Viewsdesk - chasing the global public sphere
Censorship15:47, October 13, 2005

The OpenNet Initiative (ONI) just released a report on the Internet filtering regimes in Myanmar (Burma). Not surprisingly, their findings are pretty dismal. The state is one of the most repressive on earth, and even though its filtering system is not as sophisticated as China’s, Burma is getting more tightly controlled by the day.

As usual, a western company is behind the filtering system. This time it’s the American company Fortinet, who in a response to ONI’s allegations, claims to know nothing about selling equipment to Burma.

On the global list, we found nearly 11% of pages tested blocked, with a high level of filtering of e-mail service provider sites (85%). […] On our high impact list of sites with content known to be sensitive to the Burmese state, we found 84% of sites blocked, including nearly all political opposition and pro-democracy pages tested.

Access for citizens who cannot afford expensive dial-up connections, can go to licensed Internet caf?s, where they – after having produced an ID-card – can get online. However, the caf?s are by law required to capture screenshots every five minutes of their clients’ activities, and send to the Myanmar Information Communications Technology Development Corporation (MICTDC),

 
Censorship and Free Speech03:34, September 15, 2005

Reporters sans frontiéres (RSF), or Reporters Without Borders, have released a publication they call a Handbook for bloggers and cyber-dissidents. No less than 88 pages thick, the report offer an excellent introduction to blogging, personal accounts from people all over the world and a guide to be anonymous on the internet.

It’s most definitely an interesting read, and probably something I would recommend to anyone who wants to know more about grassroot journalism and internet in countries where speech is not quite-so-free.

However, I ask myself whom RSF identify as their proposed readers: while it is indeed an interesting read for me, will it ever get in the hands of those who really need it? If someone were clever enough to outsmart the Great Firewall of China and access the PDF – would you really need the step-by-step guides on setting up a blog? Perhaps it doesn’t matter. Even if it’s just about raising awareness in the western world, it’s justified I my book.

 
Digital Culture15:42, September 4, 2005

My dear friend and mentor Jonas Söderström (of Blind Höna-fame), noticed that excerpts from a mail conversation I had back in 2000 with the customer support at Boxman, a now dead Swedish e-commerce site, was quoted in the book 404 by Lars Ilshammar and Ola Larsmo Dansen kring guldkalven by Björn Elmbrant.

(Jonas also wrote a piece (in swedish) a while ago, where he included the same mail.)

It was years since I last read the mails, but going back to it now, I still find it highly amusing. And, well, I’m not surprised that Boxman didn’t survive for very long. I decided to release the whole thing unedited here, for it to be archived for future generations.

And sorry all you non-swedish people: it’s in Swedish and too long to translate.
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Digital Culture03:50, August 18, 2005

Artist Nate Harrison use the Amen Break (mp3, 125 kB), a classic drum beat sample, as an example when talking about copyright in relation to the public domain and free culture. In it’s own calm and mellow way, the film is indeed a torch in an already heated debate.

The work attempts to bring into scrutiny the techno-utopian notion that ‘information wants to be free’ […] This as well as other issues are foregrounded through a history of the Amen Break and its peculiar relationship to current copyright law.

This video clip has circulated around the net for a few months now, and by accident I happened to watch it again a few minutes ago. Surely most of you have already seen it, but if you haven’t – check it out.

 
ICT4D16:52, August 13, 2005

At Davos, Switzerland MIT’s Nicholas Negroponte presented the idea of producing a US$100 laptop computer, something he believes will revolutionize the way children are educated. The project – One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) – would market the machines directly to governments who can distribute them much like textbooks. Initial talks have been held with the governments of China and Brazil.

The computer would be based around open-source software, and basically do everything you’d expect from a laptop – but with less storage capacity.

Initially up to 100,000 units would be manufactured, followed by up to a whopping 200 million units by the following year.

One particularly interesting idea is that the laptops would be WiFi-compatible, and although Internet access might be hard to come by in some areas, the computers can form ad-hoc meshed networks and communicate with each other independently of network access.

An important question not yet addressed by Mr Negroponte, is what measures a government like China is likely take in order to limit the uses of the machine. My experience is that would you put this technology in the hands of children, some unexpected things are bound to happen. Any software can be hacked, and if anybody can to it, it’s a million teenagers who just want to have fun. For a recent example of this, see the Kutztown 13.

Update: More information about the project at The Register.

 
Digital Culture23:42, July 11, 2005

MediaGuardian writes about how ordinary people reported from the bomb-struck city. These eye witness accounts quickly spread thoughout the world, just not on the internet but they were invaluable for the traditional media too.

“Within minutes of the first blast we had received images from the public,” says Boaden [Director of news at BBC]. “We had 50 images within an hour. Now there are thousands. We had a gallery of still photographs from the public online, and they were incredibly powerful.”

 
Digital Culture03:32, June 19, 2005

OECD has written a report about on-line music distribution. The findings are quite interesting, given the heated debate.

