secure and rule personal expansion through
technology. We will consider in a later chapter the evolutionary
characteristics that this leap-frogging of technology represents, but we can
introduce the concept here.
The evolutionary
principles that one can see within religious organizations are often found
within business infrastructures as well. There are well-defined life cycles
within the business community in general, and within its technological
components specifically, that often manifest themselves through the widespread
adoption of new technologies in favor of incremental evolution of older
technologies. If a technological mutation falls on particularly fertile
grounds, perhaps from a sociological point of view, the results can be a very
strong reinforcement of the specific mutation through group selection
mechanisms. We consider this model as particularly appropriate for viewing
private computing as a technological mutation with its acceptance in China.
Found within the
archeological record of China are early examples of abstractions of
the human identity; visualizations of that aspect of the human condition that
attempts to distinguish us from the other animals and portray us as permanent,
supernatural beings in our own right. Jinsha village is a suburb of the capital
city of Sichuan Province. In 2001, ruins were discovered that
dated back 3,000 years. Unearthed from the ruins were artifacts covering a wide
range of media as well as very diverse segments of the society of ancient China. The artifacts were replete with intricate
detail and made use of materials and art-form expressions that are relevant
even in today’s world. They represent to us the fact that human expression has
evolved less over the last few thousand years than has the technology that we
can use to extend that expression.
The use of
individual devices in China cuts across all aspects of Chinese
society, from cultural to economic to political. In the Special Administrative
Regions (SARs) of the former British colony of Hong Kong and the former Portuguese colony of Macau, chip cards have been strongly adopted
in two distinct realms. Found in the financial venue, the Octopus Card in Hong Kong is a contactless card, i.e. a card
communicating with radio waves, which is used as a bearer’s electronic purse.
At specific kiosks throughout the city cash can be loaded onto the card. The
card can then be used for a wide variety of cash-oriented transactions, ranging
from paying for a subway or train ride to purchasing groceries at a convenience
food market. The transactions are fast, which benefits the consumer and they
are cashless, which benefits the vendor.
On the legal
front, electronic identity cards are being introduced to speed the movement of
people between the special administration regions and mainland China. Effecting the philosophy of “one
country, two systems,” the legal framework of mainland China is significantly different from that in
the Special Administration Regions. As a consequence, the movement of citizens
between the regions is monitored and controlled, much as the movement of people
among different sovereign states is monitored and controlled throughout the
rest of the world. Electronic identity cards are being used in large-scale
pilot programs to facilitate the movement across borders. This is quite
analogous to the extension of Machine-Readable
Travel Documents (MRTD) used by member countries of the Visa Waiver Program, of which the United States is a prime mover. These electronic
credentials, when fully deployed, offer the possibility to speed travelers
through passport checkpoints with enhanced identity authentication and yet
ostensibly minimal inconvenience to the traveler. The goal, of course being
enhanced authentication of the identities of the travelers for the states
involved.
If China represents the opportunities of the
marketplace, contributions to the fountain of technological innovation come
from many societies, both cultural and economic. While cellular telephony
derived its early pilot deployments within the United States, it was really the
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