geert lovink on Sat, 12 Apr 2003 07:21:19 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> "The Rise of Infrastructure Socialism" |
(Dear nettimers, is this relavant? I find it hard to judge. In this political climate is it not easy to distinguish between sheer madness of some sad and marginalized crowd of tech consultants and the very real influence that neo-conservative foundations such as cato, heritage and free enterprise have on the Bush administration. Anyway, this is their latest topic: an attack against 'forced sharing' and the rise of 'infrastructure socialism'. I love that term. I wished it existed. Some of the elements are wellknown such as the neo-conservative criticism of the FCC. But it is also clearly targeted against Linux, free software and open source, and p2p networks in defense of Microsoft, AOL, SUN and other IT companies. Geert) April 11, 2003 Dear TechKnowledge Reader: In a new book from the Cato Institute, What's Yours Is Mine: Open Access and the Rise of Infrastructure Socialism, authors Adam Thierer and Clyde Wayne Crews Jr. examine the hazards of mandatory "open access"-a new trend in which hyper-regulatory bureaucrats and central planners are increasingly commanding technology companies and industry sectors to share networks, facilities, or specific technologies with rivals. Telephone and cable companies, wireless carriers, electric utilities, AOL's Instant Messenger service, the Visa/Mastercard network, Microsoft's Windows operating system-all these and more have been targets of demands for forced access. Although supporters claim that open access is pro-competitive, the opposite is true. Forced access policies inevitably mean price and quality controls, stagnation, increased litigation, and a crippling of innovation. Genuine competition requires that firms have the ability to exclude rivals. Government seizure of existing networks or technologies on behalf of rivals means that next- generation technologies will not be created by those rivals or the incumbents. The recent decision by the FCC to continue such micro-management of local telecom markets illustrates this principle; regulators have opted to continue to require sharing of local telephone lines and switches despite the fact that those rules have decimated innovation and investment in the U.S. telecom market. The key message for policymakers hoping for a high-tech renaissance: Competition in the creation of networks is as important as competition in the goods and services that get sold across those networks. Competition, innovation, and consumers will suffer if forced sharing policies are not abandoned. In today's world of increasing global communications and digital technologies, What's Yours Is Mine makes an urgently needed pro-consumer case for laissez-faire in the evolution of technology industries. To subscribe or see a list of all previous TechKnowledge articles, visit http://www.cato.org/tech/tk-index.html -- =================================== from Gilder Publishing THE FRIDAY LETTER e-mailed weekly, for friends and subscribers =================================== | http://www.gilder.com/ | Issue 101.0/April 11, 2003 THE WEEK/Disruption in the Age of Cheap ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Another year, another eclectic gathering of technologists, investors, and gurus from the storage and networking industries, to assess the state of disruption and innovation in the converging worlds of storage and bandwidth. But this one was different. It was the third iteration of Storewidth, a conference that's turned out (quite unintentionally, for certain) to parallel "three awful years in the IT industry," as Forbes publisher Rich Karlgaard noted in his introduction. He also set a tone for the event by citing what he's now calling the "cheap revolution," led by such rising stars as Google, running on 12,000 cheap PCs and the free Linux operating system. Another example: "Sun's biggest competitor today is eBay, selling one-year old servers." The warning is clear, said Karlgaard: "Never judge the health of this industry by the leading companies." Storewidth has survived in a difficult conference environment because its relevance won't go away. It's focused on a technology truism that no economic turndown can stop, and a need so great--data growth that's more than doubling every year--that it simply can't be ignored or put off. The enterprise, increasingly running on networks, is finding storage the fastest growing, most time-consuming application on those networks. And, with budgets flat while storage doubles, it's no stretch to say trouble is brewing. "It's now legions of people and bucketloads of Tylenol," said Jonathan Martin of Veritas. Graeme Thickins, Founder & Principal Consultant of GT&A Strategic Marketing Inc. kindly offers a review of Storewidth 2003. See what you missed, and why you should be there next year. http://www.storewidth.com/conferences/2003review.htm # 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