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We need to organize and actively make things uncomfortable for the companies trying to regulate our use of online technologies.

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How Do We Fight Corporate Control of the Internet?

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted May 22, 2008.


We need to organize and actively make things uncomfortable for the companies trying to regulate our use of online technologies.
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Last week I wrote about the premise of Oxford professor Jonathan Zittrain's new book, The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It (Yale University Press). He warns about a future of "tethered" technologies like the digital video recorder and smartphones that often are programmed remotely by the companies that make them rather than being programmed by users, as PCs are. As a partial solution, Zittrain offers up the idea of Wikipedia-style communities, where users create their own services without being "tethered" to a company that can change the rules any time.

Unfortunately, crowds of people running Web services or technologies online cannot save us from the problem of tethered technology. Indeed, Zittrain's crowds might even unwittingly be tightening the stranglehold of tethering by lulling us into a false sense of freedom.

It's actually in the best interest of companies like Apple, Comcast, or News Corp to encourage democratic, freewheeling enclaves like Wikipedia or MySpace to convince people that their whole lives aren't defined by tethering. When you get sick of corporate-mandated content and software, you can visit Wikipedia or MySpace. If you want a DVR that can't be reprogrammed by Comcast at any time, you can look up how to build your own software TV tuner on Wikipedia. See? You have freedom!

Unfortunately, your homemade DVR software doesn't have the kind of easy-to-use features that make it viable for most consumers. At the same time, it does prove that tethered technologies aren't your only option. Because there's this little puddle of freedom in the desert of technology tethering, crowd-loving liberals are placated while the majority of consumers are tied down by corporate-controlled gadgets.

In this way, a democratic project like Wikipedia becomes a kind of theoretical freedom -- similar to the way in which the U.S. constitutional right to freedom of speech is theoretical for most people. Sure, you can write almost anything you want. But will you be able to publish it? Will you be able to get a high enough ranking on Google to be findable when people search your topic? Probably not. So your speech is free, but nobody can hear it. Yes, it is a real freedom. Yes, real people participate in it and provide a model to others. And sometimes it can make a huge difference. But most of the time, people whose free speech flies in the face of conventional wisdom or corporate plans don't have much of an effect on mainstream society.

What I'm trying to say is that Wikipedia and "good crowds" can't fight the forces of corporate tethering -- just as one person's self-published, free-speechy essay online can't fix giant, complicated social problems. At best, such efforts can create lively subcultures where a few lucky or smart people will find that they have total control over their gadgets and can do really neat things with them. But if the denizens of that subculture want millions of people to do neat things too, they have to deal with Comcast. And Comcast will probably say, "Hell no, but we're not taking away your freedom entirely because look, we have this special area for you and 20 other people to do complicated things with your DVRs." If you're lucky, Comcast will rip off the subculture's idea and turn it into a tethered application.

So what is the solution, if it isn't nice crowds of people creating their own content and building their own tether-free DVRs? My honest answer is that we need organized crowds of people systematically and concertedly breaking the tethers on consumer technology. Yes, we need safe spaces like Wikipedia, but we also need to be affirmatively making things uncomfortable for the companies that keep us tethered. We need to build technologies that set Comcast DVRs free, that let people run any applications they want on iPhones, that fool ISPs into running peer-to-peer traffic. We need to hand out easy-to-use tools to everyone so crowds of consumers can control what happens to their technologies. In short, we need to disobey.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: comcast, news corp, myspace, wikipedia, internet, technology

Annalee Newitz annalee@techsploitation.com is a surly media nerd whose best ideas have all been appropriated and copyrighted by corporations.

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Great point
Posted by: pfeifer999 on May 22, 2008 1:15 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I notice that Alternet takes contributions. Are they tax deductible? Is Alternet a 501c3 corporation? Is it owned by one?

I noticed that the "advertise" and "donate" links were very clear and easy to use. Yet I didn't see anything on the "about" tab that tells me who owns and operates Alternet. All of that is fully disclosed on the Wikipedia site.

In a spirit of full democratic disclosure, let's have Alternet set a good example by disclosing their corporate structure, ownership, and sources of funding.

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» Not exactly so. Posted by: non-person
» RE: Not exactly so. Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Not exactly so. Posted by: leftymathprof
» Thanks, Joshua. Posted by: mjabele
» Thanks, Folks Posted by: Joshua Holland
» well... Posted by: ABetterFuture
We fight with our dollars, or more specifically, our lack thereof + ingenuity.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 22, 2008 10:14 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, you can buy Microsoft's latest broken OS, codename Vista, for $250, and then buy their office suite for another $400, in addition to a laptop worthy of running such bloatware ($800-$1200 at the low end).

Or, you can pick up a used lappy off ebay--I got a compaq n610c, and install your preferred flavor of linux. I use ubuntu because of the streamlined appget process, but damnsmall, debian, or k would do just fine.

That's about $250-$300 out the door, and you can do anything you need to do (even biology apps like lalign and proteomics/genomics) for no additional cost, except your feedback and your effort to improve the programs you use day in and day out.

Once you divorce the proprietary desktop environment, the interwibble will open up.

Now, don't get me wrong: microshaft has made gamers, IT folks, and porn gazers very, very happy. I couldn't play LOTRO on my n610c (work) laptop, something I enjoy probably to a fault on the desktop I recently built. But time moves on, and if MS doesn't shape up, they'll eventually be left behind with nothing besides Mr. Gates ginormous endowment as a legacy.

Beyond that, satellite comms and local hubs will keep Mr. Interwibble "free" but not priceless.

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Good question.
Posted by: non-person on May 23, 2008 6:06 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thoughtcriminal's account at Alternet was deleted a few days ago because he raised unflattering issues regarding the Independent Media Institute (home of Alternet and Wiretap) and their funding sources.

So, how do we prevent corporate control of the Internet? Isn't that pretty much already the case, minus some legal technicalites? As has always been the case, it is clear that "freedom of the press" only belongs to those who own the press.

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» RE: Good question. Posted by: Joshua Holland
» Hmmmmmm Posted by: pariter
» RE: Hmmmmmm Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Good question. Posted by: bornxeyed
Unleashing the Internet
Posted by: chorton on May 23, 2008 7:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(Long post, but not a rant, and carefully written.)

I want to discuss to discuss an idea about how to break the Corporate Media blockade on the news.

Most of you who are reading this post already understand certain demonstrable truths:

The Corporate Media is withholding vital and major stories from the public on nearly a daily basis and passing off government propaganda as news. This has been going on for a long time but as the crisis of the system deepens and as media ownership becomes ever more concentrated it is getting worse. The Media Barons almost certainly are deliberately orchestrating this, although how this is organized is not known.

The efforts of thousands of people to create and sustain alternative news resources – such as this site – have resulted in a growing number of people who consume, think about and act on real news, but we have not so far been able to shake the power of the Media Barons to control the “national conversation”. We are not yet reaching the scores of millions.

Somehow we have to dramatically increase our reach, but how?

One potential tool is to spread news stories by forwarding from person to person across the Internet. If people who became aware of an important story and aware that it was not being reported were to pass it on to 10 or 25 or 100 email contacts via the Internet, and if a sizeable fraction of the recipients were to do the same, the story would spread like a chain reaction.

My own experiments with this however have produced no results. I have no evidence that any alert I have sent to my contact list has spread very far, certainly never far enough to come back to me from someone else, and - like most people I’m sure - I have felt very inhibited about sending alerts to any but the people that I know generally agree with me, for fear of damaging my relationships. Yet I feel acutely that the need to break the corporate media stranglehold on the news is urgent.

Suppose we could start a movement, which perhaps we could call “News Chain”, to get this kind of Internet chain mail to work. A movement of people who are fed up with being “treated like mushrooms”, with as its sole purpose making sure that important stories which the Media tries to bury get disseminated quickly and widely. This sounds deceptively simple, but how could we get it to fly? How could we achieve a willingness of millions of people to forward these things to family, friends and business associates?

