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- Computer underground Digest Wed Oct 15, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 74
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #9.74 (Wed, Oct 15, 1997)
-
- File 1--DEMOCRACY AND CYBERSPACE - parts 5-8
- File 2--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 9 Oct 1997 12:27:45 +0100
- From: "Richard K. Moore" <rkmoore@iol.ie>
- Subject: File 1--DEMOCRACY AND CYBERSPACE - parts 5-8
-
- ((MODERATORS NOTE: Following, as a special issue, are the
- concluding four parts of Richard Moore's "Democracy and
- Cyberspace. See CuD 9.71 for the first four parts"))
-
- ___________________________________________________
-
- (parts 5-6)
-
- DEMOCRACY AND CYBERSPACE
-
- Copyright 1997 by Richard K. Moore
-
-
- Propaganda and democracy
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- As Noam Chomsky so competently documents in "Manufacturing Consent",
- propaganda has always been an essential mechanism in the machinery of
- democracy, the primary means by which the elite insure that their own
- interests are not overwhelmed by what Samuel P. Huntington refers to
- as the "excesses of democracy" and what James Madison referred to as
- "mob rule".
-
- Ownership of media, as a means to influence public opinion and
- ultimately the policies of government, has always been used to
- advantage by the economic elite in democracies - in the ongoing see-
- saw struggle for power. Popular movements have also made effective
- use of the media, from time to time, but in today's increasingly
- concentrated media industry, elite control over public opinion is for
- all intents and purposes total. It is so total, in fact, that just
- as a fish is not aware of the water through which he swims, one
- sometimes forgets how constrained the scope of public debate has
- become.
-
- Madison avenue techniques applied to campaigns, including focus on
- sound-bites, turns political campaigns into little more than
- advertising episodes, much like the release of a new toothpaste or
- hairspray. This has long characterized the situation in the U.S., and
- with Blair's takeover of the Labor Party, we've seen the same
- paradigm ported to the UK.
-
- Even opposition to the status quo is channeled and deflected by media
- emphasis, as with the militia movements (and Perot and Buchanan
- candidacies) in the U.S. and the National Front movements in UK and
- France, which are exploited so as to _define_ anti-globalist
- sentiment as being reactionary, ultra-nationalist, luddite, and
- racist; similarly environmental sentiments are regularly interpreted
- as being anti-labor, anti-prosperity, "elitist", etc.
-
- Demonization of governments and politicians - ie, blaming government
- for the problems caused by globalism and excessive corporate
- influence - is perhaps the single most potent coup of the mind-
- control media in promoting the decline of democratic institutions and
- the rise of globalism.
-
- Globalization itself further exemplifies the potency of media
- propaganda. The rhetoric of neoliberalism, with its "reforms" and
- "market forces" and "smaller government", is not just a _position_
- within the scope of public debate, but has come to be the very
- _frame_ of debate. Politicians and government leaders rarely debate
- _whether_ to embrace globalization, but compete instead to espouse
- national policies that _best accommodate_ the demands of
- globalization.
-
- As media itself is being globalized and concentrated, it is no
- surprise that globalization propaganda is one of its primary
- products. Whether the vehicle be feature film, network news,
- advertisement, panel discussion, or sit-com, the presumption of the
- inevitability of the market-forces system and the bankruptcy of
- existing political arrangements always comes through loud and clear -
- even when the future's dark side is being portrayed.
-
- The propagandistic success of this barrage is especially amazing in
- light of the utter bankruptcy of the neoliberal philosophy itself.
- The whole experience of the robber-baron era has simply vanished from
- public memory, in true Orwellian fashion, as we are told that market
- forces and deregulation are "modern" efficiencies, the brilliant
- result of state-of-the-art economic genius.
-
- This historical revision by omission has the consequence that no one
- brings up the fact that these policies have been tried before and
- were found sorely wanting - that they led to economic instability,
- monopolized markets, cyclical depressions, political corruption,
- worker exploitation, and social depravity - and that generations of
- reform were required to re-introduce competition into markets, to
- stabilize the financial system, and to institute more equitable
- employer/employee relations.
