Bruce Sterling on Wed, 19 Sep 2001 02:23:59 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Lauren's Big Picture |
Dot.Org-Dot.Com Internet A Non-Starter; Dot.Mil-Dot.Com Internet, Business As Usual *8-/ Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 10:56:24 -0700 (PDT) From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com Subject: The Big Picture? Cc: lauren@pfir.org "You will say you lose your freedom. Freedom is an illusion. All you lose is the emotion of pride." -- Colossus "Colossus: The Forbin Project" (1970) "There seems to be a definite pattern emerging." -- The Psychiatrist (G. Wood) "Harold and Maude" (1971) An interesting pattern does seem to be emerging. I do not suggest that it's the result of a conspiracy, but rather the result of long-term trends that have been self-reinforcing. Still, like the images in a kaleidoscope, complex-appearing structures can seem to easily appear from independent actions. We start with media consolidation on a grand scale. The range of content providers and distribution operations -- TV, cable, newspapers, magazine, Internet, and so on, are primarily in the hands of a tiny cadre of gigantic firms. This consolidation seems likely to continue to even more intense levels. Such concentration of media power provides the ability to present a highly unified message both to the population at large and to Congress through lobbyists. A slogan like CNN's "America's New War" can be applied across a range of related properties and environments, instead of merely being sandwiched between "EnerX" commercials. Next step: Institute a mindset and legal structure that marginalizes all rights to information except those of copyright holders (most of the widely-used content will be under the control of those few media conglomerates we discussed above, of course). The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) helps enormously at this stage to accomplish this goal. Send violators to prison along with the rapists, murderers, and terrorists. Finally, a way to fill those jail cells being emptied out in California from the new "treat drug offenders rather than jail them" program. Gotta keep the momentum going. Outlaw the sale or providing of *everything* -- hardware, software, communications, impure thoughts, or what have you -- relating to digital technologies that cannot be directly controlled by those concentrated media forces. The SSSCA (Security Systems Standards and Certification Act) should do nicely. To sweeten the deal, point out that since only SSSCA-approved security systems would be legal, it could provide a dandy mechanism to make the use of strong encryption in the private sector illicit. All that's needed is to ensure that such strong crypto systems are not compatible with the SSSCA-approved mechanisms (or refuse to certify anything that contains those undesirable systems). The approved security system will of course contain the appropriate backdoors for data access by the powers-that-be (and sufficiently resourceful hackers). The level of civil disobedience likely to result will probably be the highest since prohibition, but hey, prohibition didn't have any nasty side-effects that weren't trivial to control, right? And to tie this all up in a nice neat bow, be ready to take advantage of any catastrophe, tragedy, or horror to assert your agenda while emotions run high and knee-jerk reactions are the order of the day. Voila! Mission accomplished. --Lauren-- Lauren Weinstein lauren@pfir.org or lauren@vortex.com or lauren@privacyforum.org Tel: +1 (818) 225-2800 Co-Founder, PFIR - People For Internet Responsibility - http://www.pfir.org Moderator, PRIVACY Forum - http://www.vortex.com Member, ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy "Reality Reset" Columns - http://www.vortex.com/reality _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold