geert lovink on 22 Nov 2000 11:34:02 -0000 |
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Re: <nettime> Yahoo, the regulator |
In response to alleged French "censorship of the Internet": First of all, it is known that the Yahoo! company is consulting the Chinese government how to deal (read: censor) the Net. We don't hear much about Yahoo!'s strategy to conquer the vast online market of Mainland China. It's much easier, of course to take the moral libertarian highground towards some backward looking French judges. By now, Yahoo! has become a mass medium, a normal US-American media corporation, not much different in its market behavior from other old or new service providers. Yahoo! is as vulnerable to the ups and downs of the stockmakets as any of the other Internet giants. There is nothing alternative about Yahoo!'s content, let alone that "free speech" will ever reach the opening pages of this portal. Hundreds of Yahoo! editors are carefully filtering and editing content, buying the news from mainstream news agencies, promoting silly, harmless, funky infotainment, thereby carefully preventing today's conflicts and contradictions of everyday globalization. Because of this cool form of organized innocence we have not heard much Yahoo! critique, compared to, let's say AOL. It was only last December, on a trip in Taiwan, that I first heard about Yahoo!'s changing business practice, after having supported social movements initially (giving them webspace to host their content etc.). Yahoo's strategy is an obvious one: First fascilitate local networks, affiliates, communities, small content providers etc. Once the user base is established, dump them, set up bigger Yahoo! offices and tie the local company back into the global strategy. Still 60% of its audiences is based in the US, but that might big fifty-fifty in a years time. Revenues from its international operations is a moderate 14%. The balance between local/national infrastructure and the "global" is a delicate one - and this French court case is exactly about that fine line: where to draw the line between national servers/services and big daddy mainframe in Santa Clara, California. It would be interesting to hear what French Internet providers such as altern.org (and it's supporters) have to say about this case. Brian Holmes has taken a wise, middle-of-the-road "culturalist" position. He is the American in Paris. His anarchist statism is wellknown in moderate places such as the Netherlands where and cold and rainy pragmatism rules. But would it be possible to overcome such a regional relativism without buying into the sweet arrogance of Yahoo's US-American libertarianism? Is there such a thing a utopian globalism which is not based on US law and it's cultural specificities? Is there a way to design a new trans-national Internet on top of the ruins of the vanished cyberdreams? Perhaps a Balkanization of the Net will produce interesting monsters (such as the poverty zones of WAP). According to zdnet "Vinton Cerf of the United States, said at the time that he believed the move was contrary to the very idea of a World Wide Web, an electronic galaxy where information and ideas were exchanged with no physical borders." I really wonder if Cerf is that naive. He should know better that all Internet servers, in the end, have a locality. Data can move around, servers can't. Even if they could they remain to have a physical location and are thereby subject to the law of the place they are at that particular moment. Why is the WWW constantly mixed up with the specific US-American juridiction of free speech? Well, there is a historical explanation for that (the Internet is an American invention etc.). But how long will that historical claim be valid? I think that what is at stake in this case of Yahoo! versus the French state. [For those who want to know more about Yahoo!'s international strategy, read the interview with Heather Killen, the senior VP of international operations at Yahoo! Inc., called "the ambassador", in Fast Company Who's Fast Issue 40, November 2000, pp. 188-200]. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net