-
- The regulatory regimes that were in place before the Reagan-Thatcher
- era were there for very good reason - they adjudicated, with varying
- effectiveness, between society's desire for stability and citizen
- welfare, on the one hand, and the corporate desire for maximizing
- profits, on the other.
-
- These regimes implemented a generally reasonable accommodation
- between the interests of the elite and the people. But, with the
- help of today's media propaganda, everyone now "knows" that
- regulations are nothing more than the counter-productive ego-trips of
- well or ill-meaning politico bureaucrats who have nothing better to
- do than interfere in other people's business.
-
- Again in Orwellian fashion, today's "reforms" are in fact the
- _dismantlement_ of reforms - reforms which accomplished the
- moderation of decades of market-forces abuse. The power of the media
- to define and interpret events, and to set the context in which
- public discussion is framed, is immense. Old wine can be presented
- in new vessels, and black can be presented as white, as long as the
- message is repeated often enough and the facts that don't fit are
- never given airtime.
-
- The mass media is the front line of corporate globalist control - the
- very trenches in the battle to maintain elite domination; this fact,
- in addition to market forces, adds extra urgency to the pace of
- global media concentration. The central political importance of
- corporate-dominated mass media to the globalization process, and to
- elite control generally, must be kept in mind when attempting to
- predict the fate of Internet culture when commercial cyberspace
- begins to come online.
-
- In this regard, the treatment of cyberspace and Internet in the
- mass-media over the past few years lends some portending insights.
- There are two quite different images that are typically presented,
- one commercially oriented and the other not.
-
- The first image, frequently presented in fiction or in futuristic
- documentaries, is about the excitement of cyber adventures, the
- thrill of virtual reality, and the promise of myriad online
- enterprises. This commercially oriented image is projected with a
- positive spin, and suddenly every product and organization on the
- block includes a www.My.Logo.com on its packaging and advertising,
- with in many cases only symbolic utility. Madison avenue is selling
- cyberspace - but it's selling the commercial version yet to be
- implemented, it's pre-establishing a mass-market demand.
-
- The other image, very much anchored in today's Internet technology,
- has to do with sinister hackers, wacko bomb conspirators, and luring
- pedophiles. Those of us who use the net daily find such stories
- ludicrous and unrepresentative, but because we dismiss such stories
- we may not realize that for much of the general population, that's
- all they hear about today's Internet.
-
- If you'll permit me a personal anecdote - but a not atypical one...
- at the bank where my girl friend works, here in rural Ireland, the
- subject of Internet came up among some of the workers. None of them
- had ever been online, yet their unhesitating sentiment was that
- they'd never let their kids near that evil network, where they'd be
- immediately assaulted by obscene material and indecent proposals.
-
- The infamous Time article on Cyberporn, for example, was pure
- demonization propaganda - blatantly deceptive and sensationalist -
- and standard publication procedures were surreptitiously violated in
- order to get it printed. But the effect of the original publication
- on the general public was in no way undone by the mild apologies that
- were later offered.
-
- The U.S. CDA (censorship) initiative, whose passage was assisted in
- no small measure by the well-timed article, was fortunately rejected
- by the U.S. Supreme Court. But the defamation campaign against the
- non-economic Internet continues, in ironic contrast to the boosting
- images of its commercial future cousin (where no doubt the commercial
- pornographic offerings will in fact be equally graphic).
-
- The relationship between cyberspace and democracy is a complex one
- indeed. Internet culture, as the seeming prototype for future
- cyberspace experience, has enabled a renaissance of open public
- discussion - a peek at a more open democratic process. But this
- phenomenon has been experienced by a relatively tiny minority of the
- world's population, and may in fact not survive the commercial
- onslaught.
-
- On the contrary, as universal transport for mass-media products,
- cyberspace may in fact become the delivery vehicle for even more
- sophisticated manipulation of public opinion. Rather than the
- realization of the democratic dream, cyberspace may turn out instead
- to be the ultimate Big-Brother nightmare.
