Patrice Riemens on Mon, 12 Mar 2018 22:56:06 +0100 (CET)


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<nettime> Jean Noel Montagné: An other Internet is possible: Catalonia and Germany as examples


(The French, original version of this article to appear in the next issue of 'Le Sauvage' http://www.lesauvage.org/)

An other Internet is possible: Catalonia and Germany as examples

When Wifi came up in the early 2000s, and it became possible to connect a computer to the Internet without cables, many hackers started tinkering around with hard and software so as to increase their in and outbound range. At first it was mostly about getting Internet in an outlying room or at the end of the garden, and then sharing connectivity between neighboors became the next stage. At the time Internet connectivity was highly desired, especially in places not served by ISPs, and the only way to disseminate it was to make it available for free and to share it as far the equipment would carry it.
It took a few months only for the culture of an always on, self-managed, 
free, decentralised, and F/OSS-based Wifi network to spread all over the 
world. Before ADSL became widely available, all cities of the world have 
seen clubs, associations or other form of collectives rolling out Wifi 
networks on voluntary basis. Most were by way of hubs, more 
sophisticated ones were meshed, and all saw various outcomes in terms of 
success. The cleverest hacks with antennas involved coffee tins, or 
deep-fry skimming laddles common to Asian kitchens, still used in many 
countries for directional antennas. Progress in reach extention went 
fast: at first hundred of metres then kilometres and then even scores of 
kilometres. Nowadays, all kind of industrial grade equipments are 
manufactured and sold worldwide, this despite very disparate national 
legislation in terms of the range permitted.
.
In France, many 'Free Wifi associations' saw the light around 2001: all big cities, but also smaller towns like Montauban, Mazamet, or villages like Les Orres had their self-managed Wifi networks [1]. These networks were up for a few months or years, this untill telecom operators deployed cable connectivity all over the territory. So today a very few of these collectives are left. Some do it 'just for fun', others have an educational purpose to self-teach about network protocols and their evolution, and still others use them to connect sheperds' huts, isolated dwellings and mountain refuges. But the situation in other countries is very different.
In Germany you have the Freifunk self-managed network which is still 
growing steadily. Started in Berlin in 2002 if now aggregates 400 local 
communities all over Germany with a total of 41 000 access points. In 
scores of countries, very poor and very rich alike, collectives and 
associations run self-managed  networks, some of them adding  GSM and 3G 
technologies  to Wifi , e.g. around Oaxaca in  Mexico, boosted up by the 
Rhizomatica.org network.
In Catalonia also, as national operators would not provide connectivity 
in mountainous zones of the Pyrenees, or in the hills of the Osona 
region, a self organised WiFi culture developed, and a number of 
villages came together from 2004 onward to start a self-managed 
citizens' network: Guifi.net.This network expanded incrementally over 
the Iberic peninsula, et even connected with other countries, especially 
in South America. As I write there are 34 630 active interconnection 
nodes, of the 58 000 that have been set up.
These nodes all work with ultra small routers available of the shelf for 
30€ or even less, which use very little electricity, something between 
3W and 10W, sometimes more, depending on capacity. Some of them  are 
solar-powered. Internet  at your fingertips with just a small antenna on 
a rooftop, and a router in the attic or the staircase.  Once the 
equipment is connected the set up is through a simple webpage, everybody 
 can do it. The network adjusts seamlessly to new nodes coming up, or to 
old ones disapearing.
The software used to be starkly experimental at first, but by now it has 
been seriously upgraded, just like all F/OSS. This thanks to the 
contribution of scores of developers banding together on a Linux distro 
specifically intended for the devolpement of this type of autonomous and 
resilient Internet networks. It goes under the name of Cloudy [2]. It 
links all the nodes without any need for a centralised server. In 
addition to classic communication protocols, the Guifi community has 
also put in place mail servers, IP telephony, database services, instant 
messaging systems, webradio, webtelevision, and video-conferences 
set-ups.  This way the community created a truly autonomous, 
self-managed and resilient Internet, but one which is also connected to 
the 'big Internet'. And this is exactly where one realises the political 
and technological significance of such an approach in the context of the 
challenging years that await us.
The 'big Internet' itself is a network slowly losing its resilience. It 
is subjected to extremely strong political and technological forces 
which are in the hands of the planet's most powerful actors. Internet's 
frailness in on the rise both in technical terms, due to its massive 
energy needs, but also politically. President Trump's attacks on net 
neutrality are a boon to many a regime. Undemocratic governements, like 
China's, have erected digital walls preventing the free circulation of 
ideas and knowledge. There are a lot of economic, political, military or 
religious actors who dream of putting an end to the techno-anarchism 
that has been prevailing on the Internet from its origins. Internet as 
we still know it gives equal access to any human individual, indiferent 
whether sHe belongs to a GAFAM type of company or is a simple farmer in 
Bangladesh going online in an Internet cafe. But as governments have 
shut down access to the Internet for hours or even days on end, as 
happened during the 'Arab Spring' , avaibility of network connection 
becomes an crucial geo-political criterion, a basic necessity of life, 
and an absolute prerequisite for real democracy.
To this context, one should add the effects of the climate crisis, and 
the depletion of resources. No one can tell what the consequences will 
be of a (economic) crash on the telecommunication infrastructure and the 
avaibility of networks. If the Internet would come down, whatever the 
cause or the duration - and history shows that it has almost happened a 
number of times – self-managed network like Guifi or Freifunk will still 
be able to maintain local and regional communications, and provide for 
essential services in times of crisis, as the only thing a node needs to 
stay alife is that the small router or SBC (single board  computer) 
powering them keeps being fed with the few Watts of electricity it 
consumes.
The resilience we need to set up and achieve to weather the coming years 
will necessarily involve initiatives like Guifi, Freifunk or 
Rhizomatica: decentralized bottom up structures, started by citizens, 
managed (and owned) by citizens, developed and improved by citizens, 
which are low-cost, low energy, resilient by virtue of a mesh network 
format, resistent to any form of technological, economic, or political 
forms of censorship. And to bring this about, there is no need to 
reinvent the wheel as everything exists already, it just requires 
adaptation to the specific, local context.
---------------
[1] https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Réseaux_sans_fil_communautaires
[2] http://cloudy.community/

Nice, March 12, 2018 (written by JNM, & translated by yrs truly)








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