Vesna Manojlovic on Fri, 1 Feb 2019 16:28:02 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Long Read: Internet Economics by Geoff Huston, on RIPE Labs |
Dear nettimers, I'd like to bring to your attention to one of the articles on the platform called "RIPE Labs" - mainly used for the publications of interest to the network operators, developers, researchers... This specific article is about the Internet Economics, consolidations, measurements, content providers, security, regulators, markets... by Geoff Huston, the Chief Scientist at APNIC, where he undertakes research on topics associated with Internet infrastructure: https://labs.ripe.net/Members/gih/internet-economics-is-a-thing-and-we-need-to-take-note The article is very long, and I would love to hear your comments & opinions - so here are some quotes to "wet your appetites": "the dominant issue at present is all about the roles of the unabashed titans in our midst (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and Alphabet). Are they now so big that they are essentially answerable to no nation-state at all? Or can we create a regulatory framework that places the interests of these technology behemoths into a more even balance with various national public policy objectives?" "When is an enterprise so big that failure is untenable in terms of social stability?" "Like DoH, QUIC drags the end-to-end protocol into a darkened state within the browser. Both of these are examples of a deeper and perhaps more insidious form of consolidation in the Internet than we?ve seen to date with various corporate mergers and acquisitions. Here it?s not the individual actors that are consolidating and exercising larger market power, but the components within the environment that are consolidating. Much of this is well out of normal regulatory oversight, but the results are not dissimilar to the outcomes of corporate consolidation. The result in these two cases of application consolidation is that the browser provider attains significant gains in market power." "Measuring consolidation is a difficult problem. As an example, Staples, an office supplies retailer in the US, attempted to merge with Office Depot in their efforts to counter their collective revenue loss to Amazon. Such horizontal mergers have a difficult time with the Department of Justice in the US, and the merger proposal was not cleared. The result is, of course, inevitable, as neither enterprise has the volume to effectively compete with Amazon and both are now in challenging circumstances because of Amazon?s overarching presence. On the other hand, it could be argued that the acquisition of WhatsApp by Facebook should not have been approved, as the combination of social media and messaging further consolidates Facebook?s position with its user base and makes it a must-use platform for digital advertisers. The arguments for regulatory decisions to allow or block mergers depends on forecasted outcomes, and to conduct usable forecasts we need accurate data." "But to have an informed, relevant and effective public policy process we need to understand this changing world. It seems to me that open measurement platforms and open data sets are more important than ever before. We need public measurements that are impartial, accurate, comprehensive and of course unbiased as an essential precondition for the fair and effective operation of markets." Have a good weekend, Vesna # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: