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1 # SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
2 # Copyright (C) YEAR Cory Doctorow
3 # This file is distributed under the same license as the How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism package.
4 # FIRST AUTHOR <EMAIL@ADDRESS>, YEAR.
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25 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><title>
26 msgid "How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism"
27 msgstr "Comment détruire le capitalisme de la surveillance"
28
29 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><authorgroup><author><firstname>
30 msgid "Cory"
31 msgstr "Cory"
32
33 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><authorgroup><author><surname>
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44 "<publisher> <publishername>Petter Reinholdtsen</publishername> <placeholder "
45 "type=\"address\" id=\"0\"/> </publisher> <copyright> <year>2020</year> "
46 "<holder>Cory Doctorow</holder> </copyright> <copyright> <year>2020</year> "
47 "<holder>Petter Reinholdtsen</holder> </copyright>"
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52 "<holder>Petter Reinholdtsen</holder> </copyright>"
53
54 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
55 msgid "How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism by Cory Doctorow."
56 msgstr "Comment détruire le capitalisme de la surveillance par Cory Doctorow."
57
58 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
59 msgid "Published by Petter Reinholdtsen."
60 msgstr "Publié par Petter Reinholdtsen."
61
62 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
63 msgid "ISBN 978-82-93828-XX-X (hard cover)"
64 msgstr "ISBN 978-82-93828-XX-X (édition reliée)"
65
66 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
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68 msgstr "ISBN 978-82-93828-XX-X (livre de poche)"
69
70 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
71 msgid "ISBN 978-82-93828-XX-X (ePub)"
72 msgstr "ISBN 978-82-93828-XX-X (ePub)"
73
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77 "\"/>."
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80 ">."
81
82 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
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84 "If you find typos, error or have other corrections to the translated text, "
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86 "personal-data-safe/how-to-destroy-surveillance-capitalism/nb_NO/\"/>."
87 msgstr ""
88 "Si vous trouvez des fautes de frappe, des erreurs ou si vous avez d'autres "
89 "corrections sur le texte traduit, veuillez mettre à jour <ulink url="
90 "\"https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/rms-personal-data-safe/how-to-destroy-"
91 "surveillance-capitalism/fr/\"/>."
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113 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><legalnotice><para>
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115 "This book is licensed under a Creative Commons license. This license permits "
116 "any use of this work, so long as attribution is given and no derivatived "
117 "material is distributed. For more information about the license visit "
118 "<ulink url=\"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/\"/>."
119 msgstr ""
120 "Ce livre est sous licence Creative Commons. Cette licence permet toute "
121 "utilisation de ce travail, tant que l'attribution est donnée et qu'aucun "
122 "matériel dérivé n'est distribué. Pour plus d'informations sur la licence, "
123 "visitez <ulink url=\"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/\"/>."
124
125 #. type: Content of: <article><articleinfo><abstract><para>
126 msgid ""
127 "The Science Fiction author, journalist and technology activist Cory Doctorow "
128 "have a look at what really is behind \"Surveillance Capitalism\" and what "
129 "should be done to stop it."
130 msgstr ""
131
132 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
133 msgid "The net of a thousand lies"
134 msgstr ""
135
136 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
137 msgid ""
138 "The most surprising thing about the rebirth of flat Earthers in the 21st "
139 "century is just how widespread the evidence against them is. You can "
140 "understand how, centuries ago, people who’d never gained a high-enough "
141 "vantage point from which to see the Earth’s curvature might come to the "
142 "commonsense belief that the flat-seeming Earth was, indeed, flat."
143 msgstr ""
144
145 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
146 msgid ""
147 "But today, when elementary schools routinely dangle GoPro cameras from "
148 "balloons and loft them high enough to photograph the Earth’s curve — to say "
149 "nothing of the unexceptional sight of the curved Earth from an airplane "
150 "window — it takes a heroic effort to maintain the belief that the world is "
151 "flat."
152 msgstr ""
153
154 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
155 msgid ""
156 "Likewise for white nationalism and eugenics: In an age where you can become "
157 "a computational genomics datapoint by swabbing your cheek and mailing it to "
158 "a gene-sequencing company along with a modest sum of money, <quote>race "
159 "science</quote> has never been easier to refute."
160 msgstr ""
161
162 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
163 msgid ""
164 "We are living through a golden age of both readily available facts and "
165 "denial of those facts. Terrible ideas that have lingered on the fringes for "
166 "decades or even centuries have gone mainstream seemingly overnight."
167 msgstr ""
168
169 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
170 msgid ""
171 "When an obscure idea gains currency, there are only two things that can "
172 "explain its ascendance: Either the person expressing that idea has gotten a "
173 "lot better at stating their case, or the proposition has become harder to "
174 "deny in the face of mounting evidence. In other words, if we want people to "
175 "take climate change seriously, we can get a bunch of Greta Thunbergs to make "
176 "eloquent, passionate arguments from podiums, winning our hearts and minds, "
177 "or we can wait for flood, fire, broiling sun, and pandemics to make the case "
178 "for us. In practice, we’ll probably have to do some of both: The more we’re "
179 "boiling and burning and drowning and wasting away, the easier it will be for "
180 "the Greta Thunbergs of the world to convince us."
181 msgstr ""
182
183 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
184 msgid ""
185 "The arguments for ridiculous beliefs in odious conspiracies like anti-"
186 "vaccination, climate denial, a flat Earth, and eugenics are no better than "
187 "they were a generation ago. Indeed, they’re worse because they are being "
188 "pitched to people who have at least a background awareness of the refuting "
189 "facts."
190 msgstr ""
191
192 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
193 msgid ""
194 "Anti-vax has been around since the first vaccines, but the early anti-"
195 "vaxxers were pitching people who were less equipped to understand even the "
196 "most basic ideas from microbiology, and moreover, those people had not "
197 "witnessed the extermination of mass-murdering diseases like polio, smallpox, "
198 "and measles. Today’s anti-vaxxers are no more eloquent than their forebears, "
199 "and they have a much harder job."
200 msgstr ""
201
202 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
203 msgid ""
204 "So can these far-fetched conspiracy theorists really be succeeding on the "
205 "basis of superior arguments?"
206 msgstr ""
207
208 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
209 msgid ""
210 "Some people think so. Today, there is a widespread belief that machine "
211 "learning and commercial surveillance can turn even the most fumble-tongued "
212 "conspiracy theorist into a svengali who can warp your perceptions and win "
213 "your belief by locating vulnerable people and then pitching them with A.I.-"
214 "refined arguments that bypass their rational faculties and turn everyday "
215 "people into flat Earthers, anti-vaxxers, or even Nazis. When the RAND "
216 "Corporation <ulink url=\"https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/"
217 "research_reports/RR400/RR453/RAND_RR453.pdf\">blames Facebook for "
218 "<quote>radicalization</quote></ulink> and when Facebook’s role in spreading "
219 "coronavirus misinformation is <ulink url=\"https://secure.avaaz.org/campaign/"
220 "en/facebook_threat_health/\">blamed on its algorithm</ulink>, the implicit "
221 "message is that machine learning and surveillance are causing the changes in "
222 "our consensus about what’s true."
223 msgstr ""
224
225 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
226 msgid ""
227 "After all, in a world where sprawling and incoherent conspiracy theories "
228 "like Pizzagate and its successor, QAnon, have widespread followings, "
229 "<emphasis>something</emphasis> must be afoot."
230 msgstr ""
231
232 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
233 msgid ""
234 "But what if there’s another explanation? What if it’s the material "
235 "circumstances, and not the arguments, that are making the difference for "
236 "these conspiracy pitchmen? What if the trauma of living through "
237 "<emphasis>real conspiracies</emphasis> all around us — conspiracies among "
238 "wealthy people, their lobbyists, and lawmakers to bury inconvenient facts "
239 "and evidence of wrongdoing (these conspiracies are commonly known as "
240 "<quote>corruption</quote>) — is making people vulnerable to conspiracy "
241 "theories?"
242 msgstr ""
243
244 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
245 msgid ""
246 "If it’s trauma and not contagion — material conditions and not ideology — "
247 "that is making the difference today and enabling a rise of repulsive "
248 "misinformation in the face of easily observed facts, that doesn’t mean our "
249 "computer networks are blameless. They’re still doing the heavy work of "
250 "locating vulnerable people and guiding them through a series of ever-more-"
251 "extreme ideas and communities."
252 msgstr ""
253
254 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
255 msgid ""
256 "Belief in conspiracy is a raging fire that has done real damage and poses "
257 "real danger to our planet and species, from epidemics <ulink url=\"https://"
258 "www.cdc.gov/measles/cases-outbreaks.html\">kicked off by vaccine denial</"
259 "ulink> to genocides <ulink url=\"https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/15/"
260 "technology/myanmar-facebook-genocide.html\">kicked off by racist "
261 "conspiracies</ulink> to planetary meltdown caused by denial-inspired climate "
262 "inaction. Our world is on fire, and so we have to put the fires out — to "
263 "figure out how to help people see the truth of the world through the "
264 "conspiracies they’ve been confused by."
265 msgstr ""
266
267 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
268 msgid ""
269 "But firefighting is reactive. We need fire <emphasis>prevention</emphasis>. "
270 "We need to strike at the traumatic material conditions that make people "
271 "vulnerable to the contagion of conspiracy. Here, too, tech has a role to "
272 "play."
273 msgstr ""
274
275 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
276 msgid ""
277 "There’s no shortage of proposals to address this. From the EU’s <ulink url="
278 "\"https://edri.org/tag/terreg/\">Terrorist Content Regulation</ulink>, which "
279 "requires platforms to police and remove <quote>extremist</quote> content, to "
280 "the U.S. proposals to <ulink url=\"https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/03/"
281 "earn-it-act-violates-constitution\">force tech companies to spy on their "
282 "users</ulink> and hold them liable <ulink url=\"https://www.natlawreview.com/"
283 "article/repeal-cda-section-230\">for their users’ bad speech</ulink>, "
284 "there’s a lot of energy to force tech companies to solve the problems they "
285 "created."
286 msgstr ""
287
288 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
289 msgid ""
290 "There’s a critical piece missing from the debate, though. All these "
291 "solutions assume that tech companies are a fixture, that their dominance "
292 "over the internet is a permanent fact. Proposals to replace Big Tech with a "
293 "more diffused, pluralistic internet are nowhere to be found. Worse: The "
294 "<quote>solutions</quote> on the table today <emphasis>require</emphasis> Big "
295 "Tech to stay big because only the very largest companies can afford to "
296 "implement the systems these laws demand."
297 msgstr ""
298
299 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
300 msgid ""
301 "Figuring out what we want our tech to look like is crucial if we’re going to "
302 "get out of this mess. Today, we’re at a crossroads where we’re trying to "
303 "figure out if we want to fix the Big Tech companies that dominate our "
304 "internet or if we want to fix the internet itself by unshackling it from Big "
305 "Tech’s stranglehold. We can’t do both, so we have to choose."
306 msgstr ""
307
308 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
309 msgid ""
310 "I want us to choose wisely. Taming Big Tech is integral to fixing the "
311 "Internet, and for that, we need digital rights activism."
312 msgstr ""
313
314 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
315 msgid "Digital rights activism, a quarter-century on"
316 msgstr ""
317
318 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
319 msgid ""
320 "Digital rights activism is more than 30 years old now. The Electronic "
321 "Frontier Foundation turned 30 this year; the Free Software Foundation "
322 "launched in 1985. For most of the history of the movement, the most "
323 "prominent criticism leveled against it was that it was irrelevant: The real "
324 "activist causes were real-world causes (think of the skepticism when <ulink "
325 "url=\"https://www.loc.gov/law/foreign-news/article/finland-legal-right-to-"
326 "broadband-for-all-citizens/#:~:text=Global%20Legal%20Monitor,-Home%20%7C"
327 "%20Search%20%7C%20Browse&amp;text=(July%206%2C%202010)%20On,connection"
328 "%20100%20MBPS%20by%202015.\">Finland declared broadband a human right in "
329 "2010</ulink>), and real-world activism was shoe-leather activism (think of "
330 "Malcolm Gladwell’s <ulink url=\"https://www.newyorker.com/"
331 "magazine/2010/10/04/small-change-malcolm-gladwell\">contempt for "
332 "<quote>clicktivism</quote></ulink>). But as tech has grown more central to "
333 "our daily lives, these accusations of irrelevance have given way first to "
334 "accusations of insincerity (<quote>You only care about tech because you’re "
335 "<ulink url=\"https://www.ipwatchdog.com/2018/06/04/report-engine-eff-shills-"
336 "google-patent-reform/id=98007/\">shilling for tech companies</ulink></"
337 "quote>) to accusations of negligence (<quote>Why didn’t you foresee that "
338 "tech could be such a destructive force?</quote>). But digital rights "
339 "activism is right where it’s always been: looking out for the humans in a "
340 "world where tech is inexorably taking over."
