user-generated – Technology Liberation Front https://techliberation.com Keeping politicians' hands off the Net & everything else related to technology Tue, 07 Dec 2010 20:29:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 6772528 And so the IP & Porn Wars Give Way to the Privacy & Cybersecurity Wars https://techliberation.com/2010/12/07/and-so-the-ip-porn-wars-give-way-to-the-privacy-cybersecurity-wars/ https://techliberation.com/2010/12/07/and-so-the-ip-porn-wars-give-way-to-the-privacy-cybersecurity-wars/#comments Tue, 07 Dec 2010 20:26:05 +0000 http://techliberation.com/?p=33332

Every once and awhile it’s worth taking a step back and looking at the long view of how Internet policy developments have unfolded and consider where they might be heading next.  We’ve reached such a moment as it pertains to efforts to police the Internet for copyright piracy, objectionable online content, privacy violations, and cybersecurity.  We’re at an interesting crossroads in this regard since the prospects for successful cracking down on copyright piracy and pornography appear grim.  Seemingly every effort that has been tried has failed.  The Net is awash in online porn and pirated content.  I am not expressing a normative position on this, rather, I’m just stating what now seems to be commonly accepted fact.

In the meantime, the United States is in the process of creating new information control regimes and this time its access to personal information and cybersecurity that are the focus of regulatory efforts.  The goal of the privacy-related regulatory efforts is to help Netizens better protect their privacy in online environments and stop the “arms race” of escalating technological capabilities.  The goal of cybersecurity efforts is to make digital networks and systems more secure or, more profoundly as we see in the Wikileaks case, it is to bottle up state secrets.

These efforts are also likely to fail.  Simply stated, it’s a nightmare to bottle-up information once it’s out there.  It doesn’t make a difference if that information we are seeking to control is copyrighted content, hate speech, dirty pictures, defamatory speech, secret diplomatic cables, or personal information.  Information is the blood that runs through the veins of the Internet and once it’s out it is pretty much Game Over. Commenting on the recent Wikileaks debacle over the release of diplomatic cables, Wall Street Journal columnist Daniel Henninger noted that “There is one certain fix for the WikiLeaks problem: Blow up the Internet. Short of that, there is no obvious answer.”  The same thing is increasingly true for these other types of information flows.

Now That’s A Lot of Information

As I pointed out in my recent essay, “Privacy as an Information Control Regime,” efforts to control information today are greatly complicated by problems associated with (1) convergence, (2) scale, (3) volume, and (4) unprecedented individual empowerment / user-generation of content.  It’s the volume problem that I want to spend a bit of time on here today.

As I noted in that previous essay, the sheer volume of media and communications activity taking place today greatly complicates regulatory efforts. In simple terms, there is just too much stuff for policymakers to police today relative to the past.

Let’s put some hard numbers on this problem.  IDC’s 2009 report, “The Digital Universe Ahead — Are You Ready?” provides the following snapshot of the data deluge:

  • Last year, despite the global recession, the Digital Universe set a record.  It grew by 62% to nearly 800,000 petabytes.  A petabyte is a million gigabytes.  Picture a stack of DVDs reaching from the earth to the moon and back.
  • This year, the Digital Universe will grow almost as fast to 1.2 million petabytes, or 1.2 zettabytes.
  • This explosive growth means that by 2020, our Digital Universe will be 44 TIMES AS BIG as it was in 2009.  Our stack of DVDs would now reach halfway to Mars.

And here’s a little something from the Global Information Industry Center’s report on “How Much Information?”:

In 2008, Americans consumed information for about 1.3 trillion hours, an average of almost 12 hours per day. Consumption totaled 3.6 zettabytes and 10,845 trillion words, corresponding to 100,500 words and 34 gigabytes for an average person on an average day. A zettabyte is 10 to the 21st power bytes, a million million gigabytes. These estimates are from an analysis of more than 20 different sources of information, from very old (newspapers and books) to very new (portable computer games, satellite radio, and Internet video). Information at work is not included.

(How about that caveat: information at work is not included!!)

To put all these petabytes and zettabytes in some context, here’s a chart that appeared in an Economist essay back in February entitled, “All Too Much: Monstrous Amounts of Data“:

These are mind-boggling numbers.  As the Economist chart suggests, it’s hard to even fathom what “yottabytes” entails, but that’s what’s next.

