Pit Schultz on Sun, 5 May 96 18:21 MDT |
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nettime: The Information Hypeway: A Worst-Case Scenario |
The Information Hypeway: A Worst-Case Scenario Jeff Johnson, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility Like most new technology, the Information Highway is being promoted by those with a large financial stake in its success. Thus, we hear almost exclusively about the benefits the Information Highway will bring us, most of which are hyperbole, naivete, and lies, and very little about the problems it will bring or exacerbate. Furthermore, the promoters are banking on a *particular* vision of the Information Highway -- namely that it will be a conduit between big business and consumers -- and are working to make sure that alternative visions are marginalized. My purpose here is to present a worst-case analysis of the Information Highway, to counterbalance the hyperbolic corporate press releases that masquerade as news in the mainstream press. While an Information Highway designed to meet social needs rather than to guarantee corporate profits might be possible and beneficial, that -- I am becoming convinced -- just ain't gonna happen. I focus here on the *negative* aspects of the coming Information Highway because that is what is missing from the public discourse. First, let's clarify one thing: the Information Highway will not be a single entity, though the name suggests otherwise. Rather, it will be a collection of many different component networks -- local, national, one-way, two-way, point-to-point, center-to-points, wire-transmitted, wireless -- providing a variety of services. Furthermore, most of these networks will be disconnected from each other, at least initially and probably for a long time. Nonetheless, certain components and services *will* dominate. Just as commercial TV and radio now completely dominate the American broadcast media, with public stations having nearly insignificant audiences in comparison, the dominant component on the Information Highway will be a highly commercial, top-down, "pay-per" system for delivering infotainment to consumers, and, of course, taking their product orders. Most people won't even *know* about alternative components, e.g., civic networks operated by non-profit organizations, much less subscribe to them. To see what the future Information Highway will be like, one need only look at various service networks that telephone/cable/entertainment/merchandising conglomerates are now testing in various cities around the U.S. For example, executives from Time-Warner, Inc. are proudly showing a video about the "Full Service Network" currently being tested in Orlando, Florida. The video shows happy suburban families using their set-top boxes to play games, watch movies, browse electronic magazines, and order pizzas and bedroom sets. This supposed "Full Service Network" does not provide e-mail, bulletin-boards, or person-to-person communication of any kind. Projecting forward from the "Full Service Network" and its ilk, I now provide, in more detail, the salient features of the Information Highway as most Americans will experience it in, say, ten years. The Information Highway will be controlled by the Fortune 500, who will design it as a vehicle for consumption and delivery of advertising. It will treat us as consumers to be targeted rather than as citizens to be connected. Consumer choice will be greatly limited by monopolies, both horizontal and vertical: a few companies will control not only the network but also most of its services. The concept of "common carriage," wherein transporters have no control over -- and no stake in -- what is transmitted to whom, will have disappeared. In most markets, carriers will control content, shutting out small businesses and individuals as information providers. Fortune 500 domination also means that access equipment will be obsoleted quickly, requiring subscribers to replace or upgrade it frequently to remain online. The Information Highway will *push* information at consumers. In theory, a well-designed Information Highway could allow a shift from our current push-oriented marketplace. It could allow providers -- companies and individuals alike -- to put information "on the net," allowing seekers to *pull* it out as needed. Buyers could conduct searches for products and services of interest, compare alternatives, and initiate transactions. In short, an Information Highway could provide a close approximation to a true marketplace such as has existed until now only in economics textbooks and, in limited form, street bazaars. There would no need for advertising as we know it today other than the passive, "yellow pages" variety, which means that there would be no need for businesses to collect, share, and abuse data about households and individuals in an attempt to target advertising. But, alas, a pull-oriented network isn't what we'll get. Big business isn't interested in free markets, but rather wants *captive* markets: consumers who buy based on habit and lack of information about competitors. Captive markets is therefore what the Information Highway will be designed to deliver. The current push-oriented marketplace will be replicated, with much enhanced capabilities, on-line. Even the World-Wide Web is not immune. The Web was originally purely pull-oriented: people surfed the net, viewing and/or downloading information as desired. However, as the Web is commercialized, push-mechanisms are being added. Many corporate Web-sites now require users to register in order to gain access. Registering in order to "visit" a Web-site gives the host your e-mail address as well as an indication of your interests -- exactly what they need to begin barraging you with advertising. But adding consumer-data-capture to the Web is only the beginning. In the glorious future, the data-gathering potential of electronic transactions will be exploited to the hilt. Most of what we do using the Highway will be recorded and analyzed for use against us later, e.g., targeting us for advertisements and sales calls, determining our insurance rates, judging our eligibility for employment. The market for consumer data -- already brisk -- will grow significantly. Many services on the Information Highway will be "Bait and List" fronts, which lure customers by providing a token product or service but make their real money selling lists of customers to other companies. The Code of