Los Angeles, 2026
Ted got busted because we do graffiti. Losing Ted was a big setback, as Ted was the only guy in our gang who knew how to steal aerosol spray cans. As potent instruments of teenage social networking, aerosol spray cans have âhigh abuse potentialâ. So spray cans are among the many things us teenagers canât buy, like handguns, birth control, alcohol, cigarettes and music with curse words.
I tried hard to buy us another spray can. Iâm a street poet, so really, I tried. I walked up to the mall-store register, disguised in my Dadâs business jacket, with cash in hand. Theyâre cheap, aerosol spray cans. Beautiful colours of paint, just screaming to get sprayed someplace public where everybody has to see whatâs on our minds. The store wouldnât sell me the can. The e-commerce system simply would not allow that transaction. The screen just went gray and stayed gray.
That creepy âdifferential permissioningâ sure saves a lot of trouble for grown-ups. Increasing chunks of the world are just⊠magically off limits. Itâs a weird new regime where every mall and every school and every bus and train and jet is tagged and tracked and ambient and pervasive and ubiquitous and geolocative⊠Jesus, I love those words⊠Where was I?
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Right. We teenagers have to live in âcontrolled spacesâ. Radio-frequency ID tags, real-time locative systems, global positioning systems, smart doorways, security videocams. They âprotectâ us kids, from imaginary satanic drug dealer terrorist mafia predators. Weâre âsecuredâ. Weâre juvenile delinquents with always-on cellphone nannies in our pockets. Thereâs no way to turn them off. The internet was designed without an off-switch.
So my pal Ted, who stupidly loved to tag his own name on the walls, got sent to reform school, where the security is insanely great. Me, I had a much higher grade-point average than Ted, but with no handy Ted to steal spray cans, the words of the prophet have vanished from the subway walls. So much for my campaign to cover the town with graffiti street-stencils of my favourite teen pop stars: George Orwell and Aldous Huxley.
And Shakespeare. I used to hate Shakespeare, because the teachers would park us in front of the webcam terminals, turn on the Shakespeare lessons and leave the building. But then, somehow, they showed us Macbeth, a play which actually MEANS something to us. Grown-ups donât understand that (or they wouldnât be teaching it) but Macbeth is the true authentic story of my generation. This is Macbethâs world, and us teenagers just live in it. Dig this: those âThree Weird Sistersâ, who mysteriously know everything? They can foretell anything, instantly, like Google? Plus, the witches make it all sound really great â only, in real life, it totally sucks? Well, those âThree Weird Sistersâ are the âInternet of Thingsâ, theyâre âUbiquitous Computationâ, theyâre âAmbient Findabilityâ. The truth is written all over the page (or the screen â my school canât afford to give us any âpagesâ). Just read that awesome part where theyâre boiling pseudocode in their witch-cauldron! They talk like web designers!
âThe words of the prophet have vanished from the subway wallsâ
Macbeth stumbles around seeing ghosts and virtual-reality daggers. That sure makes sense. Every day of my life, I see people with cellphones yelling eerie gibberish in public. The world of Macbeth is totally haunted and paranoid! You canât get one minuteâs privacy, even inside your own bed!
So, I did my class report about Macbeth, and every kid in my English class instantly agreed with me. Iâm not the most popular guy in school, but they started CHEERING me. And Debbie, this wacky Goth chick in my class who identifies with Lady Macbeth⊠After my class report, Debbie sleep-walked out of the classroom and pretended to hang herself! Of course the teen-suicide subroutines in the school jumped onto Debbie immediately. Debbie broke the software rules, so Debbie is toast, just like Ted.
My Dad â heâs still alive, apparently â he sent me an email from China and said I ought to ârecruitâ Debbie into my âsocial group dynamics of online identity productionâ. My Dad always talks like that. I havenât seen Dad face-to-face in six years. Look: I am a 17-year-old male, okay? I donât want to send Debbie any hotlinks and digital video. I want to take Debbie out! Maybe we could take some clothes off! But there isnât any âoutâ for me and Debbie. There isnât any âoffâ, either.
Okay, I admit it: Debbie is insane. The fact that Debbie really likes me, that just proves it. Debbie ACCEPTS this sick state of reality. She EMBRACES it. We are doomed.
Imagine that Debbie and me somehow go out together. We want to network with our peer group, teenager-wise. I need to figure out whatâs hip and with-it and rebellious, and Debbie needs to know what the other cyber-Goth chicks are wearing. Is that okay? No!
Itâs not that we canât do it: itâs that all our social relations have been reified with a clunky intensity. Theyâre digitized! And the networking hardware and software that pervasively surround us are built and owned by evil, old, rich corporate people! Social-networking systems arenât teenagers! These machines are METHODICALLY KILLING OUR SOULS! If you donât count wall-graffiti (good old spray paint), we have no means to spontaneously express ourselves. We canât âfind ourselvesâ â the marketâs already found us and filled us with map pins.
At our local mall, events-management sub-engines emit floods of locative data. So if Debbie and me sneak in there, looking for some private place to get horizontal, all the vidcams swivel our way. Then a rent-a-cop shows up. What next? Should we go to Loversâ Lane? There arenât any! They eliminated all those! They were tracked down with satellites and abolished with Google Maps.
Okay, sure: I know I sound pretty depressed. Us teenage poets depress easily. You know what they tell me whenever I rant like this? âGet a hobby.â Play imaginary fantasy computer games! That is allowed me! Wow, thanks! When she nursed me as a baby, my Mom dropped me right on my head to play Wonder-World of Witchcraft. I sure know where that story goes. If âreligion is the opiate of the peopleâ, then immersive multiplayer 3D virtual worlds are hard-core Afghani heroin. My Mom will never make it back into the labor force: Momâs way too busy building herself up to 146th-level SuperMasonic Tolkien-Fantasy Ultra-Elf Queen. Like that helps! Look, I can show you Momâs gaming environment, right on the screen here. My Momâs a Welfare Elf Queen (CR) (system crash) (hard reboot)
Debbie: why do you access me, when you know that makes things hard for me? Why do you tag, and link to me? Why do you telephone? And why, why, why do you write me silly notes on paper? I am so sick of you, Debbie. Why, why do you hack me? It is just to see the things that you know I am writing about youâŠ
Debbie, you believe in us. You think we are the future.
I am so miserably happy, just now.