
The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)

In a graph, the number of nodes is called the "order" (in the square example, INI = 4), and the number of edges is called the "size" ( I E I = 4).
Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
Instead we want to suggest that the juncture between sovereignty and networks is the place where the apparent contradictions in…
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Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
The claim establishes one of the central debates of our time: the power relationship between sovereignty and networks.
Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
The network, it appears, has emerged as a dominant form describing the nature of control today, as…
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Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
Connectivity is a threat. The network…
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Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
between the poles of the global and…
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Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
Because its scope is so local, it can only account for the large-scale effects of network conflict by moving from local conflict to local conflict (in effect, moving from node to node). Nietzsche's notes in The Will to Power reveal this atomistic bias. Nietzsche begins from the analysis of "quanta of power" in constant interaction, and th
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They are, we suggest, a medium of contemporary power, and yet no single subject or group…
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Alexander R. Galloway • The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Electronic Mediations)
yes, it is possible to acknowledge the networked characterof power, but at the end of the day, it is the American president who makes decisions concerning war, resources, and trade. While this is undoubtedly true, it can also be argued that the political iconography of the presidency…
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