Too many incompatible audio and DRM formats and hardware devices could depress the growth of online music. […] DRMs are essential to new content business models, yet they have often failed to prevent unauthorized uses. Concerns over transparency, privacy, and comparatively restrictive terms of usage rights (e.g., denial of fair use) are also flagged.

 
Digital Culture and Free Speech23:45, May 15, 2005

Every once in a while a text comes along that in an oh-so-simple, and just plain elegant, way explain a complicated phenomenon. If you’ve ever tried to tell a friend why you are so fascinated by new media participation (come on – I know you have!), and felt that the look they gave you back was one of complete confusion (come on – I know they did!) you know exactly what I mean.

Lance Knobel of davosnewbies posted a lecture he held a few days ago with the title Nullius in verba: navigating through the new media democracy, that truly is one for the books. Using historical accounts and parallels this is a wonderful introductory text on the subject.

Just print and hand out to all your friends. It will save you time. Believe me.

 
Technologies05:08, May 11, 2005

Podcasting, the practice of distributing recorded audio over the internet, almost like home-made radio, is quickly gaining popularity. It’s being hyped as the Next Big Thing by bloggers and grassroot journalists all over the (industrialized) world. However, yours truly is not impressed.
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Technologies13:18, May 3, 2005

Today, Bloggforum Stockholm 2.0 was announced to be held on Saturday the 28th of May 2005. Bloggforum 2.0 is a follow-up to the first conference held last November. The organizers are – just like last time – two of swedens arch-bloggers: Erik Stattin och Stefan Geens. This time around there will be more seminars, more people and more fun.

I have been invited to participate as of the panellists in the Media and Blogs seminar, moderated by Jonas S?derstr?m.

Registration is free. Hope to see ya’ll there!

 
Censorship and Free Speech00:11, May 3, 2005

Today, the 3rd of May, Internews celebrates the World Press Freedom Day with a photo essay.

Some truly extraordinary photos – and stories – of people who appreciate even the simplest of media technologies. In the future, when I get upset about something silly, like non-conforming RSS-implementations or whatever, I think I’ll just have a look at these pictures and try to appreciate the freedom and the things I take for granted.

 
Internet Governance18:42, April 16, 2005

November is just around the corner, and with it the WSIS meeting in Tunis. At the end of PrepCom II a resource was created to help people communicate and share information between the PrepComs and the Summit.

The World Summit on the Information Society Civil Society Meeting Point is the host of several interesting mailing lists divided into caucuses and working groups.

 
Digital Culture03:57, April 12, 2005

Google intends to digitize millions of documents from American and English university libraries and make them accessible and searchable over the Internet, something that the French will not let go un-noticed, as both The Economist and the New York Times have reported during the last week.

The Economist in particular is deeply sarcastic about the French plan to fund their own digitalization project, calling it anglophobic. I can’t see how this is a bad idea. Isn’t that what everybody should be doing? In Sweden for example, Projekt Runeberg, have been doing the same thing for a decade.

Besides, Google’s PageRank system is not without problems, and the French culture minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres might actually have a point: “I do not believe”, he wrote in Le Monde, “that the only key to access our culture should be the automatic ranking by popularity, which has been behind Google’s success.”

Google is indeed excellent for many of our daily routines, but can we really trust it to be the keeper of all knowledge and does it really have the wisdom to tell good from bad?

Let me give you an example. A few months ago, at the WebCred conference, the participants of a panel discussion talked a structural problem with Google. See, in order to rank importance of pages Google count how many other pages are linking to that particular page. What the WebCred participants discussed was if there could be a way of disqualifying some links from that count. Their worry was that if they linked to a page they didn’t agree with, say a democratic blogger who linked to a republican site, that link would still count – and they end up helping their opponent to achieve a higher ranking, and thus more visitors.

My worries are that if this were to be put in practice Google’s index would be completely and utterly bland. The pages that would show up on top would be whatever idea or view people could agree on, and getting low page ranks would in effect silence any opposition. Keep in mind that plurality is an asset – even though search engines would like us all to be satisfied with the same results, regardless of who we are.

This is also the same problem with smaller languages. Even though English is the lingua franca of the Internet, this does not mean that caring for another language is protectionistic, right? Surly, most people recognize the importance of at least some of the French philosophers, to name just one category of which I’m sure the French will digitize.

“I have nothing in particular against Google,” Jean-No?l Jeanneney, head of France’s Biblioth?que Nationale, told L’Express. “I simply note that this commercial company is the expression of the American system, in which the law of the market is king.”

Keep in mind, that in an historical perspective, the really outstanding artists or great thinkers are rarely appreciated in their own time. (Or by the search engines of their own time, I’m sure.)

 
Internet Governance01:33, April 11, 2005

In their publication What to do About ICANN: A Proposal for Structural Reform (PDF), the Internet Governance Project suggests some changes to the organization of Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). The organizations close ties to the US government is in focus. The background is the upcoming WSIS-conference, and the three suggestions are very concrete and certainly both feasible and good.

