Item Type Journal Article Author Sarah Myers West URL https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444820983017 Volume 24 Issue 8 Pages 1891-1911 Publication New Media & Society ISSN 1461-4448 Date 2022-08-01 Extra Publisher: SAGE Publications DOI 10.1177/1461444820983017 Accessed 2024-12-09 17:34:35 Library Catalog SAGE Journals Language en Abstract This article explores an inflection point for a community of cryptography advocates as they grappled with a series of cascading failures. Drawing on 3 years of ethnographic observation and interviews at conferences devoted to building privacy systems, I consider how a determinist conception of encryption technologies inhibited the widespread adoption of privacy technologies. I develop the frame of “survival of the cryptic” to call attention to the way this conception fails to acknowledge how power shapes the conditions of surveillance: that race and racism, gender and misogyny affect not only who is most impacted by surveillance but also how the encryption technologies developed to inhibit surveillance were designed—and, as importantly, who they were designed for. I conclude by offering a new imaginary for encryption that draws on queer, black and feminist thought by centering the need to create safe and autonomous spaces for collective survival under conditions of mass surveillance. Short Title Survival of the cryptic