{"title":"家用无人机:如何军事化与环始终家用相机的智能家居","authors":"","doi":"10.28968/cftt.v9i1.38355","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Amazon launched the Ring Always Home Camera with a promotional video featuring the mobile security drone flying into action to stop a home intruder. The addition of the domestic security drone into the housewife’s arsenal expands the everyday militarism of security subjectivity, even as it imagines a “better” domestic laborer—one trained not only to be watchful but also to patrol the home and protect property. The Ring Always Home Camera suggests that to be a good securitized citizen is to make the home transparent, not only to the optical eye of the drone’s camera but also to its machine vision navigation apparatus. Networked to Ring’s home security system, the depiction of the appliance in the video forwards a new corporate vision of domestic security—one that introduces networked aeriality, as well as militarized modes of perceiving and knowing into domestic space.\nThis essay is a part of the Roundtable called “The Housewife’s Secret Arsenal” (henceforth HSA); a collection of eight object-oriented engagements focusing on particular material instantiations of domesticated war. The title of this roundtable is deliberately tongue-in-cheek reminding readers of the many ways that militarisms can be invisible to their users yet persistent in the form of mundane household items that aid in the labor of homemaking. Juxtaposing the deliberately stereotyped “housewife” with the theater of war raises questions about the quiet migration of these objects and technologies from battlefield to kitchen, or bathroom, or garden. Gathered together as an “arsenal,” their uncanny proximity to one another becomes a key critical tool in asking how war comes to find itself at home in our lives.","PeriodicalId":316008,"journal":{"name":"Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience","volume":"16 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Home Drone: How to Militarize the Smart Home with the Ring Always Home Camera\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.28968/cftt.v9i1.38355\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Amazon launched the Ring Always Home Camera with a promotional video featuring the mobile security drone flying into action to stop a home intruder. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
亚马逊推出了一款名为Ring Always Home Camera的手机,并发布了一段宣传视频,视频中展示了这款移动安全无人机飞起来阻止入侵者的画面。家庭安全无人机加入家庭主妇的武器库,扩大了安全主观性的日常军国主义,即使它想象了一个“更好的”家庭劳工——一个不仅要警惕,还要在家里巡逻和保护财产的人。“Ring Always Home Camera”告诉我们,要想成为一个安全的好公民,就要让家里变得透明,不仅对无人机摄像头的光学眼睛透明,对它的机器视觉导航设备也透明。与Ring的家庭安全系统联网,视频中对家电的描述提出了一种新的家庭安全企业愿景——将网络化的空中空间以及军事化的感知和认知模式引入家庭空间。这篇文章是圆桌会议“家庭主妇的秘密军火库”(以下简称HSA)的一部分;八个面向对象的交战的集合,集中于驯化战争的特定物质实例。这个圆桌会议的标题故意半开玩笑地提醒读者,军国主义可以在许多方面对他们的用户来说是不可见的,但却以帮助家务劳动的日常家居用品的形式持续存在。将刻意塑造的“家庭主妇”与战场并置,引发了人们对这些物品和技术从战场到厨房、浴室或花园的悄然迁移的质疑。作为“武器库”聚集在一起,他们彼此之间不可思议的接近成为一个关键的工具,用来询问战争如何在我们的生活中找到自己的家。
Home Drone: How to Militarize the Smart Home with the Ring Always Home Camera
Amazon launched the Ring Always Home Camera with a promotional video featuring the mobile security drone flying into action to stop a home intruder. The addition of the domestic security drone into the housewife’s arsenal expands the everyday militarism of security subjectivity, even as it imagines a “better” domestic laborer—one trained not only to be watchful but also to patrol the home and protect property. The Ring Always Home Camera suggests that to be a good securitized citizen is to make the home transparent, not only to the optical eye of the drone’s camera but also to its machine vision navigation apparatus. Networked to Ring’s home security system, the depiction of the appliance in the video forwards a new corporate vision of domestic security—one that introduces networked aeriality, as well as militarized modes of perceiving and knowing into domestic space.
This essay is a part of the Roundtable called “The Housewife’s Secret Arsenal” (henceforth HSA); a collection of eight object-oriented engagements focusing on particular material instantiations of domesticated war. The title of this roundtable is deliberately tongue-in-cheek reminding readers of the many ways that militarisms can be invisible to their users yet persistent in the form of mundane household items that aid in the labor of homemaking. Juxtaposing the deliberately stereotyped “housewife” with the theater of war raises questions about the quiet migration of these objects and technologies from battlefield to kitchen, or bathroom, or garden. Gathered together as an “arsenal,” their uncanny proximity to one another becomes a key critical tool in asking how war comes to find itself at home in our lives.