All users in the pavilion alter both floor and wall information. The floor acts as a path (big data/behaviour) saver in octree form, showing both immediate interaction and overall exhibition history levels. The walls contain information about Tallinn public space in form of text and image galleries, that users can flip using their movement.
The installation is connected in real time to webpage. Big brother. Users activity in the webpage is visible for other webpage users as well as on the floor and the walls of the Estonian exhibition in Venice using raw pixel representation. And vice versa - webpage displays all the users in the pavilion. Interaction is bidirectional (human in pavilion - cursor in webpage), both sides, due to their (in)activity, can affect (accelerate or block) and introduce glitches in other medium.
The system is autonomous and self correcting.
The pavilion is accompanied by a collection of theoretical essays on the digital and the public.