Three structural reforms are proposed: 1 Create an international oversight body to replace US oversight of ICANN and ICANN’s Governmental Advisory Committee; 2 restore ICANN’s global Board elections; 3 Give ccTLD managers and Internet Protocol address users a choice of governance arrangements by sharing responsibility for the Internet root zone between ICANN and the ITU.

However, the report does not (specifically) address the difficulties with influence from non-democratic governments. This is a delicate issue. Should repressive governments be given a vote in these issues? Will citizens in countries with limited or no freedom of speech be better or worse off, if control over the Internet is handed to the UN? That’s the real question.

They do however suggest a peer-to-peer model where the International Telecommunications Union is given their own IPv6 address blocks and acts as a parallel registrar to ICANN, in about the same way as many other Western democracies divide power into different branches.

 
Uncategorized02:36, April 1, 2005

I have, in earlier posts, pointed out the ease of participating in the public sphere by hosting your own blog. Well, today (or yesterday, really) another side of it showed its ugly face. My disk crashed and took this entire blog with it.

I managed to scrape together the pieces and get it back online again – but not in it’s original form. I decided to move another blogging-tool while I was at it, and the default design will have to do for a few days.

Most importantly – you all have to update your RSS-feeds! The new address is:

https://viewsdesk.com/feed/

I’m sorry for this. But I’m sure nobody will suffer as much as I do.

Update: I think I’ve created a workaround so that you won’t have to change update the feeds after all. If you’re reading this in your aggregator, you’re definitely home safe.

 
ICT4D04:23, March 24, 2005

Following up my post about The Economists leader about the digital divide the other day, I’d like to point interested parties to the report Completing the Revolution – The Challenge of Rural Telephony in Africa, written by Murali Shanmugavelan and Kitty Wariock and published by Panos.

The guys at WSIS can talk about global internet ad infinitum, but without even basic telephone services these countries will be forever left in the dust.

At present, the lack of rural connections is often hidden behind impressive overall figures for the growth of telephony. Important development initiatives such as NEPAD and the World Summit on the Information Society focus on internet-based ICTs, and where they mention telephony at all it is in general terms.

The report provides both case studies (Uganda, Senegal, Burkina Faso and Zambia) as well as insight into the processes of privatization and deregulation. For example, how countries are interpreting the Universal Service-directive and what methods are used to give access to citizens.

 
Digital Culture and ICT4D16:55, March 20, 2005

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has submitted a paper to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), where the organization gives its views on why Digital Rights Management (DRM) technology is damaging for developing nations.

The answer to “Which DRM will spur the most development in my nation?” is “None at all.”

One of the more pressing points, I believe, is how DRM prevents resale, or even donation, of used goods – something that is crucial to many economies in developing countries. Maybe it’s not such a great deal if where talking about the latest Britney Spears album – but way more serious when you consider that Adobe’s eBook-system also incorporates DRM-technology.

Then there is a problem with infrastructure, of rather lack thereof. Some DRM-solutions require the client/consumer to be in contact with a central server from time to time. This is of course not pretty difficult in a rural area with little or no internet connectivity.

However, my only complaint is that the EFF report feels somewhat thin. They argue, with their usual precision, against DRM in the developed countries – but fall a bit short in providing specific examples with regards to the developing world. Their main point seem to be it didn’t work here – and it sure won’t work there, an argument that might not convince the sceptics and be heard over the powerful pro-DRM lobby organizations.

 
ICT4D13:48, March 14, 2005

The Economist devotes one of its leaders to discuss the digital divide and the UN’s creation of a Digital Solidarity Fund. The magazine argues that creation of for example community computer centers, cannot bridge the real divide because the illiteracy rate is too high in many of the affected countries. Instead, they say, the real gap is between those with a cell phone, and those without. And, how to achieve high penetration of mobile phones? Less UN involvement and more liberalization of the market, of course.

Well…

 
Internet Governance16:04, February 23, 2005

The UN Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) has released a report – mainly focusing on procedural issues – about its progress thus far. The final meeting, the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), will be held in Tunis in December. What is especially interesting in this report, is perhaps the group’s definitions and key issues.

 
Censorship and Free Speech and Iran23:57, February 22, 2005

Arash Sigarchi, 28, was earlier today sentenced to 14 years of prison, according to The Committee to Protect Bloggers. His crime? Well, apparently he updated a blog with information about more than 20 Internet journalists who had been jailed by the Iranian government.

BBC quotes a spokesperson for Amnesty International commented: “Just as the internet is a tool for freedom, so it is being used as an excuse for repression. […] It is also shocking to realise that in the communications age just expressing support for an internet activist is enough to land people in jail.”

My question: Where does this fit in? Propaganda?

 
Technologies04:03, January 30, 2005

In November 2004 there was a blog forum (Sweden’s first and last?) arranged by IDG. I was there, along with a good part of Sweden’s bloggers, I’m sure.