341 msgstr ""
342
343 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
344 msgid ""
345 "The latest version of this critique comes in the form of <quote>surveillance "
346 "capitalism,</quote> a term coined by business professor Shoshana Zuboff in "
347 "her long and influential 2019 book, <emphasis>The Age of Surveillance "
348 "Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power</"
349 "emphasis>. Zuboff argues that <quote>surveillance capitalism</quote> is a "
350 "unique creature of the tech industry and that it is unlike any other abusive "
351 "commercial practice in history, one that is <quote>constituted by unexpected "
352 "and often illegible mechanisms of extraction, commodification, and control "
353 "that effectively exile persons from their own behavior while producing new "
354 "markets of behavioral prediction and modification. Surveillance capitalism "
355 "challenges democratic norms and departs in key ways from the centuries-long "
356 "evolution of market capitalism.</quote> It is a new and deadly form of "
357 "capitalism, a <quote>rogue capitalism,</quote> and our lack of understanding "
358 "of its unique capabilities and dangers represents an existential, species-"
359 "wide threat. She’s right that capitalism today threatens our species, and "
360 "she’s right that tech poses unique challenges to our species and "
361 "civilization, but she’s really wrong about how tech is different and why it "
362 "threatens our species."
363 msgstr ""
364
365 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
366 msgid ""
367 "What’s more, I think that her incorrect diagnosis will lead us down a path "
368 "that ends up making Big Tech stronger, not weaker. We need to take down Big "
369 "Tech, and to do that, we need to start by correctly identifying the problem."
370 msgstr ""
371
372 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
373 msgid "Tech exceptionalism, then and now"
374 msgstr ""
375
376 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
377 msgid ""
378 "Early critics of the digital rights movement — perhaps best represented by "
379 "campaigning organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Free "
380 "Software Foundation, Public Knowledge, and others that focused on preserving "
381 "and enhancing basic human rights in the digital realm — damned activists for "
382 "practicing <quote>tech exceptionalism.</quote> Around the turn of the "
383 "millennium, serious people ridiculed any claim that tech policy mattered in "
384 "the <quote>real world.</quote> Claims that tech rules had implications for "
385 "speech, association, privacy, search and seizure, and fundamental rights and "
386 "equities were treated as ridiculous, an elevation of the concerns of sad "
387 "nerds arguing about <emphasis>Star Trek</emphasis> on bulletin board systems "
388 "above the struggles of the Freedom Riders, Nelson Mandela, or the Warsaw "
389 "ghetto uprising."
390 msgstr ""
391
392 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
393 msgid ""
394 "In the decades since, accusations of <quote>tech exceptionalism</quote> have "
395 "only sharpened as tech’s role in everyday life has expanded: Now that tech "
396 "has infiltrated every corner of our life and our online lives have been "
397 "monopolized by a handful of giants, defenders of digital freedoms are "
398 "accused of carrying water for Big Tech, providing cover for its self-"
399 "interested negligence (or worse, nefarious plots)."
400 msgstr ""
401
402 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
403 msgid ""
404 "From my perspective, the digital rights movement has remained stationary "
405 "while the rest of the world has moved. From the earliest days, the "
406 "movement’s concern was users and the toolsmiths who provided the code they "
407 "needed to realize their fundamental rights. Digital rights activists only "
408 "cared about companies to the extent that companies were acting to uphold "
409 "users’ rights (or, just as often, when companies were acting so foolishly "
410 "that they threatened to bring down new rules that would also make it harder "
411 "for good actors to help users)."
412 msgstr ""
413
414 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
415 msgid ""
416 "The <quote>surveillance capitalism</quote> critique recasts the digital "
417 "rights movement in a new light again: not as alarmists who overestimate the "
418 "importance of their shiny toys nor as shills for big tech but as serene deck-"
419 "chair rearrangers whose long-standing activism is a liability because it "
420 "makes them incapable of perceiving novel threats as they continue to fight "
421 "the last century’s tech battles."
422 msgstr ""
423
424 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
425 msgid "But tech exceptionalism is a sin no matter who practices it."
426 msgstr ""
427
428 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
429 msgid "Don’t believe the hype"
430 msgstr ""
431
432 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
433 msgid ""
434 "You’ve probably heard that <quote>if you’re not paying for the product, "
435 "you’re the product.</quote> As we’ll see below, that’s true, if incomplete. "
436 "But what is <emphasis>absolutely</emphasis> true is that ad-driven Big "
437 "Tech’s customers are advertisers, and what companies like Google and "
438 "Facebook sell is their ability to convince <emphasis>you</emphasis> to buy "
439 "stuff. Big Tech’s product is persuasion. The services — social media, search "
440 "engines, maps, messaging, and more — are delivery systems for persuasion."
441 msgstr ""
442
443 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
444 msgid ""
445 "The fear of surveillance capitalism starts from the (correct) presumption "
446 "that everything Big Tech says about itself is probably a lie. But the "
447 "surveillance capitalism critique makes an exception for the claims Big Tech "
448 "makes in its sales literature — the breathless hype in the pitches to "
449 "potential advertisers online and in ad-tech seminars about the efficacy of "
450 "its products: It assumes that Big Tech is as good at influencing us as they "
451 "claim they are when they’re selling influencing products to credulous "
452 "customers. That’s a mistake because sales literature is not a reliable "
453 "indicator of a product’s efficacy."
454 msgstr ""
455
456 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
457 msgid ""
458 "Surveillance capitalism assumes that because advertisers buy a lot of what "
459 "Big Tech is selling, Big Tech must be selling something real. But Big Tech’s "
460 "massive sales could just as easily be the result of a popular delusion or "
461 "something even more pernicious: monopolistic control over our communications "
462 "and commerce."
463 msgstr ""
464
465 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
466 msgid ""
467 "Being watched changes your behavior, and not for the better. It creates "
468 "risks for our social progress. Zuboff’s book features beautifully wrought "
469 "explanations of these phenomena. But Zuboff also claims that surveillance "
470 "literally robs us of our free will — that when our personal data is mixed "
471 "with machine learning, it creates a system of persuasion so devastating that "
472 "we are helpless before it. That is, Facebook uses an algorithm to analyze "
473 "the data it nonconsensually extracts from your daily life and uses it to "
474 "customize your feed in ways that get you to buy stuff. It is a mind-control "
475 "ray out of a 1950s comic book, wielded by mad scientists whose "
476 "supercomputers guarantee them perpetual and total world domination."
477 msgstr ""
478
479 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
480 msgid "What is persuasion?"
481 msgstr ""
482
483 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
484 msgid ""
485 "To understand why you shouldn’t worry about mind-control rays — but why you "
486 "<emphasis>should</emphasis> worry about surveillance <emphasis>and</"
487 "emphasis> Big Tech — we must start by unpacking what we mean by "
488 "<quote>persuasion.</quote>"
489 msgstr ""
490
491 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
492 msgid ""
493 "Google, Facebook, and other surveillance capitalists promise their customers "
494 "(the advertisers) that if they use machine-learning tools trained on "
495 "unimaginably large data sets of nonconsensually harvested personal "
496 "information, they will be able to uncover ways to bypass the rational "
497 "faculties of the public and direct their behavior, creating a stream of "
498 "purchases, votes, and other desired outcomes."
499 msgstr ""
500
501 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><blockquote><para>
502 msgid ""
503 "The impact of dominance far exceeds the impact of manipulation and should be "
504 "central to our analysis and any remedies we seek."
505 msgstr ""
506
507 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
508 msgid ""
509 "But there’s little evidence that this is happening. Instead, the predictions "
510 "that surveillance capitalism delivers to its customers are much less "
511 "impressive. Rather than finding ways to bypass our rational faculties, "
512 "surveillance capitalists like Mark Zuckerberg mostly do one or more of three "
513 "things:"
514 msgstr ""
515
516 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><title>
517 msgid "1. Segmenting"
518 msgstr ""
519
520 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
521 msgid ""
522 "If you’re selling diapers, you have better luck if you pitch them to people "
523 "in maternity wards. Not everyone who enters or leaves a maternity ward just "
524 "had a baby, and not everyone who just had a baby is in the market for "
525 "diapers. But having a baby is a really reliable correlate of being in the "
526 "market for diapers, and being in a maternity ward is highly correlated with "
527 "having a baby. Hence diaper ads around maternity wards (and even pitchmen "
528 "for baby products, who haunt maternity wards with baskets full of freebies)."
529 msgstr ""
530
531 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
532 msgid ""
533 "Surveillance capitalism is segmenting times a billion. Diaper vendors can go "
534 "way beyond people in maternity wards (though they can do that, too, with "
535 "things like location-based mobile ads). They can target you based on "
536 "whether you’re reading articles about child-rearing, diapers, or a host of "
537 "other subjects, and data mining can suggest unobvious keywords to advertise "
538 "against. They can target you based on the articles you’ve recently read. "
539 "They can target you based on what you’ve recently purchased. They can target "
540 "you based on whether you receive emails or private messages about these "
541 "subjects — or even if you speak aloud about them (though Facebook and the "
542 "like convincingly claim that’s not happening — yet)."
543 msgstr ""
544 "Le capitalisme de surveillance se segmente par milliard. Les vendeurs de "
545 "couches peuvent aller bien au-delà des personnes dans les maternités (bien "
546 "qu’ils puissent le faire aussi, avec des choses comme les annonces mobiles "
547 "basées sur la localisation). Ils peuvent vous cibler selon que vous lisez "
548 "des articles sur l’éducation des enfants, les couches ou une foule d’autres "
549 "sujets, et l’exploration de données peut suggérer des mots-clés non évidents "
550 "sur lesquels faire de la publicité. Ils peuvent vous cibler en fonction des "
551 "articles que vous avez récemment lus. Ils peuvent vous cibler en fonction de "
552 "ce que vous avez récemment acheté. Ils peuvent vous cibler selon que vous "
553 "recevez des courriels ou des messages privés sur ces sujets – ou même si "
554 "vous en parlez à haute voix (bien que Facebook et autres affirment de "
555 "manière convaincante que cela ne se produit pas encore)."
556
557 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
558 msgid "This is seriously creepy."
559 msgstr ""
560
561 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
562 msgid "But it’s not mind control."
563 msgstr ""
564
565 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
566 msgid "It doesn’t deprive you of your free will. It doesn’t trick you."
567 msgstr ""
568
569 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
570 msgid ""
571 "Think of how surveillance capitalism works in politics. Surveillance "
572 "capitalist companies sell political operatives the power to locate people "
573 "who might be receptive to their pitch. Candidates campaigning on finance "
574 "industry corruption seek people struggling with debt; candidates campaigning "
575 "on xenophobia seek out racists. Political operatives have always targeted "
576 "their message whether their intentions were honorable or not: Union "
577 "organizers set up pitches at factory gates, and white supremacists hand out "
578 "fliers at John Birch Society meetings."
579 msgstr ""
580
581 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
582 msgid ""
583 "But this is an inexact and thus wasteful practice. The union organizer can’t "
584 "know which worker to approach on the way out of the factory gates and may "
585 "waste their time on a covert John Birch Society member; the white "
586 "supremacist doesn’t know which of the Birchers are so delusional that making "
587 "it to a meeting is as much as they can manage and which ones might be "
588 "convinced to cross the country to carry a tiki torch through the streets of "
589 "Charlottesville, Virginia."
590 msgstr ""
591
592 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
593 msgid ""
594 "Because targeting improves the yields on political pitches, it can "
595 "accelerate the pace of political upheaval by making it possible for everyone "
596 "who has secretly wished for the toppling of an autocrat — or just an 11-term "
597 "incumbent politician — to find everyone else who feels the same way at very "
598 "low cost. This has been critical to the rapid crystallization of recent "
599 "political movements including Black Lives Matter and Occupy Wall Street as "
600 "well as less savory players like the far-right white nationalist movements "
601 "that marched in Charlottesville."
602 msgstr ""
603
604 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
605 msgid ""
606 "It’s important to differentiate this kind of political organizing from "
607 "influence campaigns; finding people who secretly agree with you isn’t the "
608 "same as convincing people to agree with you. The rise of phenomena like "
609 "nonbinary or otherwise nonconforming gender identities is often "
610 "characterized by reactionaries as the result of online brainwashing "
611 "campaigns that convince impressionable people that they have been secretly "
612 "queer all along."
613 msgstr ""
614
615 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
616 msgid ""
617 "But the personal accounts of those who have come out tell a different story "
618 "where people who long harbored a secret about their gender were emboldened "
619 "by others coming forward and where people who knew that they were different "
620 "but lacked a vocabulary for discussing that difference learned the right "
621 "words from these low-cost means of finding people and learning about their "
622 "ideas."
623 msgstr ""
624
625 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><title>
626 msgid "2. Deception"
627 msgstr ""
628
629 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
630 msgid ""
631 "Lies and fraud are pernicious, and surveillance capitalism supercharges them "
632 "through targeting. If you want to sell a fraudulent payday loan or subprime "
633 "mortgage, surveillance capitalism can help you find people who are both "
634 "desperate and unsophisticated and thus receptive to your pitch. This "
635 "accounts for the rise of many phenomena, like multilevel marketing schemes, "
636 "in which deceptive claims about potential earnings and the efficacy of sales "
637 "techniques are targeted at desperate people by advertising against search "
638 "queries that indicate, for example, someone struggling with ill-advised "
639 "loans."
