This is part of a series of articles about creative online subversion, #HackYourFuture, on Dazed Digital. A different guest-editor will discuss a different discipline everyday. This is part of online art organisation Rhizome's Heather Corcoran's comment on artists, hacking and action. As part of today's #HackYourFuture Art Takeover Rhizome's Heather Corcoran selected the artist Jonas Lund's downloadable crowd-reactive project:

We See In Every Direction is a new project from Swedish net artist Jonas Lund based in Amsterdam. Playful and interactive, the software-based artwork allows its users to surf the internet together in one browser, fighting for control of directional responsibility, much like the TV remote. With no limit as to number of participants, users are only visible to the others by their cursors flitting like flies across the window.

The result is a chaotic web experience, as participants constantly change URLs, talk to each other in search bars and frantically try to click on things before the browser is pulled somewhere new. To experience it is like being at a party where everybody talks over each other, yet something is understood in the noise.

We See In Every Direction, like a lot of Lund's work, attempts to create a collaborative experience on the internet. The first critical review of the artwork was collectively written using the programme itself. In the days after launching, users discussed the merits of the work within the address and search bars. It was a fitting place for discourse.