Interesting People mailing list archives

Generativity and other abstract concepts to think about...


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2008 12:34:58 -0700


________________________________________
From: willmcclure () comcast net [willmcclure () comcast net]
Sent: Friday, June 20, 2008 3:23 PM
To: David Farber
Subject: Generativity and other abstract concepts to think about...

As a receiver of the IP emails for 5 years now, I have noticed one thing above all else about the Internet:

It is now beyond the control of any one entity (public or private), any one country, any one or any combination of 
governing groups, and most likely, any one continent.

At this point in time, it is still possible to partially control how one person accesses the Internet in their part of 
the world. But as long as that one person has the desire, knowledge, and means to pay for it, that person will be able 
to access the Internet.

The choice of picking generativity over open systems or closed systems or brutally closed systems or impossibly closed 
systems is no longer in the hands of the academic community, the governing community, or even the providers - it is 
directly in the hands of the vast user community.

Some obvious examples:

- DVD security encoding was defeated within weeks of its introduction.
- Napster was brought down, but now there is an exponential amount of file sharing going on everywhere.
- The iPhone was hacked and all its secrets were on display on the Internet within days, and the only way Apple was 
able to stop it was to make it financially expensive to tamper with their phone.
- China has been frustrated in its attempt to control all connections to the rest of the world with its firewall.
- Microsoft has put enormous amounts of money, time, and human resources behind getting everyone to switch to Vista, 
even putting out a Service Pack as bait.
- The RIAA is now suing printers and dupes because it can't properly distinguish who is actually downloading illegal 
music.
- Estonia was brought to its knees for one day by Russian hackers, but that's probably all they could afford to do, 
since it took away from their lucrative spam revenue.

These are but a small percentage of the well-documented misfortunes that are occurring every day when anyone or any 
company tries to force its will on the user community.  The future of the Internet already relies on free, highly 
functioning software and moderately priced, highly functioning hardware - the wild card for now being the fickleness of 
the users and what they are trying to achieve.  At some point, not even connectivity will matter, since the Internet 
continues to flourish even with restricted or slow connections everywhere.

All that will matter is whether an idea will appeal to someone, somewhere in the world, and whether they have the 
resources to develop it or can pass it on to others.

(Remove name)


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