Rage for the machine

Techno group Mobius Dick take on Bill Joy and his apocalyptic view of technology's future in a new tune on MP3.com.

Apr 12, 2000 | "Give Peace a Chance," "We are the World" -- and now "Embrace the Machine." Using computer-altered voices laid over sci-fi sound effects from the 1950s, a new tune by techno group Mobius Dick tries to carry on the tradition of rallying support for a social cause through song. Its social cause? Technology.

The lyrics point to no rage against the machine -- but to a critique of Bill Joy and his fears of a future world overwhelmed by robots and technological innovation. Joy, Sun Microsystems co-founder and chief scientist, has been warning his colleagues that innovations in nanotechnology, robotics and genetics could become as dangerous, if not more so, than the atomic bomb. But Mobius Dick's frontman, who uses the stage name "A.G. Android," thinks Joy is mistaken and paranoid.

"Machines are already your servants," the Nashville musician croons on the track that made it into the top 20 "intelligent techno songs" on MP3.com. "In time they will be your friends, perhaps even your lovers."

"Android" says he whipped the song out immediately after reading Joy's "fear-mongering" essay in the April issue of Wired magazine. "Some kind of change is inevitable and people need to think about what kind," he says. "But inducing fear in others just won't cut it. There are a lot of options out there and we need to see what they are and decide what we want."

Mobius Dick is on a roll with technology commentary in its techno songs. This week it posted "Indistinguishable from Magic," a little ditty proclaiming that technology is magic. This one, too, is a response to Joy's call for halting some technology research until we can better manage the potential dangers. "Android" argues that slowing innovation could delay some of the great benefits new technologies may bring -- and the best way he's found to get his message out is to sing it.

"Of course the future seems scary now," says a computer-altered version of Android's voice in "Embrace the Machine." "But these cheesy science-fiction sound effects were scary to your parents and grandparents, when science and the atom seemed scary and new. Now those old movies seem homey and reassuring. That's how it will be for your children and grandchildren. Cloning seems frightening now. One day it will seem ... quaint."

Recent Stories

Ask the pilot
Flying isn't much fun, but for now people keep doing it anyway. What can the airlines do to keep their customers happy?
Slick John McCain and the offshore oil ruse
The safety and economics of offshore drilling are distractions from the much larger challenges that humanity faces: Climate change and peak oil.
Ask the pilot
The smell of smoke in the cockpit, and it's back to Boston for a planeload of fixated Japanese tourists.
Ask the pilot
When a routine flight is plunged into weirdness after the crew smells smoke, how to deal with a possible emergency -- and a plane full of foreign tourists.
Ask the pilot
Has American stepped over the line with its baggage fee? Plus: What customers seem to value above all in choosing an airline.

Daily Newsletter

Get Salon in your mailbox!