I had just bought an MP3-player at the time, and recorded the whole thing. Well, not quite actually – I came ten minutes late, so there are a few minutes missing at the start of the conference.

I realize it’s maybe a bit late, but since I have not yet seen the audio posted somewhere else, and I stumbled over the file on my computer just now – I decided to post it. Maybe it’ll make somebody happy.

(The sound kind of sucks, but what to expect from a sub-SEK1000 player with a built-in microphone?)

And yes, I’m sorry all of you English speaking readers – the whole show is in Swedish.

Bloggforum Stockholm 2004 (MP3-audio, 80:38 min, 37 Mb)
Bloggforum Stockholm 2004 (Streaming version of the same file)

 
Digital Culture04:14, January 28, 2005

Dagens Nyheter (DN) Sweden’s biggest daily newspaper, reported yesterday that the Swedish government have produced two publications on the role of Public Service broadcasting in the future. That’s all fine, but what shocked me, and others before me, was a quote from the chairman of one of the groups.

Bengt K Å Johansson, socialdemocrat and former Member of Parliament, said that people’s use of an increasing number of media sources is a problem:

– It is a problem since we need a common ground in order to be a nation, Johansson said to DN.

Although I can understand what he mean; sure a people with homogenous views are more likely to reach consensus, and thus be more likely to bond. But, I also think his views are those of a dying generation. The nation state of the future will not be what it was 30 years ago.

One of the greatest revolutions spawned by the Internet (and other new digital media) it gives whoever’s connected to it a multitude of views and opinions to read. I’d say that on just about any subject there’s at least a handful of pages of interest, regardless of how small and seemingly insignificant the subject at hand.

When it comes to news reporting, the plethora of information is perhaps even more important. I would, like many others, like to claim that the idea of any objective truth is just plain silly. No one news organization, neither private nor public, can provide the absolute truth. The last ones to seriously consider that was a few decades when a certain state published the aptly named daily Pravda.

Much more interesting are theories on how multi-perspectivism can give a reader so many versions of the truth that he or she can make a somewhat more nuanced assessment of a particular event. (Some even go even further and say that the real revolution comes when those perspective start to talk with one another – in other words: blogs.)

How anyone can say, in public nonetheless, that people’s more extensive use of media is inherently a bad thing is completely beyond me. It is a good thing that we do not have to rely on just a few sources. It is a good thing that the nation is evolving into something else than a homogenous nation state.

I can’t even begin to understand how someone with such apparent lack of vision was put in charge of heading the government’s research. (Well, actually I think I got atleast a clue…)

 
Free Speech and Iran23:54, January 23, 2005

Hoder, an Iranian blogger based in Canada, reported yesterday about how American companies are shutting down Iranian websites – amongst them blogs.

The latest site to be shut down, with very short notice, is the Iranians Students News Agency (ISNA) who’ve been given 48 hours by their host, The Planet, to remove their content before getting shot from the sky.

The idea is that, according to the US State Department, the Iranian government supports international terrorism. This is also why many US-based registrars, deny Iranians to register Internet domains.

This seems like an utterly stupid practice, if you ask me. There are many forces at work within the Iranian society in favour of changing the system. Cutting people off from the Internet, one of the most promising ways to encourage debate and free exchange of ideas we’ve seen in the history of mankind, can only be contraproductive.

So, all you bloggers in Iran – if you ever need a host in another country, consider Sweden. I promise you that I can have you set up (and probably even sponsored) in a matter of hours.

 
Digital Culture16:31, January 20, 2005

A report from the Digital Media Project at Harvard University was released yesterday. The report is titled Copyright and Digital Media in a Post-Napster World (PDF) and primarily covers questions regarding copyrights and technological development.

The report attempt to answer the following questions: How do we balance the legitimate interests of copyright holders with the legitimate interests of the public in the use and enjoyment of digital media? Should technology developers be accountable to copyright holders? What future strategies might compensate copyright holders while also encouraging innovation?

Parallel to the US-oriented main publication there’s also an international supplement covering the issues more closely related to the rest of the world.

 
Digital Culture14:31, January 6, 2005

CNN’s debate show Crossfire is cancelled, the New York Times report. Apart from some schism between Tucker Carlson (one of the anchors) and CNN, the network’s new CEO (somewhat surprisingly, I must say) agrees with Stewart:

Mr. Klein specifically cited the criticism that the comedian Jon Stewart leveled at “Crossfire” when he was a guest on the program during the presidential campaign. Mr. Stewart said that ranting partisan political shows on cable were “hurting America.” Mr. Klein said last night, “I agree wholeheartedly with Jon Stewart’s overall premise.”

Jon Stewards CNN-bashing (transcript) received extreme attention in the days after the show (my post about it). The Internet, and viral distribution of the video clip online, was an enabler for the attention. iFilm reports a whopping 2,5 million (!) downloads of the 13 minute clip, and other sources – such as torrents and other P2P – probably account for even more.

So, using power of the internet – humor can bring down empires.