-
- In a world where most significant physical and financial events will
- involve online transactions, and in a world where backdoors are built
- into encryption algorithms and communications switches, everyone's
- every move is an open book to those who have the keys to the net
- nervous system - which would include government agents (on the basis
- of legality) as well as the operators of the system (on the basis of
- opportunity and laissez-faire non-oversight).
-
- From the accounting records alone, there would be a complete trail of
- almost everything anyone does, and the privacy of this information
- (from government, police, credit bureaus, advertisers, direct
- mailers, political strategists, etc.) is far from guaranteed.
-
- Systematic massive surveillance by government agencies would be
- extremely easy, with the ability to track (undetected) purchases and
- preferences, financial transactions, physical location, persons and
- groups communicated with, and the content of communications. There
- is even the possibility of surreptitious gathering of audio and video
- signals from home sets which are thought to be "off" (one up on
- "1984"), and the remote overriding of home security systems,
- automobile functions (windows, engine), etc.
-
- In particular, no sizable group (such as a political organization or
- a public-interest group) could exist without having its every
- deliberation and activity being monitorable by government agencies,
- depending on how interested the authorities are in its activities.
-
- | The FBI draft would take two extraordinary steps. It would
- | prohibit the manufacture, sale, import or distribution within
- | the United States of any encryption product unless it contains a
- | feature that would create a spare key or some other trap door
- | allowing "immediate" decryption of any user's messages or files
- | without the user's knowledge.
- | In addition, it would require all network service providers
- | that offer encryption products or services to their customers to
- | ensure that all messages using such encryption can be
- | immediately decrypted without the knowledge of the customer.
- | This would apply to telephone companies and to online service
- | providers such as America Online and Prodigy.
- | -The Center for Democracy and Technology,
- | CDT POLICY POST, September 8, 1997
-
-
- Mandatory chip-based ID cards or even implants may seem fanciful to
- many, but the number of government and commercial initiatives in
- those directions worldwide is cause for serious alarm. Such devices
- would turn each citizen into an involuntary leaf node of the
- cyberspace network, his chip being remotely monitorable from who-
- knows-how many scanning stations, visible or otherwise.
-
- | Building on the present national photo-id card, the Korean
- | ID Card Project involves a chip-based ID card for every adult
- | member of the population. It is to include scanned
- | fingerprints, and is intended to support the functions of a
- | multi-purpose identifier, proof of residence, a driver's
- | licence, and the national pension card.
- | - Roger Clarke,
- | "Chip-Based ID: Promise and Peril"
-
- In summary, cyberspace promises not not only to be the ultimate
- commercial delivery channel for the mass media industry, but its very
- nature provides the opportunity for the mind-control aspects of the
- mass media to be carried out with incredible precision, and with full
- feedback-knowledge of who is actually receiving which information,
- and even what they are saying to their friends about it.
-
- Cyberspace could turn out to be the ideal instrument of power for the
- elite under globalism - giving precise scientific control over what
- gets distributed to whom on a global basis, and full monitoring of
- everything everyone does (and the accounting records are always there
- to go back and follow past trails when desired).
-
- Some readers may find the above scenario far-fetched; they may react
- with "It can't happen here". I would ask them "What is there to stop
- it?". The corporate domination of societal information flows is an
- inherent part of the seemingly unstoppable globalization process. We
- turn now from this "end view" of the scenario to an examination of
- how events are likely to unfold...
-
-
- Cyberspace: whose utopia?
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The law doth punish man or woman
- That steals the goose from off the common,
- But lets the greater felon loose,
- That steals the common from the goose.
- - Anon, 18th cent., on the enclosures.
-
- One can think of digital cyberspace as a kind of utopian realm, where
- all communication wishes can be granted. The question is who's going
- to be running this utopian realm? We net users tend to assume we'll
- waltz into this utopia and use it for our creative purposes, just as
- we have Internet. But there are others who have designs on this
- utopia as well. It is a frontier toward which more than one set of
- pioneers have their wagons ready to roll.
