Abstract

21st-century media praxis is increasingly characterised by the emerging “cultural principle”, “condition” or “culture of immediacy”. The processes summarised under the term “immediation” suggest the closure of the spatio-temporal “gap” between the agencies and the media involved, resulting in a complex interplay of social, security, scientific and economic issues. The growing interest in immediation confirms its status as a new but as – yet – underestimated paradigm for the arts, sciences and humanities which calls for a future-focused inquiry into the cultures of immediacy. However, in academic and popular discourse, the focus is on documenting either (societal) challenges or (technical) solutions. This paper seeks to address this imbalance by responding to the urgent need for a systematic understanding of the main ways in which immediation appears: firstly, today’s worldwide closed-circuit arrangements; and secondly, live-streaming practices. It proposes an innovative combination of interdisciplinary perspectives and methods to discuss the options available to increase and enrich our understanding of immediation’s potential for boosting an immense variety of societal applications. Such future-focused research into liveness and immediacy promises, in particular, to shed light onto, firstly, the concrete impacts of creative closed-circuit arrangements on the emerging “domestication” of live streaming and, secondly, the actual measures that must be taken within emerging live streaming research to assess state-of-the-art R&D in the near future. These issues are discussed for the purpose of opening up new routes towards future solutions for a sovereign and innovative usage of cultural techniques of immediation in creative and everyday media praxis.

Highlights

  • Universitat Oberta de Catalunya A UOC scientific e-journal artnodes http://artnodes.uoc.edu of creative closed-circuit arrangements on the emerging “domestication” of live streaming and, secondly, the actual measures that must be taken within emerging live streaming research to assess state-of-the-art R&D in the near future

  • The systematic categorisation of CCs by most recent examples and general development, remains an important task, the relevance of which cannot be overemphasised: the ongoing quantitative updates show that more than 50% of current Internet data traffic stems from the use of video while total digital video usage exceeded 91 % of global consumer data traffic in 2014; Internet video alone accounted for 57 % of all consumer Internet traffic in 2014 (Kaskade 2014)

  • Strategically-posted CCTV cameras (CCTV is a television transmission system in which live or pre-recorded signals are sent as a closed loop to a group of receivers), camcorders and action camcorders (GoPro, etc.), webcams and investigador principal (IP) (Internet protocol) cameras are becoming prevalent means of media coverage: while, in 2002, about 25 million CCTV cameras were in operation worldwide, there were almost 10 times more in 2014, with estimated growth of around 14 % from 2013–2017.26

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Summary

Introduction

Universitat Oberta de Catalunya A UOC scientific e-journal artnodes http://artnodes.uoc.edu of creative closed-circuit arrangements on the emerging “domestication” of live streaming and, secondly, the actual measures that must be taken within emerging live streaming research to assess state-of-the-art R&D in the near future. These issues are discussed for the purpose of opening up new routes towards future solutions for a sovereign and innovative usage of cultural techniques of immediation in creative and everyday media praxis. Se entiende que las cuestiones tratadas abrirán nuevos caminos para soluciones futuras encaminadas a un uso soberano e innovador de las técnicas culturales de la inmediación en la práctica de los medios creativos y cotidianos

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