640 msgstr ""
641
642 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
643 msgid ""
644 "Surveillance capitalism also abets fraud by making it easy to locate other "
645 "people who have been similarly deceived, forming a community of people who "
646 "reinforce one another’s false beliefs. Think of <ulink url=\"https://www."
647 "vulture.com/2020/01/the-dream-podcast-review.html\">the forums</ulink> where "
648 "people who are being victimized by multilevel marketing frauds gather to "
649 "trade tips on how to improve their luck in peddling the product."
650 msgstr ""
651
652 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
653 msgid ""
654 "Sometimes, online deception involves replacing someone’s correct beliefs "
655 "with incorrect ones, as it does in the anti-vaccination movement, whose "
656 "victims are often people who start out believing in vaccines but are "
657 "convinced by seemingly plausible evidence that leads them into the false "
658 "belief that vaccines are harmful."
659 msgstr ""
660
661 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
662 msgid ""
663 "But it’s much more common for fraud to succeed when it doesn’t have to "
664 "displace a true belief. When my daughter contracted head lice at daycare, "
665 "one of the daycare workers told me I could get rid of them by treating her "
666 "hair and scalp with olive oil. I didn’t know anything about head lice, and I "
667 "assumed that the daycare worker did, so I tried it (it didn’t work, and it "
668 "doesn’t work). It’s easy to end up with false beliefs when you simply don’t "
669 "know any better and when those beliefs are conveyed by someone who seems to "
670 "know what they’re doing."
671 msgstr ""
672
673 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
674 msgid ""
675 "This is pernicious and difficult — and it’s also the kind of thing the "
676 "internet can help guard against by making true information available, "
677 "especially in a form that exposes the underlying deliberations among parties "
678 "with sharply divergent views, such as Wikipedia. But it’s not brainwashing; "
679 "it’s fraud. In the <ulink url=\"https://datasociety.net/library/data-voids/"
680 "\">majority of cases</ulink>, the victims of these fraud campaigns have an "
681 "informational void filled in the customary way, by consulting a seemingly "
682 "reliable source. If I look up the length of the Brooklyn Bridge and learn "
683 "that it is 5,800 feet long, but in reality, it is 5,989 feet long, the "
684 "underlying deception is a problem, but it’s a problem with a simple remedy. "
685 "It’s a very different problem from the anti-vax issue in which someone’s "
686 "true belief is displaced by a false one by means of sophisticated persuasion."
687 msgstr ""
688
689 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><title>
690 msgid "3. Domination"
691 msgstr ""
692
693 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
694 msgid ""
695 "Surveillance capitalism is the result of monopoly. Monopoly is the cause, "
696 "and surveillance capitalism and its negative outcomes are the effects of "
697 "monopoly. I’ll get into this in depth later, but for now, suffice it to say "
698 "that the tech industry has grown up with a radical theory of antitrust that "
699 "has allowed companies to grow by merging with their rivals, buying up their "
700 "nascent competitors, and expanding to control whole market verticals."
701 msgstr ""
702
703 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
704 msgid ""
705 "One example of how monopolism aids in persuasion is through dominance: "
706 "Google makes editorial decisions about its algorithms that determine the "
707 "sort order of the responses to our queries. If a cabal of fraudsters have "
708 "set out to trick the world into thinking that the Brooklyn Bridge is 5,800 "
709 "feet long, and if Google gives a high search rank to this group in response "
710 "to queries like <quote>How long is the Brooklyn Bridge?</quote> then the "
711 "first eight or 10 screens’ worth of Google results could be wrong. And since "
712 "most people don’t go beyond the first couple of results — let alone the "
713 "first <emphasis>page</emphasis> of results — Google’s choice means that many "
714 "people will be deceived."
715 msgstr ""
716
717 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
718 msgid ""
719 "Google’s dominance over search — more than 86% of web searches are performed "
720 "through Google — means that the way it orders its search results has an "
721 "outsized effect on public beliefs. Ironically, Google claims this is why it "
722 "can’t afford to have any transparency in its algorithm design: Google’s "
723 "search dominance makes the results of its sorting too important to risk "
724 "telling the world how it arrives at those results lest some bad actor "
725 "discover a flaw in the ranking system and exploit it to push its point of "
726 "view to the top of the search results. There’s an obvious remedy to a "
727 "company that is too big to audit: break it up into smaller pieces."
728 msgstr ""
729
730 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
731 msgid ""
732 "Zuboff calls surveillance capitalism a <quote>rogue capitalism</quote> whose "
733 "data-hoarding and machine-learning techniques rob us of our free will. But "
734 "influence campaigns that seek to displace existing, correct beliefs with "
735 "false ones have an effect that is small and temporary while monopolistic "
736 "dominance over informational systems has massive, enduring effects. "
737 "Controlling the results to the world’s search queries means controlling "
738 "access both to arguments and their rebuttals and, thus, control over much of "
739 "the world’s beliefs. If our concern is how corporations are foreclosing on "
740 "our ability to make up our own minds and determine our own futures, the "
741 "impact of dominance far exceeds the impact of manipulation and should be "
742 "central to our analysis and any remedies we seek."
743 msgstr ""
744
745 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><title>
746 msgid "4. Bypassing our rational faculties"
747 msgstr ""
748
749 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
750 msgid ""
751 "<emphasis>This</emphasis> is the good stuff: using machine learning, "
752 "<quote>dark patterns,</quote> engagement hacking, and other techniques to "
753 "get us to do things that run counter to our better judgment. This is mind "
754 "control."
755 msgstr ""
756
757 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
758 msgid ""
759 "Some of these techniques have proven devastatingly effective (if only in the "
760 "short term). The use of countdown timers on a purchase completion page can "
761 "create a sense of urgency that causes you to ignore the nagging internal "
762 "voice suggesting that you should shop around or sleep on your decision. The "
763 "use of people from your social graph in ads can provide <quote>social proof</"
764 "quote> that a purchase is worth making. Even the auction system pioneered by "
765 "eBay is calculated to play on our cognitive blind spots, letting us feel "
766 "like we <quote>own</quote> something because we bid on it, thus encouraging "
767 "us to bid again when we are outbid to ensure that <quote>our</quote> things "
768 "stay ours."
769 msgstr ""
770
771 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
772 msgid ""
773 "Games are extraordinarily good at this. <quote>Free to play</quote> games "
774 "manipulate us through many techniques, such as presenting players with a "
775 "series of smoothly escalating challenges that create a sense of mastery and "
776 "accomplishment but which sharply transition into a set of challenges that "
777 "are impossible to overcome without paid upgrades. Add some social proof to "
778 "the mix — a stream of notifications about how well your friends are faring — "
779 "and before you know it, you’re buying virtual power-ups to get to the next "
780 "level."
781 msgstr ""
782
783 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
784 msgid ""
785 "Companies have risen and fallen on these techniques, and the <quote>fallen</"
786 "quote> part is worth paying attention to. In general, living things adapt to "
787 "stimulus: Something that is very compelling or noteworthy when you first "
788 "encounter it fades with repetition until you stop noticing it altogether. "
789 "Consider the refrigerator hum that irritates you when it starts up but "
790 "disappears into the background so thoroughly that you only notice it when it "
791 "stops again."
792 msgstr ""
793
794 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
795 msgid ""
796 "That’s why behavioral conditioning uses <quote>intermittent reinforcement "
797 "schedules.</quote> Instead of giving you a steady drip of encouragement or "
798 "setbacks, games and gamified services scatter rewards on a randomized "
799 "schedule — often enough to keep you interested and random enough that you "
800 "can never quite find the pattern that would make it boring."
801 msgstr ""
802
803 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
804 msgid ""
805 "Intermittent reinforcement is a powerful behavioral tool, but it also "
806 "represents a collective action problem for surveillance capitalism. The "
807 "<quote>engagement techniques</quote> invented by the behaviorists of "
808 "surveillance capitalist companies are quickly copied across the whole sector "
809 "so that what starts as a mysteriously compelling fillip in the design of a "
810 "service—like <quote>pull to refresh</quote> or alerts when someone likes "
811 "your posts or side quests that your characters get invited to while in the "
812 "midst of main quests—quickly becomes dully ubiquitous. The impossible-to-"
813 "nail-down nonpattern of randomized drips from your phone becomes a grey-"
814 "noise wall of sound as every single app and site starts to make use of "
815 "whatever seems to be working at the time."
816 msgstr ""
817
818 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
819 msgid ""
820 "From the surveillance capitalist’s point of view, our adaptive capacity is "
821 "like a harmful bacterium that deprives it of its food source — our attention "
822 "— and novel techniques for snagging that attention are like new antibiotics "
823 "that can be used to breach our defenses and destroy our self-determination. "
824 "And there <emphasis>are</emphasis> techniques like that. Who can forget the "
825 "Great Zynga Epidemic, when all of our friends were caught in "
826 "<emphasis>FarmVille</emphasis>’s endless, mindless dopamine loops? But every "
827 "new attention-commanding technique is jumped on by the whole industry and "
828 "used so indiscriminately that antibiotic resistance sets in. Given enough "
829 "repetition, almost all of us develop immunity to even the most powerful "
830 "techniques — by 2013, two years after Zynga’s peak, its user base had halved."
831 msgstr ""
832
833 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
834 msgid ""
835 "Not everyone, of course. Some people never adapt to stimulus, just as some "
836 "people never stop hearing the hum of the refrigerator. This is why most "
837 "people who are exposed to slot machines play them for a while and then move "
838 "on while a small and tragic minority liquidate their kids’ college funds, "
839 "buy adult diapers, and position themselves in front of a machine until they "
840 "collapse."
841 msgstr ""
842
843 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
844 msgid ""
845 "But surveillance capitalism’s margins on behavioral modification suck. "
846 "Tripling the rate at which someone buys a widget sounds great <ulink url="
847 "\"https://www.forbes.com/sites/priceonomics/2018/03/09/the-advertising-"
848 "conversion-rates-for-every-major-tech-platform/#2f6a67485957\">unless the "
849 "base rate is way less than 1%</ulink> with an improved rate of… still less "
850 "than 1%. Even penny slot machines pull down pennies for every spin while "
851 "surveillance capitalism rakes in infinitesimal penny fractions."
852 msgstr ""
853
854 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
855 msgid ""
856 "Slot machines’ high returns mean that they can be profitable just by "
857 "draining the fortunes of the small rump of people who are pathologically "
858 "vulnerable to them and unable to adapt to their tricks. But surveillance "
859 "capitalism can’t survive on the fractional pennies it brings down from that "
860 "vulnerable sliver — that’s why, after the Great Zynga Epidemic had finally "
861 "burned itself out, the small number of still-addicted players left behind "
862 "couldn’t sustain it as a global phenomenon. And new powerful attention "
863 "weapons aren’t easy to find, as is evidenced by the long years since the "
864 "last time Zynga had a hit. Despite the hundreds of millions of dollars that "
865 "Zynga has to spend on developing new tools to blast through our adaptation, "
866 "it has never managed to repeat the lucky accident that let it snag so much "
867 "of our attention for a brief moment in 2009. Powerhouses like Supercell have "
868 "fared a little better, but they are rare and throw away many failures for "
869 "every success."
870 msgstr ""
871
872 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><sect2><para>
873 msgid ""
874 "The vulnerability of small segments of the population to dramatic, efficient "
875 "corporate manipulation is a real concern that’s worthy of our attention and "
876 "energy. But it’s not an existential threat to society."
877 msgstr ""
878
879 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
880 msgid ""
881 "If data is the new oil, then surveillance capitalism’s engine has a leak"
882 msgstr ""
883
884 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
885 msgid ""
886 "This adaptation problem offers an explanation for one of surveillance "
887 "capitalism’s most alarming traits: its relentless hunger for data and its "
888 "endless expansion of data-gathering capabilities through the spread of "
889 "sensors, online surveillance, and acquisition of data streams from third "
890 "parties."
891 msgstr ""
892
893 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
894 msgid ""
895 "Zuboff observes this phenomenon and concludes that data must be very "
896 "valuable if surveillance capitalism is so hungry for it. (In her words: "
897 "<quote>Just as industrial capitalism was driven to the continuous "
898 "intensification of the means of production, so surveillance capitalists and "
899 "their market players are now locked into the continuous intensification of "
900 "the means of behavioral modification and the gathering might of "
901 "instrumentarian power.</quote>) But what if the voracious appetite is "
902 "because data has such a short half-life — because people become inured so "
903 "quickly to new, data-driven persuasion techniques — that the companies are "
904 "locked in an arms race with our limbic system? What if it’s all a Red "
905 "Queen’s race where they have to run ever faster — collect ever-more data — "
906 "just to stay in the same spot?"
907 msgstr ""
908
909 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
910 msgid ""
911 "Of course, all of Big Tech’s persuasion techniques work in concert with one "
912 "another, and collecting data is useful beyond mere behavioral trickery."