-
- We're willing to pay a few cents per hour for our usage (and we
- complain of _any_ usage charges), and our need for really high per-
- user bandwidth is yet to be demonstrated. The media industry, on the
- other hand, can bring a huge existing traffic onto cyberspace - a
- traffic with much higher value-per-transaction than email and web
- hits, and a traffic that can gobble up lots of bandwidth. We want to
- pay commodity prices for transport, while the media industry is
- willing to pay whatever it needs to - and it can pass on its costs to
- consumers.
-
- From a purely economic perspective, the interests of the media
- industry could be expected to dominate the rules of the road in
- cyberspace - just as the well-funded land developer can always out-
- bid the would-be homesteader. Whether it be purchasing satellite
- spectrum or lobbying legislatures, deep-pockets tend to get their
- way.
-
- But economic considerations may not be most decisive in setting the
- rules of the cyberspace road - the political angle may be even more
- important. Continued mass-media domination of information
- distribution systems is necessary if the media is to play its
- accustomed role as shepherd of public opinion. This role, as we have
- seen, is mission-critical to the continuance of the globalization
- process and to elite societal control in general.
-
- It is instructive in this regard to review the history of the radio
- industry in 1920s America...
-
- | In the 20's there was a battle. Radio was coming along,
- | everyone knew it wasn't a marketable product like shoes. It's
- | gonna be regulated and the question was, who was gonna get hold
- | of it? Well, there were groups, (church groups, labor unions
- | were extremely weak and split then, and some student groups)...
- | who tried to organise to get radio to become a kind of a public
- | interest phenomenon; but they were just totally smashed. I mean
- | it was completely commercialized. - Noam Chomsky
-
- Other nations followed a different track (BBC et al), but this time
- around it is the U.S. model that is predominating, as we have
- discussed.
-
- The twin _drivers_ in the commercial monopolization process are
- _economic necessity_ (squashing competition from independents for
- audience attention) and _political necessity_ (maintaining control
- over public opinion).
-
- The _mechanisms_ of domination include concentrated ownership of
- infrastructure, licensing bureaucracies, information property rights,
- libel laws, pricing structures, creation of artificial distribution
- scarcity, and "public interest" censorship rules. These tactics have
- all been used and refined throughout the life of electronic media
- technology, starting with radio, and their use can be expected as
- part of the cyberspace commercialization process.
-
- Indeed, the first signs of each of these tactics is already becoming
- evident. The U.S. Internet backbone has been privatized;
- consolidation of ownership is beginning in Telecom and in ISP
- services; WIPO (World Information Property Organization) is setting
- down over-restrictive global copyright rules, which the U.S. is
- embellishing with draconian criminal penalties; content restrictions
- are cropping up all over the world, boosted by ongoing anti-Internet
- propaganda; pricing is being turned over increasingly to "market
- forces" (where traditional predatory practices can operate); chilling
- libel precedents are being set; and moves are afoot to centralize
- domain-name registration, beginning what appears to be a slippery
- slide toward ISP licensing. And these are still very early days in
- the commercialization process.
-
- Consider the U.S. Telecom Reform Bill of 1996. Theoretically, it is
- supposed to lead to "increased competition" - but what does that
- mean?. there is a transition period, during which a determination
- must be reached that "competition is occurring". after that it
- becomes a more or less laissez-faire ball game, especially given the
- ongoing climate of deregulation and lack of anti-trust enforcement.
- There is no going back, no guarantee that if competition fades
- regulation will be restored.
-
- Consolidation is permitted both horizontally and vertically - a telco
- can expand its territory, and it can be sold/merged with content
- (media) companies. Prices and the definition of services are to be
- determined by "the market". It is well to keep in mind that the
- Telecom Bill was pushed through by efforts of telecom and media
- majors, and well to interpret "increased competition" in that light.
- And it is well to keep in mind that the globalization process tends
- to propagate the US media model.
-
- | To communications companies, then, the act has been a big
- | success. The U.S. commercial media system is currently
- | dominated by a few conglomerates -- Disney, the News
- | Corporation, G.E., cable giant T.C.I., Universal, Sony, Time
- | Warner and Viacom -- with annual media sales ranging from $7
- | billion to $23 billion. These giants are often major players in
- | broadcast TV, cable TV, film production, music production, book
- | publishing, magazine publishing, theme parks and retail
- | operations. The system has a second tier of another fifteen or
- | so companies, like Gannett, Cox Communications, Dow Jones, The
- | New York Times Co. and Newhouse's Advance Communications, with
- | annual sales ranging from $1 billion to $5 billion.
- | That the 1996 Telecommunications Act's most immediate effect
- | was to sanctify this concentrated corporate control is not
- | surprising; its true mission never had anything to do with
- | increasing competition or empowering consumers.
- | ...A few crumbs were tossed to "special interest" groups
- | like schools and hospitals, but only when they didn't interfere
- | with the pro-business thrust of the legislation.
- | - Robert W. McChesney, The Nation Digital Edition,
- | author of Corporate Media and the Threat to Democracy
-
- Just as the media industry is already becoming increasingly
- vertically integrated (owning its own distribution infrastructure -
- satellites, cables, and the like), so the media industry will seek
- mergers and acquisitions in the telecom industry as the digital
- network gets closer to implementation.
-
- The ultimate direction is for a single media-communications mega-
- industry, dominated by a clique of vertically-integrated majors,
- following awesome merger wars among huge conglomerates. Regulation
- will indeed govern cyberspace but - in accordance with the globalist
- paradigm - it will be regulation by and for the cartel of majors, as
- we see presaged by the following recent announcement:
-
- | BRUSSELS (Reuter) -- The European Union's top
- | telecommunications official called Monday for an international
- | charter to regulate the Internet and other electronic networks.
- | "Its role would not be to impose detailed rules, except in
- | particular circumstances (child pornography, terrorist
- | networks)," he said.
- | The charter would recognize existing pacts negotiated within
- | the World Trade Organization and World Intellectual Property
- | Organization and draw on principles agreed by other bodies such
- | as the Group of Seven top industrial countries, he said.
-
- From an economic point of view, the whole point of monopolization is
- to create an all-the-traffic-will-bear marketplace - where products
- are priced on the basis of "How much will the mass consumer pay for
- this product?", without a need to consider under-pricing competing
- products. This is the market paradigm that operates today, for
- example, in cinemas and in video rentals. Films compete there on the
- basis of consumer interest, not on the basis of price. Copyrights
- are the foundation of this regime, and WIPO is busily implementing an
- industrial-grade version of copyright for cyberspace.
-
- Majors _will_ compete with one another, but their competition will be
- in the realm of content acquisition - seeking to have the most
- successful product offerings, and coverage - seeking to extend their
- market territories. Consumers benefit - this competition brings them
- ever more titillating entertainments, but as citizens they are poorly
- served - the scope and "message" of their entertainments (and
- information) is limited and molded by corporate interests.
-
- WIPO's strict copyright laws basically mean that each consumer must
- pay for delivery of each and every media product - it will be illegal
- to save a copy (on disk or tape) or to forward a copy to someone
- else, and there will be mechanisms (including technical provisions
- and surveillance of communications) to provide effective enforcement.
-
- The regulations being laid down for libel, copyright, and pornography
- combine to make Internet culture ultimately untenable. A bulletin
- board, for example, could not be run in open mode - there would need
- to be, in essence, a bonded professional staff to filter out
- submissions to avoid liability to prosecution. List owners would be
- forced to become censors, and to verify contributor's statements as
- do newspaper editors. The open non-economic universe of today's
- Internet seems destined to be marginalized just like America's CB-
- radio or public-interest broadcasting, thus completing the commercial
- domination of cyberspace and the corporate domination of society.
-
- The power of monopolized ownership, in a laissez-faire environment,
- translates into the power to define service categories, and to set
- prices, according to whatever goals - economic or political - the
- owners may have in mind.
