Unsecurities Lab
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Symposium
Unsecurities Lab 1
The Unsecurities Lab is an interdisciplinary platform that brings together artists, security specialists, policymakers, and researchers to rethink cyber-physical security, resilience, and adaptation. It begins with the recognition that security is not only about protection and control, but also about how we perceive and respond to complex, entangled systems. Cultural innovation plays a critical role in shaping these perceptions, providing new ways to approach security as an evolving, systemic challenge rather than a fixed technical problem.
Cycle 1 of the Unsecurities Lab was designed to simulate an immersive security incident rooted in deep time and deep space—specifically the deep sea as a metaphor for unknown systems and threat detection failure.
By engaging two immersive artworks set in submarine environments, we asked: what happens when interdisciplinary experts are immersed in environments they cannot categorise or control? The workshop aimed to surface how sensory complexity and ecological unfamiliarity overwhelm existing frameworks of analysis and response, and whether new, cross-disciplinary heuristics for navigating systemic instability could be found in those breakdowns.
Charybdis (Session 1) presented an AI-generated horror ecology populated by speculative sea creatures, cellular diagrams, and deep-sea mining footage. Participants responded to it as a live "incident" using adapted cybersecurity protocols, revealing breakdowns in disciplinary language and interpretive habit.
Abiogenesis (Session 2) portrayed four posthuman marine intelligences—octopus, sponge, jellyfish, plankton—as avatars of alternative security logics. Groups developed “stabilisation protocols” from the perspective of these entities, producing frameworks based on latency, resonance, opacity, and collective sensing.
The deep sea functioned as a space of cognitive saturation, distributed agency, and epistemological vulnerability. One participant remarked, “We’re not analysing a threat—we’re being analysed by it.” Another noted, “It felt like an extinction event happening in real time.”
The accompanying report features live transcript excerpts, speculative protocol designs, and thematic illustrations that document how disciplinary knowledge was unsettled and recomposed through immersion. It captures moments of rupture in language and interpretation, treating these as signals of emerging cross-field heuristics for navigating instability.
Bio on Joey Holder:
Joey Holder is a UK-based artist working with CGI, scientific imaging, and speculative fiction to simulate posthuman ecosystems and distributed intelligence. Her work draws heavily on deep-sea biology and emergent life systems, often created in collaboration with researchers across marine science, biotechnology, and AI. She is currently pursuing PhD research on “open worlding,” exploring how artworks can act as shared speculative environments for collaborative thought.
List of Attendees:
Sarah Chan – Neuroscience
Bill Oxbury – Intelligence & Defence
Joe Bourne – Defence, Turing Institute
Andrew Dwyer – Cybersecurity
Daniel Prince – Cybersecurity / Incident Analysis
Niki Panteli – Information Systems
Sally Keith – Marine Biology
Jakob Vinter – Cellular Biology
Alexandre Benedetto – Evolutionary Biology
Craig Jones – Cybersecurity Management
Basil Germond – Political Theory / Maritime Security
Hassan Raza – AI & Data Science
Kwasu Tembo – Speculative Philosophy
Leon Cruickshank – Strategic Design
Jamie Jenkinson – Artist / Digital Curation
Tadeo Lopez-Sendon – Curator, AND Festival
Title | Unsecurities Lab |
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Date | 27/03/25 → … |
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Website | |
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Location | Data Immersion Suite, Lancaster University |
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City | Lancaster |
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Country/Territory | United Kingdom |
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Degree of recognition | National event |
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