My sense is that people don't want to get involved with forwarding news stories because they don't want to be intrusive and annoying, don't want to be seen as trying to manipulate others, don't want to get into pointless arguments that could get nasty, don't want to spread rumors and myths that will make them look foolish, and don't want to bring politics into personal and business relationships that could be damaged by it. And they don't want their emails to be treated like spam. These are real and legitimate concerns. How do we address and overcome them?


Perhaps the participants would commit to a simple set of rules for a class of emails called News Chain communications:
1. The content of a “News Chain” message would be limited to a headline, a url pointing to an article, and a standard statement of the purpose and rules of the “news chain” movement. Period. No personal comments included.
2. The article referenced should be a news story - not an opinion or analysis piece - from a credible source, that is not being carried by the Major Media, one which the poster believes to be important to everyone.
3. Readers would be asked to use their judgment, but if they decide a story is legitimate and important and they aren't seeing it in the Major Media, to forward it it to their entire list.

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» RE: Unleashing the Internet Posted by: chorton
» RE: Unleashing the Internet Posted by: leftymathprof
American for liberty, truth, and justice.
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 11:42 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wanna know what I do? Of all the government shills that can see any info they want supposedly now, I choose to get and relay info from my 900 myspace friends who are for Ron Paul. I created my myspace just for Ron Paul supporters almost a year ago. If you go to myspace, create an account, and then, over time, seperately add hundreds of independant, grassroots people for Ron Paul, (there are thousands upon thousnds), you can then at any time log into your account, go to the bulletin board, and see what others are pointing out as this goes! Watchdog heaven it is. Most of the info being pointed out is current articles, youtube videos, whatever. Of course you will find opinions and propaganda, but I believe it to be better than doing nothing or trying to find the truth on MSM. MSM even will broadcast the truth, but only to demonize and belittle it often. And unless they broadcast it over and over and over, like this, the American sheeple will never "get" it.

Then, I copy paste info/pics from that and transfer it to a mass email message that I entitle 'myspace bulletin board' and send it away. VERY rarely do I offend anyone! It takes hours sometimes but as a disabled Iraq war vet who loves my country and brothers and sisters in the miitary deeply I take the time to do it. We must wake up America. I don't care about "secret agents" or any scum like that. Not even if they are here at Alternet. There are WAY many more of us than it is of them. Sure there's disinformation. But overall not nearly as "thick" and biased as with today's American MSM.

Try it!

bw, here is an example of a single bulletin that can be relayed from truly concerned grassroots Americans for Ron Paul on myspace:

-start example-

From: MilitaryMothers4RonPaul
Date: May 21, 2008 1:32 AM
Subject: TRUTH CAMPAIGN: ZIONIST MEDIA DECEPTION--OBAMA, CLINTON & MCCAIN

google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&q=Jewish+people +control+America%2C+and+the+Americans+know+it
(note the space, it was too long to post here otherwise)

Netanyahu says..

OBAMA AND HILLARY EXPOSED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Click here SPREAD THE WORD - CFR

McHillBama

911 Mysteries

Pentagon Lies

WMD LIES



PLEASE REPOST THIS BULLETIN TO THE ENDS OF THE EARTH!!! WE MUST OPEN AS MANY EYES AS POSSIBLE.

THIS IS MEANT FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE UNAWARE, AS IT WOULD BE REDUNDANT FOR THE REST OF US. THANK YOU

-end example-

So, it's pretty obvious that the people who are giving everybody the shaft are the anti-America corporate thugs, these Zionist bastards, and these "Neocons"(who probably overlap quite a bit.. and hide in plain view):/

You will find much, much inspirational info as well as eductional about what is happening to America, our Constitution, and our rights and who is doing it; please relay for others to evaluate themselves. This is REAL grassroots.

I suppose other social networking sites for Ron Paul may be just as useful, but I haven't tried any others yet.

btw, pay no attention to all the McHillBama ads you see all over TV and the net. That alone should wake people up to how we are being lied to/manipulated.