913 msgstr ""
914
915 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
916 msgid ""
917 "If someone wants to recruit you to buy a refrigerator or join a pogrom, they "
918 "might use profiling and targeting to send messages to people they judge to "
919 "be good sales prospects. The messages themselves may be deceptive, making "
920 "claims about things you’re not very knowledgeable about (food safety and "
921 "energy efficiency or eugenics and historical claims about racial "
922 "superiority). They might use search engine optimization and/or armies of "
923 "fake reviewers and commenters and/or paid placement to dominate the "
924 "discourse so that any search for further information takes you back to their "
925 "messages. And finally, they may refine the different pitches using machine "
926 "learning and other techniques to figure out what kind of pitch works best on "
927 "someone like you."
928 msgstr ""
929
930 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
931 msgid ""
932 "Each phase of this process benefits from surveillance: The more data they "
933 "have, the more precisely they can profile you and target you with specific "
934 "messages. Think of how you’d sell a fridge if you knew that the warranty on "
935 "your prospect’s fridge just expired and that they were expecting a tax "
936 "rebate in April."
937 msgstr ""
938
939 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
940 msgid ""
941 "Also, the more data they have, the better they can craft deceptive messages "
942 "— if I know that you’re into genealogy, I might not try to feed you "
943 "pseudoscience about genetic differences between <quote>races,</quote> "
944 "sticking instead to conspiratorial secret histories of <quote>demographic "
945 "replacement</quote> and the like."
946 msgstr ""
947
948 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
949 msgid ""
950 "Facebook also helps you locate people who have the same odious or antisocial "
951 "views as you. It makes it possible to find other people who want to carry "
952 "tiki torches through the streets of Charlottesville in Confederate cosplay. "
953 "It can help you find other people who want to join your militia and go to "
954 "the border to look for undocumented migrants to terrorize. It can help you "
955 "find people who share your belief that vaccines are poison and that the "
956 "Earth is flat."
957 msgstr ""
958
959 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
960 msgid ""
961 "There is one way in which targeted advertising uniquely benefits those "
962 "advocating for socially unacceptable causes: It is invisible. Racism is "
963 "widely geographically dispersed, and there are few places where racists — "
964 "and only racists — gather. This is similar to the problem of selling "
965 "refrigerators in that potential refrigerator purchasers are geographically "
966 "dispersed and there are few places where you can buy an ad that will be "
967 "primarily seen by refrigerator customers. But buying a refrigerator is "
968 "socially acceptable while being a Nazi is not, so you can buy a billboard or "
969 "advertise in the newspaper sports section for your refrigerator business, "
970 "and the only potential downside is that your ad will be seen by a lot of "
971 "people who don’t want refrigerators, resulting in a lot of wasted expense."
972 msgstr ""
973
974 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
975 msgid ""
976 "But even if you wanted to advertise your Nazi movement on a billboard or "
977 "prime-time TV or the sports section, you would struggle to find anyone "
978 "willing to sell you the space for your ad partly because they disagree with "
979 "your views and partly because they fear censure (boycott, reputational "
980 "damage, etc.) from other people who disagree with your views."
981 msgstr ""
982
983 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
984 msgid ""
985 "Targeted ads solve this problem: On the internet, every ad unit can be "
986 "different for every person, meaning that you can buy ads that are only shown "
987 "to people who appear to be Nazis and not to people who hate Nazis. When "
988 "there’s spillover — when someone who hates racism is shown a racist "
989 "recruiting ad — there is some fallout; the platform or publication might get "
990 "an angry public or private denunciation. But the nature of the risk assumed "
991 "by an online ad buyer is different than the risks to a traditional publisher "
992 "or billboard owner who might want to run a Nazi ad."
993 msgstr ""
994
995 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
996 msgid ""
997 "Online ads are placed by algorithms that broker between a diverse ecosystem "
998 "of self-serve ad platforms that anyone can buy an ad through, so the Nazi ad "
999 "that slips onto your favorite online publication isn’t seen as their moral "
1000 "failing but rather as a failure in some distant, upstream ad supplier. When "
1001 "a publication gets a complaint about an offensive ad that’s appearing in one "
1002 "of its units, it can take some steps to block that ad, but the Nazi might "
1003 "buy a slightly different ad from a different broker serving the same unit. "
1004 "And in any event, internet users increasingly understand that when they see "
1005 "an ad, it’s likely that the advertiser did not choose that publication and "
1006 "that the publication has no idea who its advertisers are."
1007 msgstr ""
1008
1009 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1010 msgid ""
1011 "These layers of indirection between advertisers and publishers serve as "
1012 "moral buffers: Today’s moral consensus is largely that publishers shouldn’t "
1013 "be held responsible for the ads that appear on their pages because they’re "
1014 "not actively choosing to put those ads there. Because of this, Nazis are "
1015 "able to overcome significant barriers to organizing their movement."
1016 msgstr ""
1017
1018 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1019 msgid ""
1020 "Data has a complex relationship with domination. Being able to spy on your "
1021 "customers can alert you to their preferences for your rivals and allow you "
1022 "to head off your rivals at the pass."
1023 msgstr ""
1024
1025 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1026 msgid ""
1027 "More importantly, if you can dominate the information space while also "
1028 "gathering data, then you make other deceptive tactics stronger because it’s "
1029 "harder to break out of the web of deceit you’re spinning. Domination — that "
1030 "is, ultimately becoming a monopoly — and not the data itself is the "
1031 "supercharger that makes every tactic worth pursuing because monopolistic "
1032 "domination deprives your target of an escape route."
1033 msgstr ""
1034
1035 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1036 msgid ""
1037 "If you’re a Nazi who wants to ensure that your prospects primarily see "
1038 "deceptive, confirming information when they search for more, you can improve "
1039 "your odds by seeding the search terms they use through your initial "
1040 "communications. You don’t need to own the top 10 results for <quote>voter "
1041 "suppression</quote> if you can convince your marks to confine their search "
1042 "terms to <quote>voter fraud,</quote> which throws up a very different set of "
1043 "search results."
1044 msgstr ""
1045
1046 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1047 msgid ""
1048 "Surveillance capitalists are like stage mentalists who claim that their "
1049 "extraordinary insights into human behavior let them guess the word that you "
1050 "wrote down and folded up in your pocket but who really use shills, hidden "
1051 "cameras, sleight of hand, and brute-force memorization to amaze you."
1052 msgstr ""
1053
1054 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1055 msgid ""
1056 "Or perhaps they’re more like pick-up artists, the misogynistic cult that "
1057 "promises to help awkward men have sex with women by teaching them "
1058 "<quote>neurolinguistic programming</quote> phrases, body language "
1059 "techniques, and psychological manipulation tactics like <quote>negging</"
1060 "quote> — offering unsolicited negative feedback to women to lower their self-"
1061 "esteem and prick their interest."
1062 msgstr ""
1063
1064 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1065 msgid ""
1066 "Some pick-up artists eventually manage to convince women to go home with "
1067 "them, but it’s not because these men have figured out how to bypass women’s "
1068 "critical faculties. Rather, pick-up artists’ <quote>success</quote> stories "
1069 "are a mix of women who were incapable of giving consent, women who were "
1070 "coerced, women who were intoxicated, self-destructive women, and a few women "
1071 "who were sober and in command of their faculties but who didn’t realize "
1072 "straightaway that they were with terrible men but rectified the error as "
1073 "soon as they could."
1074 msgstr ""
1075
1076 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1077 msgid ""
1078 "Pick-up artists <emphasis>believe</emphasis> they have figured out a secret "
1079 "back door that bypasses women’s critical faculties, but they haven’t. Many "
1080 "of the tactics they deploy, like negging, became the butt of jokes (just "
1081 "like people joke about bad ad targeting), and there’s a good chance that "
1082 "anyone they try these tactics on will immediately recognize them and dismiss "
1083 "the men who use them as irredeemable losers."
1084 msgstr ""
1085
1086 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1087 msgid ""
1088 "Pick-up artists are proof that people can believe they have developed a "
1089 "system of mind control <emphasis>even when it doesn’t work</emphasis>. Pick-"
1090 "up artists simply exploit the fact that one-in-a-million chances can come "
1091 "through for you if you make a million attempts, and then they assume that "
1092 "the other 999,999 times, they simply performed the technique incorrectly and "
1093 "commit themselves to doing better next time. There’s only one group of "
1094 "people who find pick-up artist lore reliably convincing: other would-be pick-"
1095 "up artists whose anxiety and insecurity make them vulnerable to scammers and "
1096 "delusional men who convince them that if they pay for tutelage and follow "
1097 "instructions, then they will someday succeed. Pick-up artists assume they "
1098 "fail to entice women because they are bad at being pick-up artists, not "
1099 "because pick-up artistry is bullshit. Pick-up artists are bad at selling "
1100 "themselves to women, but they’re much better at selling themselves to men "
1101 "who pay to learn the secrets of pick-up artistry."
1102 msgstr ""
1103
1104 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1105 msgid ""
1106 "Department store pioneer John Wanamaker is said to have lamented, "
1107 "<quote>Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I "
1108 "don’t know which half.</quote> The fact that Wanamaker thought that only "
1109 "half of his advertising spending was wasted is a tribute to the "
1110 "persuasiveness of advertising executives, who are <emphasis>much</emphasis> "
1111 "better at convincing potential clients to buy their services than they are "
1112 "at convincing the general public to buy their clients’ wares."
1113 msgstr ""
1114
1115 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
1116 msgid "What is Facebook?"
1117 msgstr ""
1118
1119 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1120 msgid ""
1121 "Facebook is heralded as the origin of all of our modern plagues, and it’s "
1122 "not hard to see why. Some tech companies want to lock their users in but "
1123 "make their money by monopolizing access to the market for apps for their "
1124 "devices and gouging them on prices rather than by spying on them (like "
1125 "Apple). Some companies don’t care about locking in users because they’ve "
1126 "figured out how to spy on them no matter where they are and what they’re "
1127 "doing and can turn that surveillance into money (Google). Facebook alone "
1128 "among the Western tech giants has built a business based on locking in its "
1129 "users <emphasis>and</emphasis> spying on them all the time."
1130 msgstr ""
1131
1132 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1133 msgid ""
1134 "Facebook’s surveillance regime is really without parallel in the Western "
1135 "world. Though Facebook tries to prevent itself from being visible on the "
1136 "public web, hiding most of what goes on there from people unless they’re "
1137 "logged into Facebook, the company has nevertheless booby-trapped the entire "
1138 "web with surveillance tools in the form of Facebook <quote>Like</quote> "
1139 "buttons that web publishers include on their sites to boost their Facebook "
1140 "profiles. Facebook also makes various libraries and other useful code "
1141 "snippets available to web publishers that act as surveillance tendrils on "
1142 "the sites where they’re used, funneling information about visitors to the "
1143 "site — newspapers, dating sites, message boards — to Facebook."
1144 msgstr ""
1145
1146 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><blockquote><para>
1147 msgid ""
1148 "Big Tech is able to practice surveillance not just because it is tech but "
1149 "because it is <emphasis>big</emphasis>."
1150 msgstr ""
1151
1152 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1153 msgid ""
1154 "Facebook offers similar tools to app developers, so the apps — games, fart "
1155 "machines, business review services, apps for keeping abreast of your kid’s "
1156 "schooling — you use will send information about your activities to Facebook "
1157 "even if you don’t have a Facebook account and even if you don’t download or "
1158 "use Facebook apps. On top of all that, Facebook buys data from third-party "
1159 "brokers on shopping habits, physical location, use of <quote>loyalty</quote> "
1160 "programs, financial transactions, etc., and cross-references that with the "
1161 "dossiers it develops on activity on Facebook and with apps and the public "
1162 "web."
1163 msgstr ""
1164
1165 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1166 msgid ""
1167 "Though it’s easy to integrate the web with Facebook — linking to news "
1168 "stories and such — Facebook products are generally not available to be "
1169 "integrated back into the web itself. You can embed a tweet in a Facebook "
1170 "post, but if you embed a Facebook post in a tweet, you just get a link back "
1171 "to Facebook and must log in before you can see it. Facebook has used extreme "
1172 "technological and legal countermeasures to prevent rivals from allowing "
1173 "their users to embed Facebook snippets in competing services or to create "
1174 "alternative interfaces to Facebook that merge your Facebook inbox with those "
1175 "of other services that you use."
1176 msgstr ""
1177
1178 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1179 msgid ""
1180 "And Facebook is incredibly popular, with 2.3 billion claimed users (though "
1181 "many believe this figure to be inflated). Facebook has been used to organize "
1182 "genocidal pogroms, racist riots, anti-vaccination movements, flat Earth "
1183 "cults, and the political lives of some of the world’s ugliest, most brutal "
1184 "autocrats. There are some really alarming things going on in the world, and "
1185 "Facebook is implicated in many of them, so it’s easy to conclude that these "
1186 "bad things are the result of Facebook’s mind-control system, which it rents "
1187 "out to anyone with a few bucks to spend."
1188 msgstr ""
1189
1190 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1191 msgid ""
1192 "To understand what role Facebook plays in the formulation and mobilization "
1193 "of antisocial movements, we need to understand the dual nature of Facebook."
