In the past few months I have so enjoyed getting to know complete strangers, with whom I find I have a great deal in common. This is the essence of community.
And it is because of the internet.
Bill Moyers writes eloquently about this troubling effort to turn the internet into Fiefdoms, turning it over to business interests who'd like to hack it into profit centers and revenue streams like everything else in the world. Click on the title of this post to link to the essay at tompaine.com, or read below:
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Against An Imperial Internet
Bill Moyers and Scott Fogdall
October 16, 2006
Bill Moyers is host of “The Net At Risk,” a documentary special airing Wednesday, October 18 at 9 p.m. on PBS (check local listings). Scott Fogdall is with Films Media Group. Visit www.pbs.org/moyers.
It was said that all roads led to Rome. However exaggerated, the image is imprinted in our imagination, reminding us of the relentless ingenuity of the ancient Romans and their will to control an empire.
For centuries Roman highways linked far-flung provinces with a centralized web of power. The might of the imperial legions was for naught without the means to transport them. The flow of trade—the bloodstream of the empire’s wealth—also depended on the integrity of the roadways. And because Roman citizens could pass everywhere, more or less unfettered on their travels, ideas and cultural elements circulated with the same fluidity as commerce.
Like the Romans, we Americans have used our technology to build a sprawling infrastructure of ports, railroads and interstates which serves the strength of our economy and the mobility of our society. Yet as significant as these have been, they pale beside the potential of the Internet. Almost overnight, it has made sending and receiving information easier than ever. It has opened a vast new marketplace of ideas, and it is transforming commerce and culture.
It may also revitalize democracy.
“Wait a minute!” you say. “You can’t compare the Internet to the Roman empire. There’s no electronic Caesar, no center, controlling how the World Wide Web is used.”
Right you are—so far. The Internet is revolutionary because it is the most democratic of media. All you need to join the revolution is a computer and a connection. We don’t just watch; we participate, collaborate and create. Unlike television, radio and cable, whose hirelings create content aimed at us for their own reasons, with the Internet every citizen is potentially a producer. The conversation of democracy belongs to us.
That wide-open access is the founding principle of the Internet, but it may be slipping through our fingers. How ironic if it should pass irretrievably into history here, at the very dawn of the Internet Age.
The Internet has become the foremost testing ground where the forces of innovation, corporate power, the public interest and government regulation converge. Already, the notion of a level playing field—what’s called network neutrality—is under siege by powerful forces trying to tilt the field to their advantage. The Bush majority on the FCC has bowed to the interests of the big cable and telephone companies to strip away, or undo, the Internet’s basic DNA of openness and non-discrimination. When some members of Congress set out to restore network neutrality, they were thwarted by the industry’s high spending lobbyists. This happened according to the standard practices of a rented Congress—with little public awareness and scarce attention from the press. There had been a similar blackout 10 years ago, when, in the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Congress carved up our media landscape. They drove a dagger in the heart of radio, triggered a wave of consolidation that let the big media companies get bigger, and gave away to rich corporations—for free—public airwaves worth billions.
This time, they couldn’t keep secret what they were doing. Word got around that without public participation these changes could lead to unsettling phenomenon—the rise of digital empires that limit, or even destroy, the capabilities of small Internet users. Organizations across the political spectrum—from the Christian Coalition to MoveOn.org —rallied in protest, flooding Congress with more than a million letters and petitions to restore network neutrality. Enough politicians have responded to keep the outcome in play.
At the core this is a struggle about the role and dimensions of human freedom and free speech. But it is also a contemporary clash of a centuries-old debate over free-market economics and governmental regulation, one that finds Adam Smith invoked both by advocates for government action to protect the average online wayfarer and by opponents of any regulation at all.
In The Wealth of Nations, Smith argued that only the unfettered dealings of merchants and customers could ensure economic prosperity. But he also warned against the formation of monopolies—mighty behemoths that face little or no competition. Our history brims with his legacy. Consider the explosion of industry and the reign of the robber barons during the first Gilded Age in the last decades of the 19th century. Settlements and cities began to fill the continent, spirited by a crucial technological advance: the railroad. As railroad companies sprang up, they merged into monopolies. Merchants and farmers were often charged outlandish freight prices—until the 1870s, when the Granger Laws and other forms of public regulation provided some protection to customers.