-
- The ability to distribute media products at reasonable rates to large
- (but not quite mass) audiences translates into the ability to start
- up a competing media company - a new film label let's say - with only
- production costs standing as the major capitalization required. This
- is exactly the kind of situation media cartels wish to avoid -
- discouraging distribution start-ups is what "control over
- distribution" is all about. In the case of television, scarce
- bandwidth translated into expensive licenses and the cartel was easy
- to maintain.
-
- In the case of cyberspace, the cartel can maintain its traditional
- distribution-control by defining services, and setting prices, in
- such a way that media-distribution is artificially expensive, and
- becomes only cost-effective on a massive scale - requiring massive
- distribution capitalization.
-
- In the case of non-commercial group networking, we're talking about
- small distribution lists, say less than a thousand. What do you
- think it will cost you to send a message to one person in commercial
- cyberspace? My guess is that the "traffic will bear" about as much
- for a one-page message as for a first-class letter. This may seem
- over-priced to you, but so what? I consider my voice phone service
- (and CDs) to be over-priced - c'est la vie in the world of monopoly
- market forces. And the advertising brochure will boast "Get your
- message instantly to anyone in the world - all for one flat rate less
- than a domestic postage stamp".
-
- At 25 cents/recipient, say, you can see what happens to the Internet
- mailing-list phenomenon: a 500-person list carries a $125 posting fee
- direct from the poster to the telco. You can play with the numbers,
- talk about receiver-pays, and point out that corporate users will
- insist on affordable networking, but it should be nonetheless clear
- that monopoly-controlled pricing has the power to totally wrench the
- foundations out from under Internet usage patterns. We could soon be
- back in the days when groups and small publications struggled to
- scratch together postage for their monthly missives.
-
- The media-com industry will make plenty of money out of 1-1 email
- messaging, and plenty of money out of their own commercial products.
- Whether or not they want to encourage widespread citizen networking
- is entirely up to them - according to their own sovereign
- cost/benefit analysis. If they don't favor it, it won't happen -
- except in the same marginalized way that HAM radio operates (only for
- people with extra time and money on their hands - talking to each
- other mostly about HAM radio).
-
- One can presume that there will be some kind of commercial chat-room/
- discussion-group industry, and one can imagine it being monopolized
- by online versions of talk radio shows, presided over perhaps by an
- Oprah Winfrey, a Ted Koppel or a Larry King - with inset screens for
- "randomly selected" guests. "Online discussion" can thus be turned
- into a new kind of media product, and its distribution economics can
- be structured to favor the cartel.
-
- The prospects seem dim for both democracy and cyberspace, and
- cyberspace itself seems to be more a part of the problem than a part
- of the solution - as with many previous technologies. I will
- endeavor to address the question of "What can we do about it?", but
- first let's consider a theme of the day: "electronic democracy".
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- [parts 7-8 (conclusion)]
-
-
- DEMOCRACY AND CYBERSPACE
-
- Copyright 1997 by Richard K. Moore
-
-
- Electronic Democracy: dream or nightmare?
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- "Electronic Democracy" has no generally agreed upon definition - the
- term is used to refer to everything from community networking, to
- online discussion of issues, to email lobbying of elected
- representatives. What I'd like to discuss here is one of the more
- radical definitions of the term: the use of electronic networking to
- bring about a more direct form of democracy, to short-circuit the
- representative process and look more to net-supported plebiscites and
- "official" online debates in deciding issues of government policy.
-
- There are well-meaning groups on the Internet actively articulating
- and promoting such radical schemes, and to many netizens this kind of
- "direct democracy" may seem very appealing. It holds out the promise
- of cutting through the bureaucratic red tape, reducing the role of
- corrupt politicians and special interests, and allowing the will of
- the people to be expressed. In short, it would appear to
- institutionalize the more promising aspects of Internet culture for
- the benefit of mankind and the furtherance of democratic ideals.
