The stack (philosophy)
The stack is a concept used in science and technology studies, the philosophy of technology and media studies to describe the multiple interconnected layers that computation depends on at a planetary scale. The term was introduced by Benjamin H. Bratton in a 2014 essay and expanded upon in his 2016 book ''The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty''
Stacks and layers
The term draws upon the concept of the stack in programming and the layered architecture of the Internet Protocol. Different scholars have proposed different layers that make up the stack, often depending on their area of interest such as a specific cultural context or a specific technology. The term has also been used to describe a model for ensuring diversity in the digital humanities.Benjamin Bratton's six layers
Bratton's model, as described and illustrated in The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty, consists of six interconnected layers: earth, cloud, city, address, interface and the user—that together form a planetary-scale computational architecture he calls “The Stack.” The model is proposed as an “accidental megastructure” through which computation reshapes political geography and sovereignty. Critics have highlighted the book’s significance for debates in political theory, design, and media studies.- Earth: Computing requires materials mined from the earth and energy that is often generated by oil or coal, producing electronic waste. This layer provides the building blocks of the global digital stack.
- Cloud: Global, usually corporate technology services like Google, which have a type of power Ian Bogost calls a "weird sovereignty".
- City: The lived experience of physically interacting with the global computer network in daily life, often discussed in relation to smart cities.
- Address: Identification of individual users and objects and its use for management and control.
- Interface: How users are connected to computers and systems.
- The user: The actual humans that interact with computers and computational systems.
Layers in "the Chinese stack"
- Gateways: interfaces between systems allowing different types of data to be connected. QR codes are an example.
- Sieves: filters, blacklists, verification systems and regulations that provide access to parts of the internet to some users.
- Domes: enclosures that aim to control parts of the internet by shutting off access to the rest of the stack.
Haroon Sheikh's layers
Governance and power
The layered framework of the stack is used to analyze how power, control and governance are enacted globally through technology. The stack has been used in the fields of economics and business to explain the connections between technology and global capitalism.Bratton discusses how sovereignty changes with global structures like the stack. Namely, there is a shift from territorial or national sovereignty, where a geographically defined nation rules itself, to a system where a global corporation like Google can operate as a global sovereign. This builds on Michel Foucault's theories of governmentality and power, and Bratton's book has been described as possible to read as "a Foucaudian toolkit that lifts out the useful parts".