Nicolas Bourbaki on Fri, 11 Jul 2014 23:12:11 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> GeoIP is a threat to democracy |
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 It seemed logical that old-world media companies would want to restrict access to content on the Internet. GeoIP was then used to induce distribution barriers analogous to those found offline so that existing models of rent extraction could survive. And while this is something most of us would be fine with leaving to the invisible hand of the market we can not take the same stance when governments start to use these measures to dictate who is a citizen, and who is not, and who is provided civil liberties and who is not. This is what the XKeyscore rules made clear was happening and will continue to happen in the future. The internet standards and governing bodies cannot relinquish themselves of political responsibility any longer. The structure of a protocol will dictate our behavior and in this world there is no such thing as an agnostic protocol. The term "neutrality" is false. In the context of service providers battling with media providers over who gets a larger share of rent from consumers, "neutrality" may be the agreed upon term but the policies that result from this debate will have real impact on our behavior, the ethics of the protocol, and our liberties. Once a neutral protocol is understood as an oxymoron standards bodies with charters claiming to serve the betterment of all nations, corporations and consumers should be clearly seen for what they are: a new Tower of Babel. Those of us still placing stones one on top of the other within these institutions should take a moment to look at our work and ask what are we actually doing. In 2010 the DHS went against their own charter and hijacked ICANN's to take down hundreds of domains for unclear copyright claims. Why is ICANN still relevant when decentralized models could easily replace them when supported by either the EU, Google or Firefox? And when the NSA can with absolutely no oversight claim that the location of an IP in some table dictates who gets civil liberties, why have we not replaced BGP or at least begun to build parallel models within universities or like minded corporations that could support reverse tunnels through collision free identities similar to Tor's onion service handles? The number of protocols that falsely advertised as agnostic are many. We should be ashamed that it took such a scandal as pervasive western surveillance to awaken us to this falsehood when so many, living under more hostel regimes, have lived with the tools of oppression we built into these protocols from the very start. If we cannot convince our institutions to take fixing these falsehoods seriously by considering civil liberties within the protocol, and overcome the obstacles of legacy systems, and work for support for parallel models, than at least we can hasten the demise of this Babel to start anew. Indeed this may sadden optimists such as Larry Page and others that are waiting for technology to become our messiah. But as Benjamin Franklin would say, those who would trade liberated networks for efficient networks deserve neither. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1 iQIcBAEBAgAGBQJTv62wAAoJEHi6xtksL8/ukl0P/jP5oEpGPF+m7OSChROGFyVa Q88xqhiRTksnBF4rRL/OCpCodrqQYYovKay58Up7I5CxCOPA9fP5sDk+bFQaSFYj wdR07pMKh61+TnpBLAFHgvvf9EcIzChynugku0LktxPJfpdtJcwDTIjYsgeiRqq2 vSKre7Qf+VTeCvi1uoV6IoRxwZT5Mb+GpnayVLB+6wehCxtp8KH0tCxJDxTDXIek RtEVRm47VfS6lV6Gx2cq6q4Q+kNb/R4xnbzlDzj6wStxQ23riFXKeIuaqj7bVIpK nhvYpgONN5oOmTaUYFGsHcijSvkwOHYZymgGOhq9EPMC9UWoDyuq5lAxTMWq0rR4 wA0HpZD6t+XdQk5OwI8CfySi3hGaYM2+s/wODgMAgy+Gp5zj7IgY3xtSaV40Va2u n9rfMKDwqh8UPzEgkTqwQxtkj4tIyDfYpJgv0NRTNtRaMHPsDuUcW8AfTr+FLaoQ T/EZ+CUJil3H6Y4nG/ocKoXRF8w3XwSQoB+Q8t/Lbfm8mWa0t3wx/i5L5HolxwWp w5T4Ds1nS4VteV+Ct+DQwEudxYAPcCzxfXkUAxeFU6+oqwBVEEVw6K0L/aWH5e4D WujijHFPwbuBmKvQMHsGyC8ceeIvMggdR5YfdRXIsgQnuThtoawMSTi7gvP9K/JJ Rj/nnoP7YzG4JcKn4MQK =9W8V -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org