Anyway, let’s return to the privacy wars and think about the volume problem in that context. Today we’re hearing proposals to regulate online services (advertising networks) or software (web browsers) to clamp down on the flow of information.  The so-called “Do Not Track” mechanism is one potential solution that has been floated in the regard.

This reminds me of the illusive search for a “simple fix” or silver-bullet solution to online pornography.  The PICS /ICRA experience is instructive in this regard. That would be the W3C’s Platform for Internet Content Selection and Internet Content Rating Association.  For a time, there was hope that voluntary metadata tagging and content labeling could be used to screen objectionable content on the Internet.  But the sheer volume of material to be dealt with made that task almost impossible.  The effort has been abandoned now.  Of course, it’s true that effort didn’t have a government mandate behind it to encourage more widespread adoption, but even if it would have, does anyone really think all porn or other objectionable content would have been labeled and screened?

Similar problems await information control efforts in the privacy realm, even if a mandated Do Not Track mechanism required the re-engineering of web browser architecture.  Those who think Do Not Track would slow the “arms race” in this arena are kidding themselves.  If anything, a Do Not Track mandate will speed up that arms race.  Take a look at how well The CAN SPAM Act worked in practice if you want another example.

Selective Morality

Now, let’s pretend for a moment that I am wrong about all this in the privacy space and that the FTC and Congress somehow find a workable mechanism to control flows of personal information and can clamp down accordingly.   Again, I don’t believe it will happen, but if it did, doesn’t that mean it’s equally likely that the same mechanism would be used to crack down on speech, expression, copyrighted content, state information flows, or whatever else?

Perhaps that’s not a bad thing from your perspective, but what I find entertaining about this debate is how the folks who support an aggressive information control regime for privacy purposes generally also oppose  information control efforts as it pertains to speech, expression, copyright, or state secrets.  There’s a bit of selective morality at play here.  When it comes to personal information, the attitude seems to be that we must ‘pay any price, bear any burden,’ even going so far as to property-tize personal information flows.  In every other case, however, the attitude seems to be: Let information flow.

Regardless of one’s disposition on these matters, my point here is more simple: the information will flow.  Indeed, I think it is safe to say that there is a strong and growing negative correlation between the aggregate volume of data flowing across digital networks and the ability of policymakers to control those information flows. The recent Wikileaks release has made that new fact of life more evident to the world, but the ongoing IP wars might also hold some lessons for us in this regard.

Consider the thoughts of Sydney-based consultant Mark Pesce, who compares the two experiences.  He writes:

We’ve been here before.  This is 1999, the company is Napster, and the angry party is the recording industry.  It took them a while to strangle the beast, but they did finally manage to choke all the life out of it – for all the good it did them.  Within days after the death of Napster, Gnutella came around, and righted all the wrongs of Napster: decentralized where Napster was centralized; pervasive and increasingly invisible.  Gnutella created the ‘darknet’ for filesharing which has permanently crippled the recording and film industries.  The failure of Napster was the blueprint for Gnutella. In exactly the same way – note for note the failures of Wikileaks provide the blueprint for the systems which will follow it, and which will permanently leave the state and its actors neutered.

And it is likely a blueprint for what will happen in the privacy arena as well.

Conclusion

Again, I want to be clear that the point of this essay has not been to endorse or celebrate copyright piracy, widespread porn, privacy violations, release of state secrets, etc.  We’ll all have differences of opinions on these matters.  But there’s simply no getting around the fact that all these problems are all likely here to stay and, barring extreme crackdowns, it’s very hard for me to imagine how government might reverse that tide.

In the extreme, I suppose we could follow the Chinese mode and firewall off digital networks, effectively nationalize ISPs, and then pay citizens to inform on each other about various transgressions.  Or, we could impose punishing forms of liability on digital intermediaries — effectively deputizing online middlemen and making them servants of the State.  But such extreme solutions would have nightmarish ramifications for the future of the Internet and digital communications networks.  We have to ask ourselves how far we want to go to control information flows.