-
- But into this pollyannic perspective I must cast a cynical dose of
- realism. Just as it would be naive to assume idyllic visions of a
- global-village commons are likely to characterize commercialized
- cyberspace, so would it be equally naive to assume electronic direct
- democracy, if implemented, would turn out to be anything like the
- idealistic visions of its well-meaning proponents.
-
- In examining the future prospects for cyberspace, what turned out to
- be determinative, at least by my analysis, were the interests of the
- major players who stand to be most affected by the economic and
- political opportunities presented by digital networking. It may be
- the Internet community that is the most aware and articulate about
- cyberspace issues, but they are not the ones who own the
- infrastructure or make the policy decisions.
-
- Similarly, when examining the prospects for electronic democracy, it
- is absolutely essential to consider the interests of those major
- players - including corporations, societal elites, and government
- itself - who would be directly affected by any changes made in
- governmental systems.
-
- If official changes are made to our systems, it is governments who
- will make those changes - the same governments who are currently
- presiding over the dismantlement of their own infrastructures and
- systematically selling out national sovereignty to corporate
- globalism.
-
- The plain fact is that direct electronic democracy is very much a
- two-edged sword. Depending on the implementation details - and the
- devil is indeed in the details - it could lead either to popular
- sovereignty or to populist manipulation. It could give voice to the
- common man and woman, or it could be the vehicle for implementing
- policies so ill-advised that even existing corrupt governments shy
- away from them - and in such a way that no one is accountable for the
- consequences.
-
- Consider some of the issues involved: Who decides which questions
- are raised for a vote? Who decides what viewpoints are presented for
- consideration? Who decides when sufficient discussion has taken
- place? Who verifies that the announced tally is in fact accurate?
- Who checks for vote-adjusting viruses in the software, and who
- supplies that software?
-
- I don't deny that a beneficent system could be designed, but I don't
- see how such could be reliably guaranteed as the outcome. Even with
- our current Internet and its open culture, the above issues would not
- be easy to resolve in a satisfactory way. In the context of a
- commercialized cyberspace, the prospects would be even less
- favorable.
-
- Let's look for a moment at a direct-democracy precedent. In
- California there has long been an initiative and referendum process,
- and it is much used. This particular system was set up in a fairly
- reasonable way, and in many cases decent results have been obtained.
- On the other hand there have been cases where corporate interests
- have used the initiative process (with the help of intensive
- advertising campaigns) to get measures approved which were blatantly
- unsound, and which the legislature had been sensible enough not to
- pursue.
-
- In today's political climate, with elite corporate interests firmly
- in control of most Western governments, the prospects for any radical
- changes being implemented in a way that actually serves popular
- interests are very slim indeed. The simple truth is that those
- interests currently in the ascendency would be blind fools to allow a
- system changes that seriously threatened the control over the
- political process they now enjoy.
-
- If "electronic democracy" were to be implemented in today's political
- environment, one can only shudder at how it would be set up, and to
- what ends it would be employed. The rhetoric surrounding its
- implementation would of course be very attractive - direct expression
- of popular will, cutting out the corrupt politicos, etc. But
- rhetoric is rhetoric, and the reality is something else again, as has
- become apparent with globalization itself, or with the U.S. Telecom
- Reform Bill.
-
- The most likely scenario, in my view, would include a biased
- statement of the issues, a constrained set of articulated
- alternatives, and a selected panel of "experts" who pose no threat to
- established interests. It would be a show more than a debate -
- reminiscent of what has happened to public-broadcasting panel shows
- in the U.S. today, where the majority of panel experts typically
- "happen" to come from right-wing think tanks.
-
- Especially disturbing is the intrinsic unaccountability of this kind
- of direct-democracy process. If an emotionally charged show/debate
- convinces people to vote for nuking Libya, or expelling immigrants,
- or sterilizing single mothers, for example, no one is afterwards
- accountable - it was "the people's will". The political process is
- reduced to stimulus-response: a Madison-Avenue-engineered show
- provides the stimulus, and spur-of-the-moment emotion provides the
- response.