 
Internet Governance and Technologies02:15, January 4, 2005

In a very interesting article the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter (DN), reports something often forgotten by national crisis management centers: the help organizations are often exclusively focusing on issues relating to the grieving process of adults, whilst neglecting the need of the younger population.

The older generation find information though traditional channels; television, radio and newspapers. Kids however, receive a lot of information though the Internet, and they retreat to their regular hangouts even during tough times. And, considering how hard Sweden has been struck by the tsunami disaster – these are definitely tough times.

One place where they go is the Swedish online community Lunarstorm, with an incredible reach of 80% of Swedes between the ages of 18-to-25. (The figure is probably about the same, if not even higher, for kids between the ages of 13-to-17.)

Lunarstorm, realizing the crucial need for help, have involved around 20 priests and other volunteer personnel who are working around the clock to meet young people on their own turf: online.

The issues can be everything from comforting someone who has lost a friend, to more concrete and practical things like starting charities and how to volunteer to help.

Save the Children, Unicef and the Red Cross, have understood that this is an important channel, says Johan Forsberg, Lunarstorm’s information officer. He only wish that the Swedish government, particularly prime minister G?ran Persson and foreign minister Laila Frievalds, would wake up and realize it too. They’re needed here, he says.

When you think about it, this is not a very unexpected development. The Internet has integrated into people’s lives in all other aspects of life, so why would this be different? And, as usual it’s the kids that are forgotten by authorities: they’re busy speaking adultish about adult things with other adults.

I believe that using the Internet for these kinds of things can be very helpful, on a personal level. Sharing thoughts, fears and sorrow with other who feel the same way as yourself can be liberating and helpful. However, to avoid getting stuck in vicious thoughts, it’s also important that there is adults, preferably professionals, present in such discussions.

It seems to me that Lunarstorm are doing a great job, with whatever limited means they can muster. So, G?ran Persson – what are you waiting for? Wake up, smell the coffee and go answer some real questions from your future constituency.

 
Digital Culture and Free Speech21:42, January 3, 2005

If you, like me, could not attend the Votes, Bits & Bytes conference at Harvard Law School last month, you’ll be pleased to know that Rebecca MacKinnon (blog) and radio producer Benjamen Walker have made a 12 minute radio program covering the event.

The show concentrates on the part of the event called Global Voices, focusing on how Internet have influenced politics around the world.

I was glad to learn that it the conference was indeed trying to be international in scope, not just the same western-oriented yada-yada we usually hear. They also discussed a particular detail I’d like to know more about: an Iraqi organization that offers blogging tools to individuals, but only if they agree with current political developments. What’s up with that?

Download MP3 Stream

 
Digital Culture02:54, December 27, 2004

In a daring move, the anonymous creators of this flash movie follow in the footsteps of writer Jon Katz and his 1994 ten-year-prediction on newspaper death. We’re presented with a possible vision of the future ahead of us, where the news organizations have parished; everyone contributes in the creation of news; where the internet contain all the information ever known to mankind, and the New York Times has gone offline.

What would such a world be like? Dare I say, its not all utopia? Holiday fun for the whole family.

 
Digital Culture and Technologies12:47, December 23, 2004

I’ve previously discussed, with Mark for example, that internet connectivity is so important that it should be treated as a public utility, rather than just a matter for private interests. Apparently, the businesses disagree with me. (Why am I not surprised?)

Besides recently losing an important battle in Philadelphia, where Verizon Communications made sure the state would not subsidize internet access, the legislation has now been converted to a fill-in-the-blanks DIY-kit, complete with dotted lines for the state name.

The legislation, dreamed up by American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), is called the Municipal Telecommunications Private Industry Safeguards Act (word file).

Read more, and be sure to check out the list of representatives on the Private Enterprise Board of ALEC, and you might get a hint to from where this is coming from.

 
Internet Governance19:41, December 15, 2004

News stories on Internet Governance are few and very far between. After I wrote a short posting the other week about the first meeting of the UN Working Group on Internet Governance, I’ve kept my eyes open for any follow-ups in the mainstream media. At lease to my knowledge, there was none.

Rebecca MacKinnon writes an excellent post on this black hole, and remind the readers that another important meeting; part two of WSIS, will be held in Tunis in less than a year from now. Will it be the bloggers who cover it, or will mainstream media be there too?

The question is why these matter have such low priority in the news output? The problem, I believe, is that it’s of only academic interest for us in the west. At some level, we can rely on our societies to provide us with access to the Internet and guarantee our freedom of speech – so we sleep well at night knowing that someone is looking out for us. This is of course not the case globally.

 
Internet Governance02:12, December 10, 2004

Berkman Center at Harvard Law School is hosting a conference called Internet + Society 2004: Votes, Bits and Bytes between the 9th and 11th of December (I know I’m a day late posting this – but is the glass half-empty or half-full?) The conference will take a sceptical look at the Internet’s effect on politics and how it might influence society.