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Heading to Oxford Univ. for Forum on “Child Protection, Free Speech and the Internet” https://techliberation.com/2009/09/29/heading-to-oxford-univ-for-forum-on-child-protection-free-speech-and-the-internet/ https://techliberation.com/2009/09/29/heading-to-oxford-univ-for-forum-on-child-protection-free-speech-and-the-internet/#comments Tue, 29 Sep 2009 13:49:09 +0000 http://techliberation.com/?p=21848

Oxford UniversityI’ll be heading to Oxford University this week to participate in an Oxford Internet Institute (OII) forum on the subject of “Child Protection, Free Speech and the Internet: Mapping the Territory and Limitations of Common Ground.”  It’s being led by several experts from the OII as well as my good friends John Morris and Leslie Harris of the Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT).  The aims of this forum are:

  • To facilitate a dialogue between NGOs campaigning to protect respectively, child protection and children’s rights online, and freedom of speech and other civil liberties online.
  • To promote a better understanding of each others’ positions, to share perspectives and information with a view to identifying areas of common ground and areas of disagreement.
  • To identify any shared policy goals, and possible tools to support the achievement of those goals.
  • To publicize the findings of the forum in international policy debates about Internet governance and regulation.

Conference participants were asked to submit a 2-3 pg summary of their views on a couple of questions that will be discussed at this event.  I have listed those questions, and my answers, down below the fold.  It’s my best attempt to date to succinctly outline my views about how to balance content concerns and free speech issues going forward. 

What is the nature of your interest or experience in this field?

I have spent the last 18 years covering the intersection of child safety concerns and free speech issues at four different think tanks.  In recent years, I have tied together all my research in a constantly updated Progress & Freedom Foundation special report entitled, “Parental Controls & Online Child Protection: A Survey of Tools & Methods.” The 4th edition of this 250-page report was released in August.

Are there particular values or principles which underlie your work?

The goal of my research has been to explore the tension between free speech and child protection and to identify methods of striking a sensible balance between these two important values.   It is my hope and belief that we are now in a position to more fully empower parents such that government regulation of content and communications will be increasingly unnecessary.

In the past, it was thought to be too difficult for families to enforce their own “household standard” for acceptable content. Thus, many believed government needed to step in and create a baseline “community standard” for the entire citizenry.  Unfortunately, those “community standards” were quite amorphous and sometimes completely arbitrary when enforced through regulatory edicts.  Worse yet, those regulatory standards treated all households as if they had the same tastes or values—which is clearly not the case in most pluralistic societies.

If it is the case that families now have the ability to effectively tailor media consumption and communications choices to their own preferences—that is, to craft their own “household standard”—then the regulatory equation can and should change.  Regulation can no longer be premised on the supposed helplessness of households to deal with content flows if families have been empowered and educated to make content determinations for themselves.  Luckily, that is the world we increasingly live in today. Parents have more tools and methods at their disposal to help them decide what constitutes acceptable media content in their homes and in the lives of their children.

Going forward, our goal should be to ensure that parents or guardians have (1) the information necessary to make informed decisions and (2) the tools and methods necessary to act upon that information.  Optimally, those tools and methods would give them the ability to not only block objectionable materials, but also to more easily find content they feel is appropriate for their families. In my work, I refer to this as the “household empowerment vision.”

Will we ever be able to achieve a world of perfect parental control over all online content and communications?  That is unlikely since both content and technology will continuously evolve and make that goal elusive. But government regulation of speech should yield where less restrictive alternatives such as household-based controls and strategies exist.  Given the value associated with free speech and the danger of government censorship, these alternatives need not be perfect to be preferable to government regulation.

What are the issues/policies or laws which you see as most problematic in terms of creating or illustrating a conflict between online child protection and free speech?

It is essential that policymakers resist the temptation to extend traditional broadcast industry regulatory statutes and standards to new media outlets and digital technologies.  In a world of media convergence and increasing user empowerment, traditional regulatory rationales make increasingly less sense.  Nonetheless, many ongoing social problems and challenges remain to achieving the “household empowerment vision” I outlined above, including:

  • The “lack of awareness” problem: Some parents remain unaware of empowerment tools.
  • The “bad parent” problem: Some parents don’t use tools even when aware of them.
  • The “bad neighbor” problem: “Good” parents fear what happens when their kids visit other kids with more permissive parents.
  • The “generation gap” problem: Kids sometimes know more about new digital technologies than their parents.
  • The “technological surprise” problem: Rapid emergence and diffusion of new digital technologies can catch some parents by surprise.
  • The “bad corporate actor” problem: Most companies self-regulate, but a handful push the boundaries of good taste in ways that create social concerns that reflect on industry generally.
  • The “user-generated content” problem: Even when “professional” content can be managed, it is difficult to control “amateur” expression and creations.
  • The “peer-on-peer bullying” problem: While many are concerned about predators, the real online safety problem turns out to be cyber-bullying among peers.

