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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 23 2017, @03:46PM   Printer-friendly
from the a-narrow-view dept.

Elizabeth Kolbert at The New Yorker writes about the implications that technology monopolies have for culture by asking "Who owns the Internet?". Three decades ago, few used the Internet for much of anything and the web wasn't even around. Today, nearly everybody uses the web, and to a lesser extent, other parts of the Internet for just about everything. However, despite massive growth, the Web has narrowed very much: "Google now controls nearly ninety per cent of search advertising, Facebook almost eighty per cent of mobile social traffic, and Amazon about seventy-five per cent of e-book sales."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 23 2017, @04:27PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 23 2017, @04:27PM (#558062)

    will band together to pull it off.

    Like the marxist theory says: The people need to wrest back control of the means of production and distribution (whether that is physical or virtual.) Unlike the communist revolution and the general failure of the ideology it represented, the requirements for this one are much simpler: Cooperative corporations with corporate charters limiting the scope of their activities and setting out the specific circumstances under which investor returns are considered rather than money being rolling back into the enterprise. Secondly is the social order. The company needs to be founded with competent people blending both practicalism as well as sufficient idealism to not let the corporation go astray from its charter and the ideals they represent. Third, these companies will need to network with similiar companies in other regions to provide supply infrastructure or peering arrangements to allow them to compete with the big players as they slowly expand their economic influence on the markets.

    Doing the above would be a non-trivial and risky exercise for experienced veterans of whichever fields the company focuses on. But this is the ONLY way (outside of bloody revolution and the setbacks it entails) to begin nudging society back onto a path which empowers the common man, rather than the small pool of increasingly wealthy elites to whom we remain beholden, whether we believe it or not. Prove that humanity isn't the chattel they believe we are and do in your region what is necessary to be defeating them. One company, one market, one pool of people at a time. You can create jobs locally, empower the economically dwindling masses, and set a foundation for the overthrow of the incumbent cathedral for something more akin to a cooperative bazaar.

  • (Score: 1) by pdfernhout on Thursday August 24 2017, @12:11AM

    by pdfernhout (5984) on Thursday August 24 2017, @12:11AM (#558230) Homepage

    "Star Wars: The Death Star Cantina | WDR" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yl_reBjVqU [youtube.com]

    Though if you look around, you can see infrastructure projects along the lines you suggest -- like Matrix.org, Mattermost, and more... One can hope they continue to gain traction...

    Ultimately we likely need a mix of approaches though:
    http://www.t0.or.at/delanda/meshwork.htm [t0.or.at]
    "To make things worse, the solution to this is not simply to begin adding meshwork components to the mix. Indeed, one must resist the temptation to make hierarchies into villains and meshworks into heroes, not only because, as I said, they are constantly turning into one another, but because in real life we find only mixtures and hybrids, and the properties of these cannot be established through theory alone but demand concrete experimentation. Certain standardizations, say, of electric outlet designs or of data-structures traveling through the Internet, may actually turn out to promote heterogenization at another level, in terms of the appliances that may be designed around the standard outlet, or of the services that a common data-structure may make possible. On the other hand, the mere presence of increased heterogeneity is no guarantee that a better state for society has been achieved. After all, the territory occupied by former Yugoslavia is more heterogeneous now than it was ten years ago, but the lack of uniformity at one level simply hides an increase of homogeneity at the level of the warring ethnic communities. But even if we managed to promote not only heterogeneity, but diversity articulated into a meshwork, that still would not be a perfect solution. After all, meshworks grow by drift and they may drift to places where we do not want to go. The goal-directedness of hierarchies is the kind of property that we may desire to keep at least for certain institutions. Hence, demonizing centralization and glorifying decentralization as the solution to all our problems would be wrong. An open and experimental attitude towards the question of different hybrids and mixtures is what the complexity of reality itself seems to call for. To paraphrase Deleuze and Guattari, never believe that a meshwork will suffice to save us."

    Also, healthy economies are a good mix of subsistence, gift, exchange, and planned transactions. So emphasizing creating better exchanged-focused organizations, even if narrowly scoped ones with more idealism, still does not address a need for balance across all four types of transactions.

    --
    The biggest challenge of the 21st century: the irony of technologies of abundance used by scarcity-minded people.