-
- The history of populism in the latter half of the twentieth century
- is not particularly promising. Mussolini and Hitler both came to
- power partly through populist appeals to cut through bureaucracy and
- bring "decisiveness" to government. I'd say extreme caution is
- indicated as regards electronic democracy or any other constitution-
- level changes at this time of elite ascendency.
-
- "Electronic democracy", like cyberspace itself, threatens under
- existing circumstances to only compound the problems faced by
- democracy. In closing, allow me to offer my thoughts on how a
- democracy-favoring citizenry might best respond to the onslaught of
- corporate globalization generally, and how they might approach
- communications policy in particular.
-
-
- Democracy & Cyberspace: strategic recommendations
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- Pursuant to the goal of improving the quality of our democracies, it
- seems to me, upon consideration, that the only effective strategy is
- an old-fashioned one: grass-roots political organizing, creation of
- broad coalition movements, formulation of common political agendas,
- and the energetic support of sound candidates - with the objective of
- re-balancing the elite-people see-saw.
-
- In order to restore balance, national sovereignty must be re-instated
- over economic and social policies, returning to democracy its
- potency. Coercively and deceptively imposed debut burdens must be
- forgiven, and corporations must be effectively encouraged by
- regulation to be good citizens just as people are so encouraged by
- laws. Laissez-faire deregulation is just a another name for
- lawlessness - and gang rule is the inevitable structural outcome, as
- history - unreconstructed - conclusively demonstrates.
-
- If popular ascendency can be achieved in this way, then there are all
- kinds of improvements that could _then_ be made to our electoral
- systems, and increased direct voting _might_ be one of them.
-
- Such a popular resurgence would of course be an incredibly formidable
- undertaking, but can we honestly expect significant societal
- improvement by any other means? In the meantime, novel proposals for
- system-level changes, even the best-intentioned, will only be
- implemented after being re-formulated by the current establishment -
- to our peril.
-
- Pursuant to the goal of preventing the kind of commercialized
- cyberspace that has been described above, my recommendation remains
- the same: broad-based popular political activism. The only way
- favorable policies can be expected regarding communications, mass
- media, excessive corporate influence - or anything else for that
- matter - is for better candidates and parties to be put in power in
- the context of a sound progressive agenda.
-
- Nonetheless, permit me to offer some specific strategic
- recommendations regarding media and telecommunications policy. The
- worst aspects of commercialized cyberspace, according to my analysis,
- arise from monopoly concentration. The indicated policy strategy
- would be to focus on preventing monopolization - both the horizontal
- and vertical variety.
-
- To be sure there are the issues of copyright, censorship, and others,
- but I believe those are, relatively speaking, already well understood
- - the problem is simply to gain some influence over them. The
- monopoly issue however deserves a few more words.
-
- Preventing horizontal monopolies is a matter of insuring that
- competition exists in each market, and setting limits on the number
- of markets a single operator can enter. Accomplishing this is not
- rocket science and has been done successfully before. In fact,
- recent "reforms", in the case of the U.S., have largely amounted to
- undoing not-that-bad regulation.
-
- Alternatively, one could specifically sanction horizontal monopolies
- (as with the classic U.S RBOC's or pre-privatization BT), but
- implement regulation that insures sound operation, and same-price-
- to-all ("common carrier") operation.
-
- Preventing vertical monopolies is a matter of defining "layers" of
- service, and preventing cross-ownership across layers. If content
- owners (media companies), for example, are not allowed to own
- transport facilities, and transport must be marketed on a same-
- price-to-all basis, then there would be considerable hope of
- preserving open discourse in cyberspace. Independent operators (eg,
- ISP's) could then afford (and be permitted) to interconnect to the
- network and offer affordable services to "the rest of us", as with
- Internet today.
-
- I hope these considerations are found to be useful.
-
- =-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~
- Posted by Richard K. Moore - rkmoore@iol.ie - PO Box 26 Wexford, Ireland
- http://www.iol.ie/~rkmoore/cyberjournal (USA Citizen)
- * Non-commercial republication encouraged - Please include this sig *
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
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