Amongst other things, on Friday morning there is a panel discussion on citizenship that looks particularly interesting, and will deal with issues around technologies’ impact on participatory democracy and global citizenship. One of the panellists will be Hossein Derakhshan (aka Hoder), an Iranian blogger.

Other areas that will be discussed in the coming two days are business and – of course – what impact the Internet had on the 2004 US presidential election.

And no, I’m afraid I’m not there either – but I will sure follow the conference on their webcast. …Unless nobody’s got a plane ticket to spare, that is?

 
Internet Governance and Technologies03:09, December 7, 2004

In several articles I’ve briefly commented on the fact that there is a problem – from a democratic point-of-view – with how Internet access is being sold to consumers today. The technology used does not encourage what I believe is promoting the fundamental uniqueness of computer mediated distribution. This article is an attempt to elaborate on the subject – hopefully, so that even non-geeks can grasp at least some of it.

Is There a Problem With Technology?
A truism of network-building is that the most difficult part of offering high speed internet is not building the backbone, but getting transporting the signals the last two kilometers from the provider and into the homes of consumers.

Today, broadband Internet connectivity is sold to consumers in a few basic flavors: ADSL, Cable and fiber. Fiber is rare, and globally the real competition is between ADSL and Cable – what method is most common depends on what country you look at. In the US for example, cable access is more common than ADSL while in Sweden it’s the other way around.

ADSL, as the most common variant of xDSL-technologies are called, is in theory a superb way of hooking people up to the Internet. It allows for telco’s to connect their telephone station to the backbone, and then use the existing copper wire to reach in to peoples homes. This means no modifications to the building, nor to each and every apartment. It’s simply plug-and-play from the consumers point-of-view. (Today, ADSL also comes in two modified (and thus faster) versions: ADSL2 and ADSL2+. These will be treated synonymously with ADSL in this article.)

Cable is also cheap because the infrastructure is (mostly) already there. The medium used is the coax cables that ordinarily carry television broadcasts.

Fiber, on the other hand, is extremely fast and future proof, but seldom a realistic possibility. Each apartment building needs to be directly hooked up with dedicated fiber cables, routers have to be installed in the basement, and ethernet network cables be installed in every apartment. In effect, very few households have fiber-access, in comparison to ADSL and cable.

Now to the design flaw: ADSL and cable is asymmetrical, a fancy word for saying that the speed at which you can send data and the speed you can receive data, is not the same. For example, personally I have a connection that is called 8/1 – in other words, I can receive at 8 megabit per second (mbps) and transmit at 1 mbps.

In Sweden, the country I’m for obvious reasons most acquainted with, the ISP’s are franticly competing to offer high speeds at very low cost using ADSL-technology. Last I checked, 24 mbps cost SEK 399/month (about US$60/month) from Bredbandsbolaget. So, what’s bad about that? Well, nothing if you don’t consider that the connection they’re talking about is a 24/1 mbps service – offering only 1 mbps of upload.

Why Is Up-Speed Important?
What separates the Internet from other media is that the audiences are active in participating as senders – just not being passive recipients. Radio, television and print media – they’ve all been a way for consumers to receive, but there was no way to transmit or respond to the messages. Networking changed all that, and I dare to say that this reason alone is the reason why the Internet is so extremely popular. All the “killer-apps” we’ve seen is because of a feedback channel; e-mail, Internet banking – even simple web browsing is interactive. But what also changed was that everyone could become a sender in a more revolutionizing way – setting up homepages and transmit material in a way that more resembled newspapers than anything else. (Remember the homepage-craze in 1995? Everyone had one, though nobody admits it today.)

Without the decentralized structure of the Internet – that anybody could publish content anywhere – there’d be no Internet. Not by definition, not in practice. The closed computer networks that attracted consumers 15 years ago (most notably America Online, CompuServe and Prodigy) died or were forced to become open systems within about five seconds after the Internet gained momentum. There simply was no way a single company could envision or create such the diversity of services offered on the Internet. (Some wise-guy will comment that it had to do with availability of pornography – but even so it does not contradict my theory. It still had to do with people being able to broadcast material, whether its pictures of last years Christmas celebration with the family or pictures of people with absolutely no costumes on.)

So, I argue that the reason for the Internets success is that it allowed people to express themselves. And for that an uplink channel is needed. A concrete example of what I mean is this very blog you are reading now. It’s hosted on a crappy second-hand computer I bought for SEK 1000 (about US$140) and is standing in a closet in my apartment. Using the Internet and its inherent channel to transmit information I’ve transformed a closet into a broadcasting device with a (potentially) global audience.

My fear, however, is that the possibility of transmitting is being effectively removed by current standards, endorsed by the owners of the networks. Why you ask? Because of a flawed technology, coupled with greed from the ISP’s to make money with content services.

Is There a Problem With the Companies?
For a capitalist, the ultimate goal is consumer addiction. This is a wet dream for them because nothing is as good as a costumer that returns again and again – without money having to be spent on persuading him to do so. Short of getting people addicted by their own free will, they can at least take every precaution that people don’t have a choice.

Thus, companies strive – in one way or another – towards creating virtual monopolies. They want to have an exclusive channel into your brain without the hassle of competition. For this reason, many media companies have merged in the last decades, to create huge conglomerates that, for example, control the whole chain of production, distribution and advertisement of a movie. It makes sense to them. Very much sense, actually. Not only do they produce the movie, but also they can make absolutely sure you see it, whether you want to or not.

So what on earth has this got to do with broadband Internet? Well, Time Warner owns Road Runner, one of the biggest providers in the US, for example. All Internet service providers, trying to maximize income, see huge possibilities in controlling content – not setting it free.

The asymmetric model being built into technology fits the companies perfectly, since they want passive consumers who are in need of content. Even though there are alternative technologies, such as VSDL, capable of offering symmetric bandwidth, ISP’s often chose not to pursuit them, and where they existed have discontinued them – at least in Sweden.

A recent Swedish example can illustrate my point. As the available bandwidth to the consumer increase so does the opportunities to send services their way. IP-telephony (or VOIP) has been around for a while, and for consumers it is a fantastic way to lower their cost for national and international telephony. Since they already have the bandwidth they can just sign up to any service and make really cheap phone calls. Well, for customers of Bredbandsbolaget it’s not quite that easy. Since they offer their own VOIP-service and do not wish to have competition, they’ve simply blocked the use of other services, and thus limiting the bits allowed to freely pass through the line for which the consumer is paying.

The same pattern is repeated with the launch of broadband broadcasted television that was launched by Bredbandsbolaget in cooperation with Viasat – Sweden’s largest satellite-TV owner. At the cost of 5 Mbps and a mere SEK 299/month you get 27 tv-channels blasted right into your TV. (What they fail to mention is that it’s just as expensive as their non-broadband packet, and then you get to keep your 5 Mbps – why can’t really see the use just yet?)

Instead of separating the infrastructure from the content, the two are increasingly intertwined. The promise of broadband distribution is that you should be able to buy television, in the form of zeroes and ones, from just about anybody. Not just repackaging an old service digitally and selling to you again. What this leaves us with is the monopolies the cable companies created in the 80’s – effectively controlling what was broadcasted to the homes. They owned the cables and operated the service. Where are the competition were did my free choice go?

The Future of the Network
The problem with this approach is that it’s counter-productive for the prosperity of the Internet as a growing community. Again, consider what the lessons from the early 90’s taught us – closed networks perish because they are not really networks of independent nodes but a controlled and centralized environment. I repeat what I said above: Without the decentralized structure of the Internet – that anybody could publish content anywhere – there’d be no Internet. Not by definition, not in practice.

I believe that in order to satisfy the increasing demands of bandwidth, as services get more complex and more mission-critical, P2P-technology (also called peer-to-peer) will become a vital part of the distribution chain. And I’m not talking about Napster or eDonkey but about a transparent system that distribute content by letting the computers organize themselves to minimize strain on the network and enable lightning-fast transfers. The business models of copyright holders and content providers will have to adjust to such a system in order for the companies to survive (…but that’s another article).

Already today there are systems, based on P2P, that allow people to download media content, released under a less restrictive license. Torrentocracy is one of them that I mentioned in an article just the other day.

Even the, usually pretty business-conservative paper, The Economist admits (subscription walled) that utilizing P2P-technology is a natural development and would enable faster, better and more fault-redundant services to the consumers. Creating a hub-and-spokes-network as what largely done today is not ideal, they say.

The problem is that P2P will only work if the nodes in the network are symmetrically hooked-up. If users consume (receive) faster that they produce (send) the scheme will fail, since P2P is mathematically a zero-sum game. By definition, every bit you download has to be uploaded by someone else.

Effects for Democracy
To speak bluntly; most companies that sell Internet capacity to you today does not want you to distribute content – they’d much rather sell it to you themselves. They want you to be passive because that gives them opportunity to sell you things, while not changing their tried-and-tested business-model. Content owners need to thoroughly revise their business model for a digital age, where scarcity is no longer determining the value of commodities. Bits are not atoms.

I fear continuing on this path of turning the Internet to yet another place where you passively consume (televised) messages will indeed hurt the Internets inherently democratic effects of allowing its participants to have a voice. P2P could enable ordinary citizens to distribute their own content, much like what bloggers all over the world are doing with ideas right now. Participation is the cornerstone of a healthy democracy, and the mainstream media have failed to be inclusive enough – by any standard.

The question is of course if governments should regulate Internet connectivity and treat it like a public commodity. Critics to such an idea usually claim that the Internets success is to a great deal the story of entrepreneurs and that therefore it’d be wrong to regulate. However, one should also keep in mind that the Internet is the result of millions of dollars spent on research – funded by the US government. So, maybe we should cut the governments some slack? Besides, nobody at their right mind is talking about expropriation of the Internet, just some guidelines for what is acceptable behavior. Like what FCC in the US (and PTS in Sweden) do for telecommunications.

Somebody said that we often overestimate the progress that will be made in two years, but underestimate what will happen in ten. To me, that is both good and bad news given this scenario. For one, the technologies we see today are not what are going to be still here in ten years. Bandwidth demand will continue to increase, and I’d expect them to level out at about 1 Gbps per household (I’m not kidding). However, one should still be mindful of the things I’ve explored in this article. Structures and patterns of behavior are determined at an early stage, even though unsymmetric technologies get replaced, we might have gotten used to just downloading the last 40 seasons of Friends from our old buddy the cable company.

(Thanks to Mark for a great discussion on the matter.)

 
Digital Culture23:58, December 4, 2004

The French newspaper Le Monde has not only launched reader blogs under their own brand, but they’ve also allowed reader and journalist blogs to be presented at the same level, French blogger Lo?c Le Meur reports. After two days of readers voting among the blogs to create a ranking, four reader-blogs are in the top-ten.

This kind of competition is not new within the blogosphere, but appears more or less in every blogroll on the planet, aswell as on Technorati for example – but to my knowledge this is the first time it’s been done under the brand of a traditional newspaper. And that is indeed important news.

Definitely its a bold move from the paper, and I really hope it the outcome is successful for all parties. It could very well be a way for the public sphere to be more inclusive, and open up for amateurs and professionals to work together toward a less hierarchic news production apparatus.

 
Digital Culture and Technologies14:27, December 1, 2004

The guy behind Torrentocracy, Gary Lerhaupt (blog), had an idea. What if you combined RSS, P2P and your television set? It would, they say, be a system that would let you, for the first time, enjoy the true power of television.

While space in traditional media is (by comparison) scarce and controlled by few, the promise of the new technology is that information and ideas will spread freely and that citizens will gain access to a plethora of opinions and voices. Being both a technical platform, combining some hardware and Linux software, the project is also negotiating deals with content owners to release materials to the public sphere under a more permissive licence, such as Creative Commons.

The system enables you to with your remote control select, download and watch material. Of course you need a geek in the house to set the system up, but it sounds simple enough. To quote Gary himself: “If you ever wondered how and when your computer, the internet and your television would merge into one seemless device with access to anything and everything, then at this very moment […] Also Sprach Zarathustra should be resounding through your head.”

The suggested system available today is clearly too complicated for the average user, I believe Gary has a point. The P2P-distribution technologies are a great way of getting content to the masses. (Provided our upload speed in effect is not taken away from us. More on that matter some other time. Watch this space.) Some material has already been released, most notably sequences from the documentary Outfoxed. Torrentocracy also carried the presidential debates, hopefully enabling a few more people to listen to the most powerful man on earth and his “opponent” battling it out.

The point is, even though the MPAA is whining about copyright infringements and reports that Bittorrent alone use 35% of all available bandwidth on the planet; one should remember that there are legit uses for the technology.

So would content owners really be interested in this? Well, clearly what is missing is stream of money back to the studios or TV-channels before the bigger studios would be interested. However, remember that Michael Moore actually encouraged people to download and spread his documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 online to maximize the number of people who saw it before the American election. So, while it may not be a preferred system to distribute the latest Star Wars flick, it might well prove to be interesting for idealistic New Documentary directors, for whom money is not necessarily the greatest reward.

 
Digital Culture14:46, November 25, 2004

In an article a month or so ago, I discussed Jon Katz’s prediction that the web would kill print newspapers. I argued that news has been turned into a commodity that people consume in quite a different way than they did just 10 years ago, and that while it has not yet obliterated the newspaper, it has certainly changed they way they’re doing business. (And the newspapers who have not yet changed their model, are up for a big surprise…)

Now, Wired is at it again – and they seem, I’m glad to say, share quite a few of my views. In yesterdays article Newspapers Should Really Worry, reporter Adam L. Penenberg, reports that newspapers, according to one study done by The Washington Post, are having difficulty appealing to the very vital demographic group of 18- to 34-year-olds, and they believe this has got to do with a change in reader habits. In the article, Wired talks to a few people to try to pinpoint the problem:

[John Athayde, a web designer] views news as “packets of distributed information,” and uses NetNewsWire to aggregate about 70 news sources, including several blogs. “I typically will read entire stories within the news aggregator, bypassing all design (and) advertising” to get “to the content”, [he says].

Although their interviewees may not be representative of the broader spectrum of news consumers or newspaper readers in any part of the world, the views are still of uttermost importance. I remember a time when the music industry didn’t think in a hundred years that mp3-downloading could seriously threaten their business model.

The question is also; how long can online news-outlets provide news for free? Considering their explanation on the growing number of online newspapers that offer RSS-syndication to please users who are tired of intrusive advertising “chimneys”, the papers only source of revenue is also dropping. Advertising in RSS feeds might be controversial right now, but its probably inevitable that users will have to get used to it (and/or invent the feed version of a popup blocker to avoid it from littering their newsreader).

Wired: Newspapers Sould Really Worry

 

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