1194 msgstr ""
1195
1196 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1197 msgid ""
1198 "Because it has a lot of users and a lot of data about those users, Facebook "
1199 "is a very efficient tool for locating people with hard-to-find traits, the "
1200 "kinds of traits that are widely diffused in the population such that "
1201 "advertisers have historically struggled to find a cost-effective way to "
1202 "reach them. Think back to refrigerators: Most of us only replace our major "
1203 "appliances a few times in our entire lives. If you’re a refrigerator "
1204 "manufacturer or retailer, you have these brief windows in the life of a "
1205 "consumer during which they are pondering a purchase, and you have to somehow "
1206 "reach them. Anyone who’s ever registered a title change after buying a house "
1207 "can attest that appliance manufacturers are incredibly desperate to reach "
1208 "anyone who has even the slenderest chance of being in the market for a new "
1209 "fridge."
1210 msgstr ""
1211
1212 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1213 msgid ""
1214 "Facebook makes finding people shopping for refrigerators a <emphasis>lot</"
1215 "emphasis> easier. It can target ads to people who’ve registered a new home "
1216 "purchase, to people who’ve searched for refrigerator buying advice, to "
1217 "people who have complained about their fridge dying, or any combination "
1218 "thereof. It can even target people who’ve recently bought <emphasis>other</"
1219 "emphasis> kitchen appliances on the theory that someone who’s just replaced "
1220 "their stove and dishwasher might be in a fridge-buying kind of mood. The "
1221 "vast majority of people who are reached by these ads will not be in the "
1222 "market for a new fridge, but — crucially — the percentage of people who "
1223 "<emphasis>are</emphasis> looking for fridges that these ads reach is "
1224 "<emphasis>much</emphasis> larger than it is than for any group that might be "
1225 "subjected to traditional, offline targeted refrigerator marketing."
1226 msgstr ""
1227
1228 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1229 msgid ""
1230 "Facebook also makes it a lot easier to find people who have the same rare "
1231 "disease as you, which might have been impossible in earlier eras — the "
1232 "closest fellow sufferer might otherwise be hundreds of miles away. It makes "
1233 "it easier to find people who went to the same high school as you even though "
1234 "decades have passed and your former classmates have all been scattered to "
1235 "the four corners of the Earth."
1236 msgstr ""
1237
1238 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1239 msgid ""
1240 "Facebook also makes it much easier to find people who hold the same rare "
1241 "political beliefs as you. If you’ve always harbored a secret affinity for "
1242 "socialism but never dared utter this aloud lest you be demonized by your "
1243 "neighbors, Facebook can help you discover other people who feel the same way "
1244 "(and it might just demonstrate to you that your affinity is more widespread "
1245 "than you ever suspected). It can make it easier to find people who share "
1246 "your sexual identity. And again, it can help you to understand that what "
1247 "you thought was a shameful secret that affected only you was really a widely "
1248 "shared trait, giving you both comfort and the courage to come out to the "
1249 "people in your life."
1250 msgstr ""
1251
1252 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1253 msgid ""
1254 "All of this presents a dilemma for Facebook: Targeting makes the company’s "
1255 "ads more effective than traditional ads, but it also lets advertisers see "
1256 "just how effective their ads are. While advertisers are pleased to learn "
1257 "that Facebook ads are more effective than ads on systems with less "
1258 "sophisticated targeting, advertisers can also see that in nearly every case, "
1259 "the people who see their ads ignore them. Or, at best, the ads work on a "
1260 "subconscious level, creating nebulous unmeasurables like <quote>brand "
1261 "recognition.</quote> This means that the price per ad is very low in nearly "
1262 "every case."
1263 msgstr ""
1264
1265 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1266 msgid ""
1267 "To make things worse, many Facebook groups spark precious little discussion. "
1268 "Your little-league soccer team, the people with the same rare disease as "
1269 "you, and the people you share a political affinity with may exchange the odd "
1270 "flurry of messages at critical junctures, but on a daily basis, there’s not "
1271 "much to say to your old high school chums or other hockey-card collectors."
1272 msgstr ""
1273
1274 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1275 msgid ""
1276 "With nothing but <quote>organic</quote> discussion, Facebook would not "
1277 "generate enough traffic to sell enough ads to make the money it needs to "
1278 "continually expand by buying up its competitors while returning handsome "
1279 "sums to its investors."
1280 msgstr ""
1281
1282 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1283 msgid ""
1284 "So Facebook has to gin up traffic by sidetracking its own forums: Every time "
1285 "Facebook’s algorithm injects controversial materials — inflammatory "
1286 "political articles, conspiracy theories, outrage stories — into a group, it "
1287 "can hijack that group’s nominal purpose with its desultory discussions and "
1288 "supercharge those discussions by turning them into bitter, unproductive "
1289 "arguments that drag on and on. Facebook is optimized for engagement, not "
1290 "happiness, and it turns out that automated systems are pretty good at "
1291 "figuring out things that people will get angry about."
1292 msgstr ""
1293
1294 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1295 msgid ""
1296 "Facebook <emphasis>can</emphasis> modify our behavior but only in a couple "
1297 "of trivial ways. First, it can lock in all your friends and family members "
1298 "so that you check and check and check with Facebook to find out what they "
1299 "are up to; and second, it can make you angry and anxious. It can force you "
1300 "to choose between being interrupted constantly by updates — a process that "
1301 "breaks your concentration and makes it hard to be introspective — and "
1302 "staying in touch with your friends. This is a very limited form of mind "
1303 "control, and it can only really make us miserable, angry, and anxious."
1304 msgstr ""
1305
1306 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1307 msgid ""
1308 "This is why Facebook’s targeting systems — both the ones it shows to "
1309 "advertisers and the ones that let users find people who share their "
1310 "interests — are so next-gen and smooth and easy to use as well as why its "
1311 "message boards have a toolset that seems like it hasn’t changed since the "
1312 "mid-2000s. If Facebook delivered an equally flexible, sophisticated message-"
1313 "reading system to its users, those users could defend themselves against "
1314 "being nonconsensually eyeball-fucked with Donald Trump headlines."
1315 msgstr ""
1316
1317 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1318 msgid ""
1319 "The more time you spend on Facebook, the more ads it gets to show you. The "
1320 "solution to Facebook’s ads only working one in a thousand times is for the "
1321 "company to try to increase how much time you spend on Facebook by a factor "
1322 "of a thousand. Rather than thinking of Facebook as a company that has "
1323 "figured out how to show you exactly the right ad in exactly the right way to "
1324 "get you to do what its advertisers want, think of it as a company that has "
1325 "figured out how to make you slog through an endless torrent of arguments "
1326 "even though they make you miserable, spending so much time on the site that "
1327 "it eventually shows you at least one ad that you respond to."
1328 msgstr ""
1329
1330 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
1331 msgid "Monopoly and the right to the future tense"
1332 msgstr ""
1333
1334 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1335 msgid ""
1336 "Zuboff and her cohort are particularly alarmed at the extent to which "
1337 "surveillance allows corporations to influence our decisions, taking away "
1338 "something she poetically calls <quote>the right to the future tense</quote> "
1339 "— that is, the right to decide for yourself what you will do in the future."
1340 msgstr ""
1341
1342 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1343 msgid ""
1344 "It’s true that advertising can tip the scales one way or another: When "
1345 "you’re thinking of buying a fridge, a timely fridge ad might end the search "
1346 "on the spot. But Zuboff puts enormous and undue weight on the persuasive "
1347 "power of surveillance-based influence techniques. Most of these don’t work "
1348 "very well, and the ones that do won’t work for very long. The makers of "
1349 "these influence tools are confident they will someday refine them into "
1350 "systems of total control, but they are hardly unbiased observers, and the "
1351 "risks from their dreams coming true are very speculative."
1352 msgstr ""
1353
1354 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1355 msgid ""
1356 "By contrast, Zuboff is rather sanguine about 40 years of lax antitrust "
1357 "practice that has allowed a handful of companies to dominate the internet, "
1358 "ushering in an information age with, <ulink url=\"https://twitter.com/"
1359 "tveastman/status/1069674780826071040\">as one person on Twitter noted</"
1360 "ulink>, five giant websites each filled with screenshots of the other four."
1361 msgstr ""
1362
1363 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1364 msgid ""
1365 "However, if we are to be alarmed that we might lose the right to choose for "
1366 "ourselves what our future will hold, then monopoly’s nonspeculative, "
1367 "concrete, here-and-now harms should be front and center in our debate over "
1368 "tech policy."
1369 msgstr ""
1370
1371 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1372 msgid ""
1373 "Start with <quote>digital rights management.</quote> In 1998, Bill Clinton "
1374 "signed the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) into law. It’s a complex "
1375 "piece of legislation with many controversial clauses but none more so than "
1376 "Section 1201, the <quote>anti-circumvention</quote> rule."
1377 msgstr ""
1378
1379 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1380 msgid ""
1381 "This is a blanket ban on tampering with systems that restrict access to "
1382 "copyrighted works. The ban is so thoroughgoing that it prohibits removing a "
1383 "copyright lock even when no copyright infringement takes place. This is by "
1384 "design: The activities that the DMCA’s Section 1201 sets out to ban are not "
1385 "copyright infringements; rather, they are legal activities that frustrate "
1386 "manufacturers’ commercial plans."
1387 msgstr ""
1388
1389 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1390 msgid ""
1391 "For example, Section 1201’s first major application was on DVD players as a "
1392 "means of enforcing the region coding built into those devices. DVD-CCA, the "
1393 "body that standardized DVDs and DVD players, divided the world into six "
1394 "regions and specified that DVD players must check each disc to determine "
1395 "which regions it was authorized to be played in. DVD players would have "
1396 "their own corresponding region (a DVD player bought in the U.S. would be "
1397 "region 1 while one bought in India would be region 5). If the player and the "
1398 "disc’s region matched, the player would play the disc; otherwise, it would "
1399 "reject it."
1400 msgstr ""
1401
1402 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1403 msgid ""
1404 "However, watching a lawfully produced disc in a country other than the one "
1405 "where you purchased it is not copyright infringement — it’s the opposite. "
1406 "Copyright law imposes this duty on customers for a movie: You must go into a "
1407 "store, find a licensed disc, and pay the asking price. Do that — and "
1408 "<emphasis>nothing else</emphasis> — and you and copyright are square with "
1409 "one another."
1410 msgstr ""
1411
1412 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1413 msgid ""
1414 "The fact that a movie studio wants to charge Indians less than Americans or "
1415 "release in Australia later than it releases in the U.K. has no bearing on "
1416 "copyright law. Once you lawfully acquire a DVD, it is no copyright "
1417 "infringement to watch it no matter where you happen to be."
1418 msgstr ""
1419
1420 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1421 msgid ""
1422 "So DVD and DVD player manufacturers would not be able to use accusations of "
1423 "abetting copyright infringement to punish manufacturers who made "
1424 "noncompliant players that would play discs from any region or repair shops "
1425 "that modified players to let you watch out-of-region discs or software "
1426 "programmers who created programs to let you do this."
1427 msgstr ""
1428
1429 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1430 msgid ""
1431 "That’s where Section 1201 of the DMCA comes in: By banning tampering with an "
1432 "<quote>access control,</quote> the rule gave manufacturers and rights "
1433 "holders standing to sue competitors who released superior products with "
1434 "lawful features that the market demanded (in this case, region-free players)."
1435 msgstr ""
1436
1437 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1438 msgid ""
1439 "This is an odious scam against consumers, but as time went by, Section 1201 "
1440 "grew to encompass a rapidly expanding constellation of devices and services "
1441 "as canny manufacturers have realized certain things:"
1442 msgstr ""
1443
1444 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><itemizedlist><listitem><para>
1445 msgid ""
1446 "Any device with software in it contains a <quote>copyrighted work</quote> — "
1447 "i.e., the software."
1448 msgstr ""
1449
1450 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><itemizedlist><listitem><para>
1451 msgid ""
1452 "A device can be designed so that reconfiguring the software requires "
1453 "bypassing an <quote>access control for copyrighted works,</quote> which is a "
1454 "potential felony under Section 1201."
1455 msgstr ""
1456
1457 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><itemizedlist><listitem><para>
1458 msgid ""
1459 "Thus, companies can control their customers’ behavior after they take home "
1460 "their purchases by designing products so that all unpermitted uses require "
1461 "modifications that fall afoul of Section 1201."
1462 msgstr ""
1463
1464 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1465 msgid ""
1466 "Section 1201 then becomes a means for manufacturers of all descriptions to "
1467 "force their customers to arrange their affairs to benefit the manufacturers’ "
1468 "shareholders instead of themselves."
1469 msgstr ""
1470
1471 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1472 msgid ""
1473 "This manifests in many ways: from a new generation of inkjet printers that "
1474 "use countermeasures to prevent third-party ink that cannot be bypassed "
1475 "without legal risks to similar systems in tractors that prevent third-party "
1476 "technicians from swapping in the manufacturer’s own parts that are not "
1477 "recognized by the tractor’s control system until it is supplied with a "
1478 "manufacturer’s unlock code."