Because of these ongoing social challenges or concerns, legal and regulatory proposals will continue to be put forward. But each has serious downsides:

  • Future of filtering: Centralized, network-based or decentralized, user-based?  The former creates serious censorship threats, as we see in China and other repressive states. The latter is more consistent with the household empowerment vision.
  • Middleman deputization: Should online intermediaries be required to police the Net for various social ills?  If so, as hand-maidens of the state, they could become over-zealous speech regulators.
  • Universal content ratings: Can policymakers mandate unified (or “scientific”) content media ratings?  Doing so puts regulators in a position to dictate content standards—for better or worse.  Moreover, this does nothing to address user-generated “amateur” content.
  • Mandatory online age / identity verification: Potentially threatens anonymity, privacy, and free speech rights.  Moreover, to the extent “bad guys” continue to get into “secured” environments it creates a false sense of security for parents and kids.
  • Expanded data retention: Although it would help facilitate some law enforcement goals, it also gives rise to new privacy and data breach risks.

Might any of these conflicts be avoidable, e.g. through the use of improved legislative instruments or greater clarity and accountability in processes of self-regulation?

For the above reasons, it makes more sense to put our energies into finding new self-regulatory mechanisms, social norms, and user empowerment strategies to solve ongoing social problems instead of focusing on regulatory solutions or mandates.  Instead of providing greater clarity, legislative instruments are more likely to instead create greater ambiguity, or at least uncertainty, for content creators and consumers alike. This is because, as was noted above, “community standards” are notoriously subjective; they are ham-handed attempts to gloss over the diverse needs and values of a diverse citizenry. By contrast, self-regulation, social norms, and empowerment strategies are evolutionary in character and more responsive to differences among cultures and households.

What are the issues where you think there might be most scope for finding some common ground?

In two words: empowerment and education. Because reliance on legislation is perilously difficult and enforcement of regulatory mandates is complicated (and sometimes impossible in an increasingly borderless world), efforts to better empower families and educate both kids and parents offer the most sensible path forward.  All stakeholders involved in child safety and free speech debates can generally agree that empowerment efforts, media literacy programs, awareness-building programs, and so on, are both effective and unobjectionable.

At the international level, are there certain key principles which we ought to be defending above all others?

Because of the “values clash” at the international level, it’s hard to imagine we’ll ever achieve consensus on some of these issues.  Countries vary widely in their sensitivities about speech, making any attempt to devise “universal principles” complicated.  For example, Europeans generally deride America’s prudish ways when it comes to matters of sexuality or “indecency.”  By contrast, most Americans cannot understand European concerns about “hate speech” or violently-themed media.  Meanwhile, governments in many other parts of the world are still busy trying to quell political or religious dissent.  “Harmonization” among those competing cultural norms remains complicated, therefore, and it would be a mistake if international harmonization was accomplished by sacrificing free speech rights for countries and cultures who cherish them.

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“Parental Controls & Online Child Protection” PFF special report (Version 4.0 Release) https://techliberation.com/2009/07/27/parental-controls-online-child-protection-pff-special-report-version-4-0-release/ https://techliberation.com/2009/07/27/parental-controls-online-child-protection-pff-special-report-version-4-0-release/#comments Mon, 27 Jul 2009 14:05:07 +0000 http://techliberation.com/?p=19625

ThiererBookCover062007The latest edition (Version 4.0) of my PFF special report on “Parental Controls and Online Child Protection: A Survey of Tools & Methods” is now up.  For those not familiar with the report, it explores the market for parental control tools, rating schemes, education and media literacy efforts, and various other tools, methods, and initiatives aimed at promoting online child safety.  After evaluating that state of this market, I conclude: “There has never been a time in our nation’s history when parents have had more tools and methods at their disposal to help them decide what constitutes acceptable media content in their homes and in the lives of their children.”  Moreover, I believe that the parental controls and content management tools cataloged in the report represent a better, less restrictive alternative to government regulation.

Version 4.0 of the report is now over 250 pages long (up from 200 pages in Version 3.0) and it contains almost 70 exhibits (up from 50), 725 references (up from roughly 500), and numerous updates in all five sections of the book. Major updates have been made to the Internet, social networking, and mobile media sections, reflecting the growing importance of those sectors and issues. Other new sections or appendices have also been added to the report, including:

  • a new section examining how many households really need parental control tools;
  • a new appendix on the downsides of mandatory parental controls and restrictive default settings;
  • a new section on the dangers of “deputizing the online middleman” solution as an approach to solving child safety concerns;
  • a new appendix reviewing the findings of 5 past online safety task forces;
  • … and much more.

I issue major updates once a year and 1 or 2 minor tweaks during the course of the year to reflect the evolution of the parental control and online child safety marketplace and debate. The report is available free-of-charge on the PFF website, and the previous editions of the report are housed there too in case you want to see how it has evolved over the past couple of years. For those interested in taking a quick look at the report, I have embedded it down below the fold as a Scribd file. Finally, as is always the case, I encourage readers to send me updates and suggestions for how to improve the report and I will incorporate them into future versions.

http://documents.scribd.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=2887320&access_key=key-um5xjvf98bfnuu8811v&page=&version=1&auto_size=true ]]>
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Book Review: Lee Siegel’s Against the Machine https://techliberation.com/2008/10/20/book-review-lee-siegel%e2%80%99s-against-the-machine/ https://techliberation.com/2008/10/20/book-review-lee-siegel%e2%80%99s-against-the-machine/#comments Tue, 21 Oct 2008 02:50:17 +0000 http://techliberation.com/?p=13371

Siegel Against the Machine book coverOf the titles I included in a mega-book review about Internet optimists and pessimists that I posted here a few months ago, I mentioned Lee Siegel’s new book, Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob.  It is certainly the dourest of the recent books that have adopted a pessimistic view of the impact the Internet is having on our culture, society, and economy. Because Siegel’s book is one of the most important technology policy books of 2008, however, I decided to give it a closer look here.

Siegel’s book essentially picks up where Andrew Keen’s leaves off in Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet is Killing our Culture (2007).  I posted a two-part review of Keen’s book here last year [Part 1, Part 2], but here’s a quick taste of Keen’s take on things.  He argues “the moral fabric of our society is being unraveled by Web 2.0” and that “our cultural standards and moral values are not all that are at stake.  Gravest of all,” Keen continues, “the very traditional institutions that have helped to foster and create our news, our music, our literature, our television shows, and our movies are under assault as well.”

As I noted in my earlier “Net optimists vs. pessimists” essay, after reading Cult of the Amateur, I didn’t think anyone else could ever be quite as over-the-top and Chicken Little-ish as Keen. But after working my way through Siegel’s Against the Machine, I realized I was wrong. It made Keen seem downright reasonable and cheery by comparison! Keen and Siegel seem to be in heated competition for the title “High Prophet of Internet Doom,” but Siegel is currently a nose ahead in that race.

Keen and Siegel are both essentially channeling the ghost of the late Neil Postman, the one-time dean of the modern school of techno-pessimism. Postman’s 1992 book Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology, was the first major anti-Digital Age diatribe and it remains the reigning champion of anti-technology screeds. “Information has become a form of garbage,” Postman argued, “not only incapable of answering the most fundamental human questions but barely useful in providing coherent direction to the solution of even mundane problems.” If left unchecked, Postman argued, America’s new technopoly — “the submission of all forms of cultural life to the sovereignty of technique and technology” — would destroy “the vital sources of our humanity” and lead to “a culture without a moral foundation” by undermining “certain mental processes and social relations that make human life worth living.”

Although Lee Siegel doesn’t bother citing him, he owes much to Postman’s brand of social criticism. Indeed, in large part, Siegel is simply bringing Postman’s critique of the Information Age up to date. Like Postman and Keen, Siegel is concerned about the “destructive side” of the Internet and the Information Age, which they all feel is being overlooked. Specifically, the attack these authors mount on the Information Age and the Net can be boiled down to two major themes:

  1. The Net is destroying (or at least greatly diminishing) the role of experts, authority, “truth”, and traditional societal norms and institutions. This is having (or eventually will result in) dangerous ramifications for our culture, economy, and democracy.
  2. The personalization and customization that the Information Age and the Internet have spawned is an unambiguously negative development for our society and culture. Moreover, in large part, the entire Web 2.0 experience is largely just about commercial interests furthering their ends.

Let’s take a closer look what Siegel says about each.

