One man’s trash is another man’s treasure

Photo: Tanja Kanazir / Drugo more (Flickr gallery)

What happens to our data when we send a computer, an hard disk or any kind of other storage device to the garbage? Not everybody knows that the only way to prevent access to an – even damaged and inaccessible for us – digital storage device is to physically destroy it, using a specific procedure. And that around the giant digital waste dumpsters located in third world countries flourishes an economy based not only on the recycling of hardwares and precious metals, but also on data recovery and reuse.

Forensic Fantasies (2016) is a series of three artworks developed by KairUs (Linda Kronman and Andreas Zingerle) after an artist in residence program in Ghana, and dealing with data breaches of private information. In the artworks, KairUs use data that was recovered from hard-drives dumped in Agbogbloshie, Ghana and collected after a process of field research. Reports suggest that at this e-waste dump, criminals extract data from hard-drives to demand payments from their pre-owners or to resell the information.
   
The exhibition will open in Filodrammatica Gallery (Korzo 28/1, Rijeka) on Thursday, 12th April, 2018 at 8 pm. Admission is free!

   

More specifically, Not a Blackmail examines the possibility to blackmail a prior owner of a hard-drive. In order to do it, it’s crucial to be able to contact the person to express one’s demands. From one hard-drive KairUs found out who it had belonged to, further through social media platforms, they found his current employer and other contact details; yet, rather than blackmailing the person, they grew curious if they could get in contact with him/her. Therefore the artwork consists of one ready to be posted package, containing the recovered data and a letter to the pre-owner.

Identity Theft focuses on the phenomena of romance scamming. Scammers conduct identity theft by copying bulks of images of attractive people to create fraudulent profiles on social media platforms or dating channels. The scammers pose to be in love with their victim and after gaining their trust they lure them to give gifts and money, always hiding behind their false identity. One of the hard-drives contained several images of attractive ladies, probably copied to this hard-drive to create and sustain fraudulent profiles. In the artwork, 18 of the fraudulent online profiles using the same images found on the hard-drive are combined with “Nollywood” – mainly Nigerian and Ghanaian low-budget films – found footage clips that thematize the topic of romance scams.

Forensic Fantasies
Photo: Tanja Kanazir / Drugo more

Finally, Found Footage Stalkers takes a closer look at images found on one of the hard-drives. Scanning through the private photos enables very personal insights into the life and habits of the pre-owners of this hard-drive. You can follow them to parties with friends, trips to amusement parks and Christmas celebrations with the family. By presenting the photos in an album, KairUS updates the traditional practice of found footage, based on gathering material from thrift shops, yard sales and flea markets for remixing and creating new artworks.


 
The ‘Forensic fantasies’ trilogy was created at the ‘Behind the Smart World’ research lab – a project by KairUs art -collective (Linda Kronman & Andreas Zingerle) in cooperation with servus.at, 2014-2016 in Linz/Austria.


The ongoing research is supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea  No. NRF 2017S1A2A2041837. The project is supported by Department of Media and Communication Arts at Sol International School of Woosong University , Daejeon, Republic of Korea.


KairUs is a collective of two artists Linda Kronman (Finland) and Andreas Zingerle (Austria). Their work focuses on human computer and computer mediated human-human interaction. Since 2010 they have worked with the thematic of internet fraud and online scams, constantly shifting their focus and therefore approaching the theme from a number of perspectives such as data security, data breaches, ethics of vigilante communities, narratives of scam e-mails and scam & technologies. They adopt methodologies, used by anthropologists and sociologist, therefore their artworks are often informed by archival research, content analysis, participation observations and field research. Besides the artworks they publish academic research papers related to their projects and contextualize their research topics to wider discourses like data privacy, activism and hacking culture, and disruptive art practices. Their current research topics focus on vulnerabilities of Internet of Things and Smart Cities. The project is supported by Department of Media and Communication Arts at Sol International School of Woosong University, Daejeon, Republic of Korea trough a grant by National Research Foundation of Korea. http://www.kairus.org
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