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DOWN WITH BIG MEDIA/GOV - UP WITH THE U.S. CONSTITUTION
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 11:52 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and oh, if you are not for Ron Paul, what the heck is wrong with you!

Ron Paul Reagan and Goldwater Platform Video

People their has never been a movement like this in America. Please don't let the media wipe and smear us away. We are your children and soldiers. (tin foil hat people included)

Don't you understand all the "weirdos" would come out in the real thing? This is a real rEVOLution for America.

No matter what you believe please help us spread the truth of what is happening to all family, friends, and beyond. I do this with everything I have in my soul and sleep little doing it 24/7. I am not a propagandist, nazi, racist, or any of that crap.. I am a good natured, God fearing, American citizen.

Please help us. Wake up your stubborn status quo friends. The time for the talk to stop has arrived. Let's save America. We must. If Ron Paul had a heart attack tomoorw morning the rEVOLution continues to elect Ron Paul Republicans that are for the Constitution.

paulcongress.com

God Bless America and God Bless our troops and government that are currently hijcked by these people.

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IMPEACH THEM ALL
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 11:58 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This guy is building an add a Ron Paul supporter blog post that can be passed around so other people can add you as a RP friend.

blog.myspace.com/ index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID =336364219&blogID=395395102 (note the spaces)

Remember, don't be scared to get/share info! We must overcome that fear or it's all OVER. They cannot possibly put us all in jail. It's bum rush time folks. We citizens, sheep and all, outnumber them by millions and millions. But we have to come together NOW.

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WAKE UP PEOPLE
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 12:16 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
correction for above links:

Click here SPREAD THE WORD - CFR

McHillBama

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youtube.com//watch?v=UnychOXj9Tg
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 1:59 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
VietnamVeteransAgainstMcCain.com

therealmccain.com

All major candidates running are members of the CFR except Ron Paul, also, including mccain. And Obama is for AIPAC, and is also Dick Checney's COUSIN... research it.

--
RonPaul2008.com/veterans

--
Why has Ron Paul received more donations from active-duty soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines than any other Republican presidential candidate? It's simple. Throughout his career, Ron has proven his patriotism by supporting a strong national defense and fighting for the rights of veterans. Most importantly, all veterans – and all other citizens – would have confidence that with Paul as commander-in-chief, soldiers would never be put into harm’s way unless America’s national security were at stake. Paul has always stood for military readiness, secure borders, and the fair treatment of our troops – never “nation-building,” crusades for democracy, and “peace keeping” at the behest of the U.N. Ronald Reagan, who knew a patriot when he saw one, was an excellent judge of Paul’s character: “Ron Paul is one of the outstanding leaders fighting for a stronger national defense. As a former Air Force officer, he knows well the needs of our armed forces, and he always puts them first.”

Read the testimonials of veterans and military personnel from all branches of the armed services. You'll see why Ron Paul is the choice of more veterans than any other candidate for president.

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Your friendly neighborhood patriot for Ron Paul 2008
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 2:24 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
STAND UP FOR YOUR... CHILDREN'S LIVES IF ANYTHING, COME ON!!!!
Posted by: Michael_D on May 23, 2008 3:42 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's one of my favs from the Bible:

Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead expose them. Ephesians 5:11

soooo, I do!

google video:
clinton chronicles
coke bush
iraq for sale

patriotsquestion911.com
pilotsfor911truth.org
911pressfortruth.com

bodyofwar.com

(which one of you sheeple gave me the "1" rating in my first post above, ha, thanks alot. I'm on your side! (if you're pro America) Please wake up to your situation/s. This is no time to blast grassroots Americans for damn sure; if they take the internet away too it's definitely over. We must realize many will just be waking up as this goes and need help doing so. The big picture must be relayed many times! Please please help us.)

and oh, my favorite link of the day since my best friend is Hispanic?
Hispanics 4 Ron Paul 2008 (La Nueva Revolución)

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Could somebody please define "tethered technology"?
Posted by: AsteroidMiner on May 23, 2008 10:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm using a PowerMac 5260/100 from 15 to 20 years ago.
I don't have a cell phone or those other gadgets.
What are you talking about?