1479 msgstr ""
1480
1481 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1482 msgid ""
1483 "Closer to home, Apple’s iPhones use these measures to prevent both third-"
1484 "party service and third-party software installation. This allows Apple to "
1485 "decide when an iPhone is beyond repair and must be shredded and landfilled "
1486 "as opposed to the iPhone’s purchaser. (Apple is notorious for its "
1487 "environmentally catastrophic policy of destroying old electronics rather "
1488 "than permitting them to be cannibalized for parts.) This is a very useful "
1489 "power to wield, especially in light of CEO Tim Cook’s January 2019 warning "
1490 "to investors that the company’s profits are endangered by customers choosing "
1491 "to hold onto their phones for longer rather than replacing them."
1492 msgstr ""
1493
1494 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1495 msgid ""
1496 "Apple’s use of copyright locks also allows it to establish a monopoly over "
1497 "how its customers acquire software for their mobile devices. The App Store’s "
1498 "commercial terms guarantee Apple a share of all revenues generated by the "
1499 "apps sold there, meaning that Apple gets paid when you buy an app from its "
1500 "store and then continues to get paid every time you buy something using that "
1501 "app. This comes out of the bottom line of software developers, who must "
1502 "either charge more or accept lower profits for their products."
1503 msgstr ""
1504
1505 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1506 msgid ""
1507 "Crucially, Apple’s use of copyright locks gives it the power to make "
1508 "editorial decisions about which apps you may and may not install on your own "
1509 "device. Apple has used this power to <ulink url=\"https://www.telegraph.co."
1510 "uk/technology/apple/5982243/Apple-bans-dictionary-from-App-Store-over-swear-"
1511 "words.html\">reject dictionaries</ulink> for containing obscene words; to "
1512 "<ulink url=\"https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/538kan/apple-just-banned-the-"
1513 "app-that-tracks-us-drone-strikes-again\">limit political speech</ulink>, "
1514 "especially from apps that make sensitive political commentary such as an app "
1515 "that notifies you every time a U.S. drone kills someone somewhere in the "
1516 "world; and to <ulink url=\"https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2016-05-19-"
1517 "palestinian-indie-game-must-not-be-called-a-game-apple-says\">object to a "
1518 "game</ulink> that commented on the Israel-Palestine conflict."
1519 msgstr ""
1520
1521 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1522 msgid ""
1523 "Apple often justifies monopoly power over software installation in the name "
1524 "of security, arguing that its vetting of apps for its store means that it "
1525 "can guard its users against apps that contain surveillance code. But this "
1526 "cuts both ways. In China, the government <ulink url=\"https://www.ft.com/"
1527 "content/ad42e536-cf36-11e7-b781-794ce08b24dc\">ordered Apple to prohibit the "
1528 "sale of privacy tools</ulink> like VPNs with the exception of VPNs that had "
1529 "deliberately introduced flaws designed to let the Chinese state eavesdrop on "
1530 "users. Because Apple uses technological countermeasures — with legal "
1531 "backstops — to block customers from installing unauthorized apps, Chinese "
1532 "iPhone owners cannot readily (or legally) acquire VPNs that would protect "
1533 "them from Chinese state snooping."
1534 msgstr ""
1535
1536 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1537 msgid ""
1538 "Zuboff calls surveillance capitalism a <quote>rogue capitalism.</quote> "
1539 "Theoreticians of capitalism claim that its virtue is that it <ulink url="
1540 "\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_signal\">aggregates information in the "
1541 "form of consumers’ decisions</ulink>, producing efficient markets. "
1542 "Surveillance capitalism’s supposed power to rob its victims of their free "
1543 "will through computationally supercharged influence campaigns means that our "
1544 "markets no longer aggregate customers’ decisions because we customers no "
1545 "longer decide — we are given orders by surveillance capitalism’s mind-"
1546 "control rays."
1547 msgstr ""
1548
1549 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1550 msgid ""
1551 "If our concern is that markets cease to function when consumers can no "
1552 "longer make choices, then copyright locks should concern us at "
1553 "<emphasis>least</emphasis> as much as influence campaigns. An influence "
1554 "campaign might nudge you to buy a certain brand of phone; but the copyright "
1555 "locks on that phone absolutely determine where you get it serviced, which "
1556 "apps can run on it, and when you have to throw it away rather than fixing it."
1557 msgstr ""
1558
1559 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
1560 msgid "Search order and the right to the future tense"
1561 msgstr ""
1562
1563 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1564 msgid ""
1565 "Markets are posed as a kind of magic: By discovering otherwise hidden "
1566 "information conveyed by the free choices of consumers, those consumers’ "
1567 "local knowledge is integrated into a self-correcting system that makes "
1568 "efficient allocations—more efficient than any computer could calculate. But "
1569 "monopolies are incompatible with that notion. When you only have one app "
1570 "store, the owner of the store — not the consumer — decides on the range of "
1571 "choices. As Boss Tweed once said, <quote>I don’t care who does the electing, "
1572 "so long as I get to do the nominating.</quote> A monopolized market is an "
1573 "election whose candidates are chosen by the monopolist."
1574 msgstr ""
1575
1576 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1577 msgid ""
1578 "This ballot rigging is made more pernicious by the existence of monopolies "
1579 "over search order. Google’s search market share is about 90%. When Google’s "
1580 "ranking algorithm puts a result for a popular search term in its top 10, "
1581 "that helps determine the behavior of millions of people. If Google’s answer "
1582 "to <quote>Are vaccines dangerous?</quote> is a page that rebuts anti-vax "
1583 "conspiracy theories, then a sizable portion of the public will learn that "
1584 "vaccines are safe. If, on the other hand, Google sends those people to a "
1585 "site affirming the anti-vax conspiracies, a sizable portion of those "
1586 "millions will come away convinced that vaccines are dangerous."
1587 msgstr ""
1588
1589 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1590 msgid ""
1591 "Google’s algorithm is often tricked into serving disinformation as a "
1592 "prominent search result. But in these cases, Google isn’t persuading people "
1593 "to change their minds; it’s just presenting something untrue as fact when "
1594 "the user has no cause to doubt it."
1595 msgstr ""
1596
1597 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1598 msgid ""
1599 "This is true whether the search is for <quote>Are vaccines dangerous?</"
1600 "quote> or <quote>best restaurants near me.</quote> Most users will never "
1601 "look past the first page of search results, and when the overwhelming "
1602 "majority of people all use the same search engine, the ranking algorithm "
1603 "deployed by that search engine will determine myriad outcomes (whether to "
1604 "adopt a child, whether to have cancer surgery, where to eat dinner, where to "
1605 "move, where to apply for a job) to a degree that vastly outstrips any "
1606 "behavioral outcomes dictated by algorithmic persuasion techniques."
1607 msgstr ""
1608
1609 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1610 msgid ""
1611 "Many of the questions we ask search engines have no empirically correct "
1612 "answers: <quote>Where should I eat dinner?</quote> is not an objective "
1613 "question. Even questions that do have correct answers (<quote>Are vaccines "
1614 "dangerous?</quote>) don’t have one empirically superior source for that "
1615 "answer. Many pages affirm the safety of vaccines, so which one goes first? "
1616 "Under conditions of competition, consumers can choose from many search "
1617 "engines and stick with the one whose algorithmic judgment suits them best, "
1618 "but under conditions of monopoly, we all get our answers from the same place."
1619 msgstr ""
1620
1621 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1622 msgid ""
1623 "Google’s search dominance isn’t a matter of pure merit: The company has "
1624 "leveraged many tactics that would have been prohibited under classical, pre-"
1625 "Ronald-Reagan antitrust enforcement standards to attain its dominance. After "
1626 "all, this is a company that has developed two major products: a really good "
1627 "search engine and a pretty good Hotmail clone. Every other major success "
1628 "it’s had — Android, YouTube, Google Maps, etc. — has come through an "
1629 "acquisition of a nascent competitor. Many of the company’s key divisions, "
1630 "such as the advertising technology of DoubleClick, violate the historical "
1631 "antitrust principle of structural separation, which forbade firms from "
1632 "owning subsidiaries that competed with their customers. Railroads, for "
1633 "example, were barred from owning freight companies that competed with the "
1634 "shippers whose freight they carried."
1635 msgstr ""
1636
1637 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1638 msgid ""
1639 "If we’re worried about giant companies subverting markets by stripping "
1640 "consumers of their ability to make free choices, then vigorous antitrust "
1641 "enforcement seems like an excellent remedy. If we’d denied Google the right "
1642 "to effect its many mergers, we would also have probably denied it its total "
1643 "search dominance. Without that dominance, the pet theories, biases, errors "
1644 "(and good judgment, too) of Google search engineers and product managers "
1645 "would not have such an outsized effect on consumer choice."
1646 msgstr ""
1647
1648 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1649 msgid ""
1650 "This goes for many other companies. Amazon, a classic surveillance "
1651 "capitalist, is obviously the dominant tool for searching Amazon — though "
1652 "many people find their way to Amazon through Google searches and Facebook "
1653 "posts — and obviously, Amazon controls Amazon search. That means that "
1654 "Amazon’s own self-serving editorial choices—like promoting its own house "
1655 "brands over rival goods from its sellers as well as its own pet theories, "
1656 "biases, and errors— determine much of what we buy on Amazon. And since "
1657 "Amazon is the dominant e-commerce retailer outside of China and since it "
1658 "attained that dominance by buying up both large rivals and nascent "
1659 "competitors in defiance of historical antitrust rules, we can blame the "
1660 "monopoly for stripping consumers of their right to the future tense and the "
1661 "ability to shape markets by making informed choices."
1662 msgstr ""
1663
1664 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1665 msgid ""
1666 "Not every monopolist is a surveillance capitalist, but that doesn’t mean "
1667 "they’re not able to shape consumer choices in wide-ranging ways. Zuboff "
1668 "lauds Apple for its App Store and iTunes Store, insisting that adding price "
1669 "tags to the features on its platforms has been the secret to resisting "
1670 "surveillance and thus creating markets. But Apple is the only retailer "
1671 "allowed to sell on its platforms, and it’s the second-largest mobile device "
1672 "vendor in the world. The independent software vendors that sell through "
1673 "Apple’s marketplace accuse the company of the same surveillance sins as "
1674 "Amazon and other big retailers: spying on its customers to find lucrative "
1675 "new products to launch, effectively using independent software vendors as "
1676 "free-market researchers, then forcing them out of any markets they discover."
1677 msgstr ""
1678
1679 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1680 msgid ""
1681 "Because of its use of copyright locks, Apple’s mobile customers are not "
1682 "legally allowed to switch to a rival retailer for its apps if they want to "
1683 "do so on an iPhone. Apple, obviously, is the only entity that gets to decide "
1684 "how it ranks the results of search queries in its stores. These decisions "
1685 "ensure that some apps are often installed (because they appear on page one) "
1686 "and others are never installed (because they appear on page one million). "
1687 "Apple’s search-ranking design decisions have a vastly more significant "
1688 "effect on consumer behaviors than influence campaigns delivered by "
1689 "surveillance capitalism’s ad-serving bots."
1690 msgstr ""
1691
1692 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
1693 msgid "Monopolists can afford sleeping pills for watchdogs"
1694 msgstr ""
1695
1696 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1697 msgid ""
1698 "Only the most extreme market ideologues think that markets can self-regulate "
1699 "without state oversight. Markets need watchdogs — regulators, lawmakers, and "
1700 "other elements of democratic control — to keep them honest. When these "
1701 "watchdogs sleep on the job, then markets cease to aggregate consumer choices "
1702 "because those choices are constrained by illegitimate and deceptive "
1703 "activities that companies are able to get away with because no one is "
1704 "holding them to account."
1705 msgstr ""
1706
1707 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1708 msgid ""
1709 "But this kind of regulatory capture doesn’t come cheap. In competitive "
1710 "sectors, where rivals are constantly eroding one another’s margins, "
1711 "individual firms lack the surplus capital to effectively lobby for laws and "
1712 "regulations that serve their ends."
1713 msgstr ""
1714
1715 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1716 msgid ""
1717 "Many of the harms of surveillance capitalism are the result of weak or "
1718 "nonexistent regulation. Those regulatory vacuums spring from the power of "
1719 "monopolists to resist stronger regulation and to tailor what regulation "
1720 "exists to permit their existing businesses."
1721 msgstr ""
1722
1723 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1724 msgid ""
1725 "Here’s an example: When firms over-collect and over-retain our data, they "
1726 "are at increased risk of suffering a breach — you can’t leak data you never "
1727 "collected, and once you delete all copies of that data, you can no longer "
1728 "leak it. For more than a decade, we’ve lived through an endless parade of "
1729 "ever-worsening data breaches, each one uniquely horrible in the scale of "
1730 "data breached and the sensitivity of that data."
1731 msgstr ""
1732
1733 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1734 msgid ""
1735 "But still, firms continue to over-collect and over-retain our data for three "
1736 "reasons:"
1737 msgstr ""
1738
1739 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1740 msgid ""
1741 "<emphasis role=\"strong\">1. They are locked in the aforementioned limbic "
1742 "arms race with our capacity to shore up our attentional defense systems to "
1743 "resist their new persuasion techniques.</emphasis> They’re also locked in an "
1744 "arms race with their competitors to find new ways to target people for sales "
1745 "pitches. As soon as they discover a soft spot in our attentional defenses (a "
1746 "counterintuitive, unobvious way to target potential refrigerator buyers), "
1747 "the public begins to wise up to the tactic, and their competitors leap on "
1748 "it, hastening the day in which all potential refrigerator buyers have been "
1749 "inured to the pitch."