Experts, Authority, and “Truth”

Like Postman and Keen, Siegel doesn’t mix words when it comes to his contempt for the disintermediating influences of modern information technology. He is particularly concerned about the loss of “truth” and “authority” in our new environment. “Culture needs authoritative institutions like a powerful newspaper; it needs them both to protect its critical, independent spirit and to make sure that culture’s voices heard in the louder din of more powerful economic and political entities.” (p. 140-1) By empowering the masses to have more of a voice, Siegel says, “unbiased, rational, intelligent, and comprehensive news… will become less and less available.” (p. 165) “[G]iving everyone a voice,” he argues, “can also be a way to keep the most creative, intelligent, and original voices from being heard.” (p. 5)

Like many other Net skeptics, Siegel views Wikipedia, YouTube, blogs, and almost all user-generated content with a combination of confusion or contempt. “[S]elf-expression is not the same thing as imagination” or art, he argues. (p. 52)  Instead, he regards the explosion of online expression as the “narcissistic” bloviation of the masses and argues it is destroying true culture and knowledge. “Under the influence of the Internet,” he says, “knowledge is withering away into information.” (p. 152) Our new age of information abundance is not worth celebrating, he says, because “information is powerlessness.” (p. 148).

One reason Siegel gets nostalgic about the age of scarcity is because elites like him — and others who were lucky enough to have access to mainstream media — had a more privileged place in the old media world.  As a social / cultural critic, he can’t be happy with all the competition he now faces in that field from the blogosphere and online media outlets.

But it’s difficult to sympathize with Siegel’s position that others should be excluded from having a voice now in an effort to preserve the old order. After all, for the past seven decades, public policy has largely been preoccupied with getting society out of the scarcity mess (even though public policy created much of that mess!) by ensuring that citizens had more choices and outlets. Now that we have more options, some people like Keen and Siegel aren’t happy about the fact that the hoi polloi have been empowered. But, even if some traditional institutions lose the dominant position they once held in society, plenty of “authoritative” and “professional” media options and outlets continue to exist. Our new Information Age simply empowers millions of other voices to join the conversation and offer alternative perspectives and input.

But Siegel also disputes what he regards as such romanticized notions of “online participation” and “personal democracy.” To him, everyone is just in it for the money. “Web 2.0 is the brainchild of businessmen,” and the “producer public” is really just a “totalized ‘consumerist’ society.”  But what about all those bloggers who (like me!) are in it for the love of the conversation and debate?  Well, says Siegel, we just don’t realize the harm we are doing by trying to have our say!  “[T]he bloggers are playing into the hands of political and financial forces that want nothing more than to see the critical, scrutinizing media disappear.” (p. 141) And as for those true believers and Net evangelists who believe that something truly exciting is happening with our new online conversation, according to Siegel, they are simply “in a mad rush to earn profits or push a fervent idealism.” (p. 25-6)

It’s difficult for me to imagine anything more insultingly stupid than those last two statements.  The insulting part about them is that Siegel is essentially telling us all to shut up!  We all need to put down our pens — or, rather, our keyboards — and understand that we are doing great harm to those journalists, institutions, or other enlightened few who are really providing the “critical, scrutinizing” function so essential for a healthy democracy and culture. It’s just blatantly elitist for Siegel to suggest that only a select few have any business sharing their views with the world, and he even acknowledges that several times in the book. But he wears that elitist tag like a badge of honor as he stares down his nose at the newly empowered masses, snorting in disgust at everything he sees.

And the stupid part about those statements above is that the vast majority of bloggers or online participants are absolutely not in it for the money, or even out to take down mainstream media. They just want to be heard. But, again, Siegel believes that what you all have to say is not worth hearing anyway.

The Supposed Perils of Personalization

Indeed, Siegel’s primary gripe with the Web 2.0 world is that while most of us appreciate the growing personalization of information and content as well as the increasingly participatory nature of the Internet, he sees that as an unmitigated evil.  “The Internet is the first social environment to serve the needs of the isolated, asocial individual.” (p. 6)  The “Daily Me” (personalized, instantaneously delivered content) that Nicholas Negroponte predicted and longed for in his prescient 1995 book Being Digital, is viewed by Siegel as nothing more that the creation of a “narcissistic culture” in which “exaggeration” and the “loudest, most outrageous, or most extreme voices sway the crowd his way; the cutest, most self-effacing, most ridiculous, or most transparently fraudulent of voices saw the crowd of voices that way.” (p. 79)  He goes so far as to refer to it as our “democracy’s fatal turn” in that, instead of “allowing individuals to create their own cultural and commercial choices,” Web 2.0 has instead created “a more potent form of homogenization.” (p. 67)

In this regard, Siegel is channeling another Net skeptic, the prolific Cass Sunstein of the University of Chicago Law School.  In his 2001 book Republic.com, Sunstein also referred to Negroponte’s “Daily Me” in contemptuous terms, saying that the hyper-customization of websites and online technologies was causing extreme social fragmentation, isolation, and alienation, and could lead to political extremism. “A system of limitless individual choices, with respect to communications, is not necessarily in the interest of citizenship and self-government,” he wrote. As I said in my review of his book in Regulation magazine that year, Sunstein was essentially saying that the Internet is breeding a dangerous new creature: Anti-Democratic Man. “Group polarization is unquestionably occurring on the Internet,” he proclaimed, and it is weakening what he called the “social glue” that binds society together and provides citizens with a common “group identity.” If that continues unabated, Sunstein argued, the potential result could be nothing short of the death of deliberative democracy and the breakdown of the American system of government.

