Techsploitation
By Annalee Newitz
HaX0r
pr0n
A FEW WEEKS ago a little town in southern Germany called Schwäbisch
Hall adopted the open-source operating system Linux for its government
computers. To ease the transition to the new software, city council
member Horst Bräuner asked a woman to do a technical demo of Linux
for his fellow civil servants. Silicon.com reports that Bräuner
described his decision at the "Open Source for Local Government"
conference in London, explaining, "We found that no man would say
that he couldn't use his PC now that everyone knew a woman could do
it."
Now there's a story with more than one possible pedagogical use, if
I do say so myself. First we learn that Linux is good for government
computers, which is obvious. It's free and easy to use and far more
secure than Windows, which is what Schwäbisch Hall used before.
But in the process of discovering the wonderfulness of Linux, we also
learn that the barometer by which we measure the easiness of a piece
of software is whether women can use it. It's good to know that as we
advance technologically, we nevertheless remain trapped in prehistory
when it comes to gender relations.
Trapped as we are in this interstitial moment between cave-dwelling
and colonizing space, it's sometimes hard to tell the difference between
piggery and subversion. Take, for example, an instructional video series
called HaXXXor (www.haxxxor.com) produced by a bunch of nutty Arizona
hackers who have excellent taste in both erotica and port scanners.
In a series of vignettes, we receive lessons in computer network security
from comely women who look sort of like a cross between gothy-punk Suicide
Girls and hot science fiction nerds. Each one does a strip tease while
moaning things like "Oh, scan my ports, baby." My favorite
girl plays with a dildo and manages to have an orgasm while crying out,
"I love penetration testing!"
Aaron, one of the film's producers, says the movie was "really
a joke," though inevitably it taught him something serious. "It's
amazing how quickly someone can go from talking about being on the cutting
edge, and fighting for freedom and liberty ... to becoming a total right-wing,
reactionary, censorship wacko, if naked girls are involved." He's
hoping to disturb more reactionaries with HaXXXor Vol. 2, called Fear
of an 8-Bit Planet.
What pricked my conscience when I watched HaXXXor Vol. 1 was the fact
that the girls, while obviously enjoying themselves, also just as obviously
weren't hackers. How could they really be getting off on public key
encryption when it was so clear they were reading their lines off the
Mac laptop that starred in nearly every scene? There were even some
outtakes included in which one of the girls said, "I have no idea
what I'm talking about, but it gets me hot." What makes this DVD
different from a clueless German bureaucrat using a lady in his Linux
demo to prove it's so easy even a woman can do it?
The difference is as simple as audience. Who is HaXXXor aimed at? Hackers.
These aren't guys who have to be convinced computers are fun, easy,
and sexy; they already know it. Adding hot girls to the mix simply literalizes
a fantasy that hackers already have about their computers not
that they are so simple to use that even girls can do it, but that hacking
is as arousing as porn. Nevertheless, HaXXXor reminds us forcefully
that in the world of high tech, even at its coolest and most transgressive,
the assumption is that we're all straight guys. Where were the hot boys
moaning and telling us in gravelly voices about buffer overflow exploits?
Remember, porn is so easy that even gay men and straight women can
use it!
Proof positive that this is the case comes to us from a blog entry
posted by Jane a couple of years ago on Game Girl Advance (www.gamegirladvance.com).
I accidentally discovered it while Googling on "video games and
vibrator," which tells you something about how I use Google. Jane
and her friend Justin were in Japan and discovered a lovely PlayStation
game (available only in Japan, sadly) called Rez. Nothing special there:
just a music shooting game she dubs "Tron on ecstasy."
The cool part is that Rez came with something called a "trance
vibrator" that they discovered throbs in time with the techno music
in the game. As they get to higher and higher levels, Jane uses the
unusual component in exactly the way one would expect a vibrator to
be used, and she reports experiencing exceptional bliss while feeling
the vibrations and allowing the colorful game to hypnotize her into
a technogasmic state.
After some titillating descriptions, Jane finally asks, "Don't
you think this trance vibrator extension is ... so a girl gamer can
get off while she's playing the game?"
Yes. It's that easy.
Annalee Newitz (pr0n@techsploitation.com)
is a surly media nerd who prefers her feminist analysis with some sex,
thank you. Her column also appears in Metro, Silicon Valley's weekly
newspaper.