1750 msgstr ""
1751
1752 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1753 msgid ""
1754 "<emphasis role=\"strong\">2. They believe the surveillance capitalism story."
1755 "</emphasis> Data is cheap to aggregate and store, and both proponents and "
1756 "opponents of surveillance capitalism have assured managers and product "
1757 "designers that if you collect enough data, you will be able to perform "
1758 "sorcerous acts of mind control, thus supercharging your sales. Even if you "
1759 "never figure out how to profit from the data, someone else will eventually "
1760 "offer to buy it from you to give it a try. This is the hallmark of all "
1761 "economic bubbles: acquiring an asset on the assumption that someone else "
1762 "will buy it from you for more than you paid for it, often to sell to someone "
1763 "else at an even greater price."
1764 msgstr ""
1765
1766 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1767 msgid ""
1768 "<emphasis role=\"strong\">3. The penalties for leaking data are negligible.</"
1769 "emphasis> Most countries limit these penalties to actual damages, meaning "
1770 "that consumers who’ve had their data breached have to show actual monetary "
1771 "harms to get a reward. In 2014, Home Depot disclosed that it had lost credit-"
1772 "card data for 53 million of its customers, but it settled the matter by "
1773 "paying those customers about $0.34 each — and a third of that $0.34 wasn’t "
1774 "even paid in cash. It took the form of a credit to procure a largely "
1775 "ineffectual credit-monitoring service."
1776 msgstr ""
1777
1778 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1779 msgid ""
1780 "But the harms from breaches are much more extensive than these actual-"
1781 "damages rules capture. Identity thieves and fraudsters are wily and "
1782 "endlessly inventive. All the vast breaches of our century are being "
1783 "continuously recombined, the data sets merged and mined for new ways to "
1784 "victimize the people whose data was present in them. Any reasonable, "
1785 "evidence-based theory of deterrence and compensation for breaches would not "
1786 "confine damages to actual damages but rather would allow users to claim "
1787 "these future harms."
1788 msgstr ""
1789
1790 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1791 msgid ""
1792 "However, even the most ambitious privacy rules, such as the EU General Data "
1793 "Protection Regulation, fall far short of capturing the negative "
1794 "externalities of the platforms’ negligent over-collection and over-"
1795 "retention, and what penalties they do provide are not aggressively pursued "
1796 "by regulators."
1797 msgstr ""
1798
1799 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1800 msgid ""
1801 "This tolerance of — or indifference to — data over-collection and over-"
1802 "retention can be ascribed in part to the sheer lobbying muscle of the "
1803 "platforms. They are so profitable that they can handily afford to divert "
1804 "gigantic sums to fight any real change — that is, change that would force "
1805 "them to internalize the costs of their surveillance activities."
1806 msgstr ""
1807
1808 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1809 msgid ""
1810 "And then there’s state surveillance, which the surveillance capitalism story "
1811 "dismisses as a relic of another era when the big worry was being jailed for "
1812 "your dissident speech, not having your free will stripped away with machine "
1813 "learning."
1814 msgstr ""
1815
1816 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1817 msgid ""
1818 "But state surveillance and private surveillance are intimately related. As "
1819 "we saw when Apple was conscripted by the Chinese government as a vital "
1820 "collaborator in state surveillance, the only really affordable and tractable "
1821 "way to conduct mass surveillance on the scale practiced by modern states — "
1822 "both <quote>free</quote> and autocratic states — is to suborn commercial "
1823 "services."
1824 msgstr ""
1825
1826 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1827 msgid ""
1828 "Whether it’s Google being used as a location tracking tool by local law "
1829 "enforcement across the U.S. or the use of social media tracking by the "
1830 "Department of Homeland Security to build dossiers on participants in "
1831 "protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s family separation "
1832 "practices, any hard limits on surveillance capitalism would hamstring the "
1833 "state’s own surveillance capability. Without Palantir, Amazon, Google, and "
1834 "other major tech contractors, U.S. cops would not be able to spy on Black "
1835 "people, ICE would not be able to manage the caging of children at the U.S. "
1836 "border, and state welfare systems would not be able to purge their rolls by "
1837 "dressing up cruelty as empiricism and claiming that poor and vulnerable "
1838 "people are ineligible for assistance. At least some of the states’ "
1839 "unwillingness to take meaningful action to curb surveillance should be "
1840 "attributed to this symbiotic relationship. There is no mass state "
1841 "surveillance without mass commercial surveillance."
1842 msgstr ""
1843
1844 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1845 msgid ""
1846 "Monopolism is key to the project of mass state surveillance. It’s true that "
1847 "smaller tech firms are apt to be less well-defended than Big Tech, whose "
1848 "security experts are drawn from the tops of their field and who are given "
1849 "enormous resources to secure and monitor their systems against intruders. "
1850 "But smaller firms also have less to protect: fewer users whose data is more "
1851 "fragmented across more systems and have to be suborned one at a time by "
1852 "state actors."
1853 msgstr ""
1854
1855 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1856 msgid ""
1857 "A concentrated tech sector that works with authorities is a much more "
1858 "powerful ally in the project of mass state surveillance than a fragmented "
1859 "one composed of smaller actors. The U.S. tech sector is small enough that "
1860 "all of its top executives fit around a single boardroom table in Trump Tower "
1861 "in 2017, shortly after Trump’s inauguration. Most of its biggest players bid "
1862 "to win JEDI, the Pentagon’s $10 billion Joint Enterprise Defense "
1863 "Infrastructure cloud contract. Like other highly concentrated industries, "
1864 "Big Tech rotates its key employees in and out of government service, sending "
1865 "them to serve in the Department of Defense and the White House, then hiring "
1866 "ex-Pentagon and ex-DOD top staffers and officers to work in their own "
1867 "government relations departments."
1868 msgstr ""
1869
1870 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1871 msgid ""
1872 "They can even make a good case for doing this: After all, when there are "
1873 "only four or five big companies in an industry, everyone qualified to "
1874 "regulate those companies has served as an executive in at least a couple of "
1875 "them — because, likewise, when there are only five companies in an industry, "
1876 "everyone qualified for a senior role at any of them is by definition working "
1877 "at one of the other ones."
1878 msgstr ""
1879
1880 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><blockquote><para>
1881 msgid ""
1882 "While surveillance doesn’t cause monopolies, monopolies certainly abet "
1883 "surveillance."
1884 msgstr ""
1885
1886 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1887 msgid ""
1888 "Industries that are competitive are fragmented — composed of companies that "
1889 "are at each other’s throats all the time and eroding one another’s margins "
1890 "in bids to steal their best customers. This leaves them with much more "
1891 "limited capital to use to lobby for favorable rules and a much harder job of "
1892 "getting everyone to agree to pool their resources to benefit the industry as "
1893 "a whole."
1894 msgstr ""
1895
1896 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1897 msgid ""
1898 "Surveillance combined with machine learning is supposed to be an existential "
1899 "crisis, a species-defining moment at which our free will is just a few more "
1900 "advances in the field from being stripped away. I am skeptical of this "
1901 "claim, but I <emphasis>do</emphasis> think that tech poses an existential "
1902 "threat to our society and possibly our species."
1903 msgstr ""
1904
1905 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1906 msgid "But that threat grows out of monopoly."
1907 msgstr ""
1908
1909 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1910 msgid ""
1911 "One of the consequences of tech’s regulatory capture is that it can shift "
1912 "liability for poor security decisions onto its customers and the wider "
1913 "society. It is absolutely normal in tech for companies to obfuscate the "
1914 "workings of their products, to make them deliberately hard to understand, "
1915 "and to threaten security researchers who seek to independently audit those "
1916 "products."
1917 msgstr ""
1918
1919 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1920 msgid ""
1921 "IT is the only field in which this is practiced: No one builds a bridge or a "
1922 "hospital and keeps the composition of the steel or the equations used to "
1923 "calculate load stresses a secret. It is a frankly bizarre practice that "
1924 "leads, time and again, to grotesque security defects on farcical scales, "
1925 "with whole classes of devices being revealed as vulnerable long after they "
1926 "are deployed in the field and put into sensitive places."
1927 msgstr ""
1928
1929 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1930 msgid ""
1931 "The monopoly power that keeps any meaningful consequences for breaches at "
1932 "bay means that tech companies continue to build terrible products that are "
1933 "insecure by design and that end up integrated into our lives, in possession "
1934 "of our data, and connected to our physical world. For years, Boeing has "
1935 "struggled with the aftermath of a series of bad technology decisions that "
1936 "made its 737 fleet a global pariah, a rare instance in which bad tech "
1937 "decisions have been seriously punished in the market."
1938 msgstr ""
1939
1940 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1941 msgid ""
1942 "These bad security decisions are compounded yet again by the use of "
1943 "copyright locks to enforce business-model decisions against consumers. "
1944 "Recall that these locks have become the go-to means for shaping consumer "
1945 "behavior, making it technically impossible to use third-party ink, insulin, "
1946 "apps, or service depots in connection with your lawfully acquired property."
1947 msgstr ""
1948
1949 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1950 msgid ""
1951 "Recall also that these copyright locks are backstopped by legislation (such "
1952 "as Section 1201 of the DMCA or Article 6 of the 2001 EU Copyright Directive) "
1953 "that ban tampering with (<quote>circumventing</quote>) them, and these "
1954 "statutes have been used to threaten security researchers who make "
1955 "disclosures about vulnerabilities without permission from manufacturers."
1956 msgstr ""
1957
1958 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1959 msgid ""
1960 "This amounts to a manufacturer’s veto over safety warnings and criticism. "
1961 "While this is far from the legislative intent of the DMCA and its sister "
1962 "statutes around the world, Congress has not intervened to clarify the "
1963 "statute nor will it because to do so would run counter to the interests of "
1964 "powerful, large firms whose lobbying muscle is unstoppable."
1965 msgstr ""
1966
1967 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1968 msgid ""
1969 "Copyright locks are a double whammy: They create bad security decisions that "
1970 "can’t be freely investigated or discussed. If markets are supposed to be "
1971 "machines for aggregating information (and if surveillance capitalism’s "
1972 "notional mind-control rays are what make it a <quote>rogue capitalism</"
1973 "quote> because it denies consumers the power to make decisions), then a "
1974 "program of legally enforced ignorance of the risks of products makes "
1975 "monopolism even more of a <quote>rogue capitalism</quote> than surveillance "
1976 "capitalism’s influence campaigns."
1977 msgstr ""
1978
1979 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1980 msgid ""
1981 "And unlike mind-control rays, enforced silence over security is an "
1982 "immediate, documented problem, and it <emphasis>does</emphasis> constitute "
1983 "an existential threat to our civilization and possibly our species. The "
1984 "proliferation of insecure devices — especially devices that spy on us and "
1985 "especially when those devices also can manipulate the physical world by, "
1986 "say, steering your car or flipping a breaker at a power station — is a kind "
1987 "of technology debt."
1988 msgstr ""
1989
1990 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
1991 msgid ""
1992 "In software design, <quote>technology debt</quote> refers to old, baked-in "
1993 "decisions that turn out to be bad ones in hindsight. Perhaps a long-ago "
1994 "developer decided to incorporate a networking protocol made by a vendor that "
1995 "has since stopped supporting it. But everything in the product still relies "
1996 "on that superannuated protocol, and so, with each revision, the product team "
1997 "has to work around this obsolete core, adding compatibility layers, "
1998 "surrounding it with security checks that try to shore up its defenses, and "
1999 "so on. These Band-Aid measures compound the debt because every subsequent "
2000 "revision has to make allowances for <emphasis>them</emphasis>, too, like "
2001 "interest mounting on a predatory subprime loan. And like a subprime loan, "
2002 "the interest mounts faster than you can hope to pay it off: The product team "
2003 "has to put so much energy into maintaining this complex, brittle system that "
2004 "they don’t have any time left over to refactor the product from the ground "
2005 "up and <quote>pay off the debt</quote> once and for all."
2006 msgstr ""
2007
2008 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2009 msgid ""
2010 "Typically, technology debt results in a technological bankruptcy: The "
2011 "product gets so brittle and unsustainable that it fails catastrophically. "
2012 "Think of the antiquated COBOL-based banking and accounting systems that fell "
2013 "over at the start of the pandemic emergency when confronted with surges of "
2014 "unemployment claims. Sometimes that ends the product; sometimes it takes "
2015 "the company down with it. Being caught in the default of a technology debt "
2016 "is scary and traumatic, just like losing your house due to bankruptcy is "
2017 "scary and traumatic."
2018 msgstr ""
2019
2020 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2021 msgid ""
2022 "But the technology debt created by copyright locks isn’t individual debt; "
2023 "it’s systemic. Everyone in the world is exposed to this over-leverage, as "
2024 "was the case with the 2008 financial crisis. When that debt comes due — when "
2025 "we face a cascade of security breaches that threaten global shipping and "
2026 "logistics, the food supply, pharmaceutical production pipelines, emergency "
2027 "communications, and other critical systems that are accumulating technology "
2028 "debt in part due to the presence of deliberately insecure and deliberately "
2029 "unauditable copyright locks — it will indeed pose an existential risk."