At about the same time, chemist Samuel Andrews—inventor of a new method for refining oil into kerosene—partnered with John D. Rockefeller to create the Standard Oil Company. By century’s end Standard Oil had forged a monopoly, controlling a network of pipelines and railways that spanned the country. Competition became practically impossible as the mammoth company manipulated prices and crushed rival after hapless rival. Only with the passage of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act in 1890 did the public have hope of recourse against the overwhelming might of concentrated economic and political power. But, less than a century later a relative handful of large companies would assemble monopolies over broadcasting, newspapers, cable and even the operating system of computers, and their rule would go essentially unchallenged by the U.S. government.
Now we have an Internet infrastructure that is rapidly evolving, in more ways than one. As often occurred on Rome’s ancient highways, cyber-sojourners could soon find themselves paying up in order to travel freely. Our new digital monopolists want to use their new power to reverse the way the Internet now works for us: allowing those with the largest bankrolls to route their content on fast lanes, while placing others in a congested thoroughfare. If they succeed in taking a medium that has an essential democratic nature and monetizing every aspect of it, America will divide further between the rich and poor and between those who have access to knowledge and those who do not.
The companies point out that there have been few Internet neutrality violations. Don’t mess with something that’s been working for everyone, they say; don’t add safeguards when none have so far been needed. But the emerging generation, which will inherit the results of this Washington battle, gets it. Writing in The Yale Daily News, Dariush Nothaft, a college junior, after hearing with respect the industry’s case, argues that:
Nevertheless, the Internet’s power as a social force counters these arguments….A non-neutral Internet would discourage competition, thereby costing consumers money and diminishing the benefits of lower subscription prices for Internet access. More importantly, people today pay for Internet access with the understanding that they are accessing a wide, level field of sites where only their preferences will guide them. Non-neutrality changes the very essence of the Internet, thereby making the product provided to users less valuable.
So the Internet is reaching a crucial crossroads in its astonishing evolution. Will we shape it to enlarge democracy in the digital era? Will we assure that commerce is not its only contribution to the American experience?
The monopolists tell us not to worry: They will take care of us, and see to it that the public interest is honored and democracy served by this most remarkable of technologies.
They said the same thing about radio.
And about television.
And about cable.
Will future historians speak of an Internet Golden Age that ended when the 21st century began?
Say What You Want To Say
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I have often been privy to much different conversations now versus several
years ago. Several of you have written that people are emboldened to say
what th...
1 week ago
2 comments:
Sam,
I have the impression that most people don't really understand how far reaching this threat is. It is not simply a freedom of speech issue (although that alone would be enough of a threat to make one quite scared.) A huge amount of research benefiting society technologically, scientifically (including medically), and socially has become possible only because of a free internet.
This dependence upon a free internet is the case not only in research institutions but also in agencies performing public services. I teach a course in European Union immigration legislation, where the internet allows me to track all developments not only on the European Union level, but also in each of the member countries. I and my students have almost immediate access to the primary source documents. I also work in a city sponsored program to assist asylum seekers; through the internet I can access, for example, a local newspaper in the Eastern Congo, to help substantiate a Congolese refugee's asylum claim.
In a restricted internet, the university and the city would, of course, be able to buy into the "fast track," but what use would it be if the private agencies putting information on the net or small, local newspapers were frozen out by high fees? I would be driving down the information highway alone.
Of course, even much more vital medical and scientific information would be blocked, as would information potentailly helpful to government agencies providing vital public services. The number of sources they could draw upon would be radically reduced.
All this, of course, is besides the valuable exchange of information we get through blogging.
Bruce,
I think you are quite right about all the above. There is an entire wreckage of "progress" we've allowed ourselves to get into because big business said so. Recenty, consolidation of media after the 1996 telecommunications act, before that the demise of railroads here and the switch to trucking, before that the killing of city transits and trolley systems across the country in the 1940s and 50s by big oil, auto, and rubber interests... the list is long and broad. All these events were sold as "progress," but they really were just a boon to big business and create chaos for everyday people in so many ways. And in every instance, the common denominator was an ill-informed population that did nothing to stop what was happening. In this case, hopefully enough are informed to stop it. Though the political climate here doesn't seem to care too much for public opinion.
What we need to do is send our email correspondence here to Al Gore... and ask him what else can be done besides biting our nails and blogging about it (November 7 elections nothwithstanding, of course. Hopefully, nothing would be brought up before then, but who knows what sort of desperate mischief the lame ducks will get up to).
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