Fair Information Practices, a Seventies-era set of privacy guidelines for electronic data records (see sidebar) is already seen as a hindrance to business. It will be ignored. One result of all this collecting and trading of consumer data will be that advertising on the Information Highway will be ubiquitous and in-your-face. You think you get junk mail now? In the glorious future, *stupefying* amounts of unwanted junk mail is headed your way! Not only will privacy be rare on the Information Highway, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, and other constitutional rights will be severely restricted there. Doctors discussing anatomy will be arrested for posting "pornographic" information. Network operators will censor private e-mail and bulletin board postings. Instead of treating cyberspace simply as a new communications medium to which the U.S. Constitution extends, policymakers will regard it as special territory in which the Constitution has limited applicability. On the Information Highway, your rights will be governed by a "Constitution-Lite." The Information Highway will be bad for democracy. The popular term "electronic democracy" suggests that the Information Highway will enhance democracy by allowing citizens to communicate with elected representatives and participate more effectively in government policymaking. In some fantasy world, perhaps, but not in this one. For example, without e-mail, discussion groups, or a means of entering text, the Time-Warner "Full-Service Network" can't possibly support participatory democracy. Most of the hype about "electronic democracy" is really just about rapid electronic polling, which networks like Time-Warner's can support. But polling is just "acclamatory democracy," a degenerate case of democracy. True democracy involves discussion and deliberation and is slow *by definition*. It requires debate, not just clicking on For or Against buttons. Furthermore, it requires opportunities for citizens to influence important issues. Instead, the Information Highway will give us more opportunities to vote on issues such as whether or not the First Spouse should dye his or her hair. Instead of democracy, we'll get Oprahcracy. The Information Highway will be bad for your children. The threat doesn't come from pornography on the Internet -- that particular danger has been badly overblown. For most Americans, the Information Highway won't be the Internet anyway, but rather the services available through their set-top box. Those services will subject children to a mind-numbing barrage of advertising -- some of it masquerading as entertainment or educational material -- designed to train kids to be consuming machines. There will be no escape from it, even in places that were once sanctuaries from commercialism, like libraries, schools, and churches. Suggestion: If a company proposes to connect your child's school to the Information Highway, ask first what's in it for the company. Ask how the service will be financed. Chances are, advertising -- to a captive audience of children -- is part of the plan. It should be no surprise that the Information Highway will turn out this way. Consider television. In the Fifties, when the corporate push to get consumers to buy TVs was in full swing, the press was awash in glowing predictions about how television would benefit society. Instead, we got Gilligan's Island, Beavis and Butthead, O.J. Simpson, and TV news designed more to sell tires than to inform, interlaced with 12-15 minutes of commercials per hour of airtime. Some people complain about this, whining that "TV could be so much better, if only the 'content' were improved." No, it couldn't. TV was developed and marketed by commercial interests. The content on TV isn't the programs; they are just the *bait*. The real content is the commercials. TV *had* to become a wasteland of drivel, violence, sexploitation, sensationalism, and advertising because its purpose was not to educate or inform, but rather to sell product. The Information Highway will be no different. Some people who lament the failure of TV to live up to its "potential" believe that computerizing TV -- making it interactive and turning it into everyone's portal onto the Information Highway -- will rescue TV from the wasteland. This view is naive in the extreme. TV won't be computerized, computers will be TV-ized. Theoretically, there is an alternative to this vision. An Information Highway could be open to all, especially small businesses and individuals who want to *provide* information. It could be pull-oriented rather than push-oriented. It could support forms of exchange other than product consumption. It could provide public-services as well as private ones. It could allow us to preserve our privacy if we so desire. It could enhance communication within neighborhoods. It could connect us rather than targeting us. In short, it could be more like the Berkeley Community Memory Project, the Seattle Community Network, or the Santa Monica Public Education Network -- all of which were developed by local citizens for the benefit of their community -- and less like the Time-Warner "Full-Service Network." An Information Highway composed of parts such as these would generate more total value when summed across the entire economy, yielding a higher gross national product and better standard of living, than the corporate dominated Highway I have foreshadowed. But the Fortune 500 don't care about the *general* well-being or the summation of all generated wealth; they care only about their own well-being and wealth. So they will push for an Information Highway that delivers much less public benefit but maximizes their own expected benefit. And that is what they -- and we -- will get unless we very *clearly* indicate, by refusing to allow it into our homes, by being vocal critics, and by working in our communities to develop alternative information networks, that a corporate-dominated Information Highway is not acceptable. --- Jeff Johnson is a software designer in California's Silicon Valley. From 1991-94, he was Chair of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR), a Palo Alto based organization that examines the impact of technology on society (cpsr@cpsr.org). This article is based on a talk Dr. Johnson gave at the Association for Computing Machinery's 1995 Conference on Computer-Human Interaction. The views expressed are his own. 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