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Pacifica, PBS, .... .
Posted by: talkville on May 25, 2008 4:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cable tv was obliged to provide 'cable-access' channel(s), available to anyone in the community who wished to make use of it for their own purposes. Radio has also created "listener-supported" stations and transmitters, available to anyone in the community who wishes to speak or create programming. Capitalist "collectives" have gathered in some states to purchase and set up telecommunications (telephone services) -- study the history of Alltel, for instance.

Collective, public acquisition of telecom facility, a collectively operated and maintained telecom facility, a collectively operated and maintained ISP. As a right and protected by law.

Maybe?

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The author may have misunderstood something
Posted by: Im_Original on May 27, 2008 1:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hello,

I think the author may have misunderstood something about the internet. The idea that programming your own software or "untethering" yourself will always be limited to a small group of people, beyond the reach of most, is false. The ease of publication provided by the internet means that it only takes one person to solve this sort of problem, and then everyone has access to the solution: yes it takes talent to do the sort of programming the author talks about, but once it is done and up on a website or bitorrent, everyone has it. It is no longer limited to a small group of people. The same goes for ease-of-use: only one person needs to design an easy interface, and then everyone can use it easily. There are many examples of this sort of thing happening: for example, DeCSS was done by a small group of people, but quickly became public knowledge. Another example is that any Linux distribution has far more users than developers.

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Clean Money Elections -
Posted by: EJW on May 27, 2008 3:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We the people need to fund the election process - not special interest groups of any ilk. I know the Supreme court has struck down the notion as an infringement of speech issue but I think the case can be argued as a lack of speech issue. Speech and money are not synonymous.

That is the first step. Then the election system needs work. The existing system is so complicated nobody understands it.

How about all primaries on the same day. And election day should be a holiday. Local elections should be held at the same time to save money and get more voters to the polls. In CA, this year I have 3 elections - it's very hard to keep up with it all.

And as for electronic voting - how about open source code (open to everyone and all nations) that can run on any proprietary machine? Too simple.

Repeal Corporate Person-hood!!!!!!!!! Return governing to real people not corporate automatons.

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Me Ranting
Posted by: meranting on Jun 2, 2008 10:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm not sure what good it does, but I've taken it on myself, to educate my surroundings. It's difficult at times, because all people seem to be following the 'heard'. I'm an internet marketer, however my main passion is politics and I do everything in my power to help people get educated. My main mission is to encourage people to generate their own information and not become part of the feeding trough the nation is 'eating' from.

I never realized how much more critical I am since I grew up in Germany, but as the years pass I can see that most American are born with an inherent trust in their government, where most Europeans have the opposite feeling. Even boulevard press in Europe is more critical of the government - which to me shows that in Europe the ties between politics and the media aren't as close as they are here. I'm not saying they don't exist, but the direct force feed the American population receives is just astonishing.

I fully support open source software, most everything I run is based on it. I've setup various wikis and I'm a firm believer in freedom of information and mainly - access to it!

I fully agree with most of what the author has to say and I've been operating under those assumptions for quite a while.

The problem is that many people either don't care, are too distracted or simply don't see the urgency. Why make your own food when the fast food joint down the street already has it ready for me? The moment people realize that we can provide our own meals, own information and..get this...own thought! I think we might make some progress. Until then I feel that I just keep talking to people that are already on the same page as mine and that's not helping everyone.

Me Ranting Blog

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Really?
Posted by: owlsliveintrees on Jun 3, 2008 10:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are Apple and DVR designers/manufacturers just supposed to hand us the keys to the device they invented? All we're talking about here is just online communities of people hacking software and violating warranties/agreements. Who are you going to call when your hacked iPhone won't start because the latest firmware update bricked it? Apple won't help you. So you're going to hop on message boards all day? I'm sure most people will take consistency and the opportunity to call Apple tech support over some vague notions of "taking back" technology.

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