Siegel continues this line of reasoning in Against the Machine but, like Sunstein, completely fails to offer anything more than a few random anecdotes in defense of their thesis that the Net is leading to close-mindedness, homogenization, and the death of deliberative democracy. Worse yet, they also both completely fail to look at the other side of the story, which is that the Internet and Web 2.0 may be having the exact opposite effect. I made that argument in my 2005 book, Media Myths: Making Sense of the Debate over Media Ownership (p. 39):

The reality is that citizens do face an overwhelming number of media choices today, and that probably does make it somewhat more difficult for them to have “shared experiences” involving any individual news or entertainment program. But that isn’t really such a lamentable development. Government need not take steps to make sure everyone watches or listens to the same programs each night so they can all talk about them around the watercooler at work the next day. It’s just as good that everyone can discuss something different that they saw or heard the night before. And the very fact there are so many distinct media options available to citizens is better for a healthy democracy than a limited range of media options. Again, regardless of who owns what, the fact remains that we have more sources of news, communications, and entertainment than ever before in this country. Still, some media critics wax nostalgic about a mythical time — a supposed “Golden Age” of newspapers, radio, or television — when the populace was more closely linked or unified in some grand sociological sense by common reporting or programming options. But that is a stretch. The days when William Randolph Hearst dominated media, or when only three TV networks brought us our news at a set time each night, could hardly be labeled the “Golden Age” of those respective mediums. If that’s the world media critics want us to return to, then this represents, as Jonathan Knee argues, “an argument for homogeneity hiding under the pretext of diversity.”

And, indeed, that’s exactly what Siegel is proposing in his book, as Keen also does in his. They want to roll back to clock and return us to the mythical “good ‘ol days” of media. Again, when were those days? I simply cannot fathom how anyone can claim that the age of media scarcity — with its limited outlets and opportunities — was truly better than the world we find ourselves in today. As I noted in the first part of my two-part review of Keen’s book, which was entitled “Why an Age of Abundance Really is Better than an Age of Scarcity”:

What Keen doesn’t seem willing to tolerate is that when everyone has a voice, a lot more silly things are going to be said and heard. Back in the days before we all had our own soapboxes (websites, blogs, social networks, YouTube posts, etc.) we all had opinions, but we had few ways to get those opinions out. Now that the Internet has become the great leveler and given everyone the ability to be a one-person newspaper or broadcaster to the world, the dream of a more fully empowered citizenry is slowly becoming a reality. The upside is that everyone gets an equal chance to be heard. But the downside is that everyone gets an equal chance to be heard! That is, with the good comes some bad. There are wonderful contributions to culture and human communications being made by average Joes and Janes across the globe because of the Web. But let’s face it, there’s a lot of crap out there too. Cutting through the cultural clutter can been a real challenge, and even with the best search tools in the world at your disposal, it can still be difficult to find that diamond in the rough. But aren’t we better off as a society because of the opportunities now at our disposal? Isn’t an age of media and cultural abundance — warts and all — still preferable to the age of scarcity which preceded it?

I believe it is. And as I concluded in my review of Keen’s book, which seems like an equally sensible way to conclude this review of Lee Siegel’s tedious screed:

I think we are definitely better off because of this seismic shift in our communications and media environment. The human conversation is more diverse than ever before, and we have been empowered to experience the full range of culture and human creativity (for better and for worse!)
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Version 3.1 release: “Parental Controls & Online Child Protection” https://techliberation.com/2008/09/16/version-31-release-parental-controls-online-child-protection/ https://techliberation.com/2008/09/16/version-31-release-parental-controls-online-child-protection/#comments Tue, 16 Sep 2008 21:46:20 +0000 http://techliberation.com/?p=12784

Just FYI, the latest update of my booklet on “Parental Controls and Online Child Protection: A Survey of Tools & Methods” is now live. The new version, Version 3.1, provides minor updates to all sections of the book and a new appendix of relevant research in the field. I issue major updates early each year and 1 or 2 tweaks during the course of the year to reflect the evolution of the parental control and online child safety market and debate. ThiererBookCover062007

For those not familiar with the report, it explores the market for parental control tools, rating schemes, education efforts, and initiatives aimed at promoting online child safety. I believe that the parental controls and content management tools cataloged in the report represent a better, less restrictive alternative to government regulation. As I conclude after evaluating that state of the market: “There has never been a time in our nation’s history when parents have had more tools and methods at their disposal to help them decide what constitutes acceptable media content in their homes and in the lives of their children.”

The report is available free-of-charge on the PFF website, and the previous editions of the report are housed there too in case you want to see how it has evolved over the past two years. For those interested in taking a quick look at the report, I have embedded it down below the fold as a Scribd file. Finally, as is always the case, I encourage readers to send me updates and suggestions for how to improve the report and I will incorporate them into future versions.

http://documents.scribd.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=2887320&access_key=key-um5xjvf98bfnuu8811v&page=&version=1&auto_size=true <div style="font-size: 10px; text-align: center; width: 100%;”>Parental Controls and Online Content Protection-Version 3 0 (Thierer-PFF)Upload a Document to Scribd ]]>
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“Parental Controls and Online Child Protection” – Version 3.0 release https://techliberation.com/2008/03/26/parental-controls-and-online-child-protection-version-30-release/ https://techliberation.com/2008/03/26/parental-controls-and-online-child-protection-version-30-release/#comments Wed, 26 Mar 2008 13:35:34 +0000 http://techliberation.com/2008/03/26/parental-controls-and-online-child-protection-version-30-release/

PFF has just releasing an updated edition of my booklet on “Parental Controls and Online Child Protection: A Survey of Tools & Methods.” The new version, Version 3.0, includes two new appendixes and updates to each section to reflect new parental control tools and programs developed in the last nine months. ThiererBookCover062007

The updated report is timely as it comes on the heels of the recently-announced Internet Safety Technical Task Force, which is being chaired by the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School. I am privileged to serve as a member of the Task Force, which is evaluating various online safety technologies and strategies and then reporting back to state attorneys general with our findings.

Those issues and much more are covered in the latest edition of my report. The report explores the market for parental control tools, rating schemes, education efforts, and initiatives aimed at promoting online child safety. I believe that the parental controls and content management tools cataloged in the report represent a better, less restrictive alternative to government regulation. As I conclude after evaluating that state of the market: “There has never been a time in our nation’s history when parents have had more tools and methods at their disposal to help them decide what constitutes acceptable media content in their homes and in the lives of their children.”

Version 3.0 of the special report, now over 200 pages, contains over fifty exhibits and numerous updates in all five sections of the book. Major updates have been made to the Internet, social networking, and mobile media sections, reflecting the growing importance of those sectors and issues. A greatly expanded section on video empowerment technologies has also been included. Finally, two appendices have also been added: a comprehensive legislative index cataloging over thirty bills introduced in Congress on these issues (complied with John Morris of Center for Democracy & Technology), and a glossary of 35 relevant terms and cases.

The report is available free-of-charge on the PFF website, as are the previous editions. And I am happy to provide hard copies to those who are interested.

http://documents.scribd.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=2887320&access_key=key-um5xjvf98bfnuu8811v&page=&version=1&auto_size=true ]]>
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Parental Control Perfection https://techliberation.com/2007/10/11/parental-control-perfection/ https://techliberation.com/2007/10/11/parental-control-perfection/#respond Thu, 11 Oct 2007 20:36:29 +0000 http://techliberation.com/2007/10/11/parental-control-perfection/

PFF has just released my latest paper entitled “Parental Control Perfection? The Impact of the DVR and VOD Boom on the Debate over TV Content Regulation.” In the report, I focus on the extent to which new video technologies, such as digital video recorders (DVRs) and video on demand (VOD) services, are changing the way households consume media and are helping parents better tailor viewing experiences to their tastes and values. I provide evidence showing the rapid spread of these technologies and discuss how parents are using these tools in their homes. Finally, I argue that these developments will have profound implications for debates over the regulation of video programming. As parents are given the ability to more effectively manage their family’s viewing habits and experiences, it will lessen—if not completely undercut—the need for government intervention on their behalf.

This 16-page report can be found at: http://www.pff.org/issues-pubs/pops/pop14.20DVRboomcontentreg.pdf

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