2030 msgstr ""
2031
2032 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2033 msgid "Privacy and monopoly"
2034 msgstr ""
2035
2036 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2037 msgid ""
2038 "Many tech companies are gripped by an orthodoxy that holds that if they just "
2039 "gather enough data on enough of our activities, everything else is possible "
2040 "— the mind control and endless profits. This is an unfalsifiable hypothesis: "
2041 "If data gives a tech company even a tiny improvement in behavior prediction "
2042 "and modification, the company declares that it has taken the first step "
2043 "toward global domination with no end in sight. If a company <emphasis>fails</"
2044 "emphasis> to attain any improvements from gathering and analyzing data, it "
2045 "declares success to be just around the corner, attainable once more data is "
2046 "in hand."
2047 msgstr ""
2048
2049 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2050 msgid ""
2051 "Surveillance tech is far from the first industry to embrace a nonsensical, "
2052 "self-serving belief that harms the rest of the world, and it is not the "
2053 "first industry to profit handsomely from such a delusion. Long before hedge-"
2054 "fund managers were claiming (falsely) that they could beat the S&amp;P 500, "
2055 "there were plenty of other <quote>respectable</quote> industries that have "
2056 "been revealed as quacks in hindsight. From the makers of radium "
2057 "suppositories (a real thing!) to the cruel sociopaths who claimed they "
2058 "could <quote>cure</quote> gay people, history is littered with the formerly "
2059 "respectable titans of discredited industries."
2060 msgstr ""
2061
2062 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2063 msgid ""
2064 "This is not to say that there’s nothing wrong with Big Tech and its "
2065 "ideological addiction to data. While surveillance’s benefits are mostly "
2066 "overstated, its harms are, if anything, <emphasis>understated</emphasis>."
2067 msgstr ""
2068
2069 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2070 msgid ""
2071 "There’s real irony here. The belief in surveillance capitalism as a "
2072 "<quote>rogue capitalism</quote> is driven by the belief that markets "
2073 "wouldn’t tolerate firms that are gripped by false beliefs. An oil company "
2074 "that has false beliefs about where the oil is will eventually go broke "
2075 "digging dry wells after all."
2076 msgstr ""
2077
2078 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2079 msgid ""
2080 "But monopolists get to do terrible things for a long time before they pay "
2081 "the price. Think of how concentration in the finance sector allowed the "
2082 "subprime crisis to fester as bond-rating agencies, regulators, investors, "
2083 "and critics all fell under the sway of a false belief that complex "
2084 "mathematics could construct <quote>fully hedged</quote> debt instruments "
2085 "that could not possibly default. A small bank that engaged in this kind of "
2086 "malfeasance would simply go broke rather than outrunning the inevitable "
2087 "crisis, perhaps growing so big that it averted it altogether. But large "
2088 "banks were able to continue to attract investors, and when they finally "
2089 "<emphasis>did</emphasis> come a-cropper, the world’s governments bailed them "
2090 "out. The worst offenders of the subprime crisis are bigger than they were in "
2091 "2008, bringing home more profits and paying their execs even larger sums."
2092 msgstr ""
2093
2094 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2095 msgid ""
2096 "Big Tech is able to practice surveillance not just because it is tech but "
2097 "because it is <emphasis>big</emphasis>. The reason every web publisher "
2098 "embeds a Facebook <quote>Like</quote> button is that Facebook dominates the "
2099 "internet’s social media referrals — and every one of those <quote>Like</"
2100 "quote> buttons spies on everyone who lands on a page that contains them (see "
2101 "also: Google Analytics embeds, Twitter buttons, etc.)."
2102 msgstr ""
2103
2104 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2105 msgid ""
2106 "The reason the world’s governments have been slow to create meaningful "
2107 "penalties for privacy breaches is that Big Tech’s concentration produces "
2108 "huge profits that can be used to lobby against those penalties — and Big "
2109 "Tech’s concentration means that the companies involved are able to arrive at "
2110 "a unified negotiating position that supercharges the lobbying."
2111 msgstr ""
2112
2113 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2114 msgid ""
2115 "The reason that the smartest engineers in the world want to work for Big "
2116 "Tech is that Big Tech commands the lion’s share of tech industry jobs."
2117 msgstr ""
2118
2119 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2120 msgid ""
2121 "The reason people who are aghast at Facebook’s and Google’s and Amazon’s "
2122 "data-handling practices continue to use these services is that all their "
2123 "friends are on Facebook; Google dominates search; and Amazon has put all the "
2124 "local merchants out of business."
2125 msgstr ""
2126
2127 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2128 msgid ""
2129 "Competitive markets would weaken the companies’ lobbying muscle by reducing "
2130 "their profits and pitting them against each other in regulatory forums. It "
2131 "would give customers other places to go to get their online services. It "
2132 "would make the companies small enough to regulate and pave the way to "
2133 "meaningful penalties for breaches. It would let engineers with ideas that "
2134 "challenged the surveillance orthodoxy raise capital to compete with the "
2135 "incumbents. It would give web publishers multiple ways to reach audiences "
2136 "and make the case against Facebook and Google and Twitter embeds."
2137 msgstr ""
2138
2139 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2140 msgid ""
2141 "In other words, while surveillance doesn’t cause monopolies, monopolies "
2142 "certainly abet surveillance."
2143 msgstr ""
2144
2145 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2146 msgid "Ronald Reagan, pioneer of tech monopolism"
2147 msgstr ""
2148
2149 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2150 msgid ""
2151 "Technology exceptionalism is a sin, whether it’s practiced by technology’s "
2152 "blind proponents or by its critics. Both of these camps are prone to "
2153 "explaining away monopolistic concentration by citing some special "
2154 "characteristic of the tech industry, like network effects or first-mover "
2155 "advantage. The only real difference between these two groups is that the "
2156 "tech apologists say monopoly is inevitable so we should just let tech get "
2157 "away with its abuses while competition regulators in the U.S. and the EU say "
2158 "monopoly is inevitable so we should punish tech for its abuses but not try "
2159 "to break up the monopolies."
2160 msgstr ""
2161
2162 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2163 msgid ""
2164 "To understand how tech became so monopolistic, it’s useful to look at the "
2165 "dawn of the consumer tech industry: 1979, the year the Apple II Plus "
2166 "launched and became the first successful home computer. That also happens to "
2167 "be the year that Ronald Reagan hit the campaign trail for the 1980 "
2168 "presidential race — a race he won, leading to a radical shift in the way "
2169 "that antitrust concerns are handled in America. Reagan’s cohort of "
2170 "politicians — including Margaret Thatcher in the U.K., Brian Mulroney in "
2171 "Canada, Helmut Kohl in Germany, and Augusto Pinochet in Chile — went on to "
2172 "enact similar reforms that eventually spread around the world."
2173 msgstr ""
2174
2175 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2176 msgid ""
2177 "Antitrust’s story began nearly a century before all that with laws like the "
2178 "Sherman Act, which took aim at monopolists on the grounds that monopolies "
2179 "were bad in and of themselves — squeezing out competitors, creating "
2180 "<quote>diseconomies of scale</quote> (when a company is so big that its "
2181 "constituent parts go awry and it is seemingly helpless to address the "
2182 "problems), and capturing their regulators to such a degree that they can get "
2183 "away with a host of evils."
2184 msgstr ""
2185
2186 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2187 msgid ""
2188 "Then came a fabulist named Robert Bork, a former solicitor general who "
2189 "Reagan appointed to the powerful U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit "
2190 "and who had created an alternate legislative history of the Sherman Act and "
2191 "its successors out of whole cloth. Bork insisted that these statutes were "
2192 "never targeted at monopolies (despite a wealth of evidence to the contrary, "
2193 "including the transcribed speeches of the acts’ authors) but, rather, that "
2194 "they were intended to prevent <quote>consumer harm</quote> — in the form of "
2195 "higher prices."
2196 msgstr ""
2197
2198 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2199 msgid ""
2200 "Bork was a crank, but he was a crank with a theory that rich people really "
2201 "liked. Monopolies are a great way to make rich people richer by allowing "
2202 "them to receive <quote>monopoly rents</quote> (that is, bigger profits) and "
2203 "capture regulators, leading to a weaker, more favorable regulatory "
2204 "environment with fewer protections for customers, suppliers, the "
2205 "environment, and workers."
2206 msgstr ""
2207
2208 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2209 msgid ""
2210 "Bork’s theories were especially palatable to the same power brokers who "
2211 "backed Reagan, and Reagan’s Department of Justice and other agencies began "
2212 "to incorporate Bork’s antitrust doctrine into their enforcement decisions "
2213 "(Reagan even put Bork up for a Supreme Court seat, but Bork flunked the "
2214 "Senate confirmation hearing so badly that, 40 years later, D.C. insiders use "
2215 "the term <quote>borked</quote> to refer to any catastrophically bad "
2216 "political performance)."
2217 msgstr ""
2218
2219 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2220 msgid ""
2221 "Little by little, Bork’s theories entered the mainstream, and their backers "
2222 "began to infiltrate the legal education field, even putting on junkets where "
2223 "members of the judiciary were treated to lavish meals, fun outdoor "
2224 "activities, and seminars where they were indoctrinated into the consumer "
2225 "harm theory of antitrust. The more Bork’s theories took hold, the more money "
2226 "the monopolists were making — and the more surplus capital they had at their "
2227 "disposal to lobby for even more Borkian antitrust influence campaigns."
2228 msgstr ""
2229
2230 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2231 msgid ""
2232 "The history of Bork’s antitrust theories is a really good example of the "
2233 "kind of covertly engineered shifts in public opinion that Zuboff warns us "
2234 "against, where fringe ideas become mainstream orthodoxy. But Bork didn’t "
2235 "change the world overnight. He played a very long game, for over a "
2236 "generation, and he had a tailwind because the same forces that backed "
2237 "oligarchic antitrust theories also backed many other oligarchic shifts in "
2238 "public opinion. For example, the idea that taxation is theft, that wealth is "
2239 "a sign of virtue, and so on — all of these theories meshed to form a "
2240 "coherent ideology that elevated inequality to a virtue."
2241 msgstr ""
2242
2243 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2244 msgid ""
2245 "Today, many fear that machine learning allows surveillance capitalism to "
2246 "sell <quote>Bork-as-a-Service,</quote> at internet speeds, so that you can "
2247 "contract a machine-learning company to engineer <emphasis>rapid</emphasis> "
2248 "shifts in public sentiment without needing the capital to sustain a "
2249 "multipronged, multigenerational project working at the local, state, "
2250 "national, and global levels in business, law, and philosophy. I do not "
2251 "believe that such a project is plausible, though I agree that this is "
2252 "basically what the platforms claim to be selling. They’re just lying about "
2253 "it. Big Tech lies all the time, <emphasis>including</emphasis> in their "
2254 "sales literature."
2255 msgstr ""
2256
2257 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2258 msgid ""
2259 "The idea that tech forms <quote>natural monopolies</quote> (monopolies that "
2260 "are the inevitable result of the realities of an industry, such as the "
2261 "monopolies that accrue the first company to run long-haul phone lines or "
2262 "rail lines) is belied by tech’s own history: In the absence of anti-"
2263 "competitive tactics, Google was able to unseat AltaVista and Yahoo; Facebook "
2264 "was able to head off Myspace. There are some advantages to gathering "
2265 "mountains of data, but those mountains of data also have disadvantages: "
2266 "liability (from leaking), diminishing returns (from old data), and "
2267 "institutional inertia (big companies, like science, progress one funeral at "
2268 "a time)."
2269 msgstr ""
2270
2271 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2272 msgid ""
2273 "Indeed, the birth of the web saw a mass-extinction event for the existing "
2274 "giant, wildly profitable proprietary technologies that had capital, network "
2275 "effects, and walls and moats surrounding their businesses. The web showed "
2276 "that when a new industry is built around a protocol, rather than a product, "
2277 "the combined might of everyone who uses the protocol to reach their "
2278 "customers or users or communities outweighs even the most massive products. "
2279 "CompuServe, AOL, MSN, and a host of other proprietary walled gardens learned "
2280 "this lesson the hard way: Each believed it could stay separate from the web, "
2281 "offering <quote>curation</quote> and a guarantee of consistency and quality "
2282 "instead of the chaos of an open system. Each was wrong and ended up being "
2283 "absorbed into the public web."
2284 msgstr ""
2285
2286 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2287 msgid ""
2288 "Yes, tech is heavily monopolized and is now closely associated with industry "
2289 "concentration, but this has more to do with a matter of timing than its "
2290 "intrinsically monopolistic tendencies. Tech was born at the moment that "
2291 "antitrust enforcement was being dismantled, and tech fell into exactly the "
2292 "same pathologies that antitrust was supposed to guard against. To a first "
2293 "approximation, it is reasonable to assume that tech’s monopolies are the "
2294 "result of a lack of anti-monopoly action and not the much-touted unique "
2295 "characteristics of tech, such as network effects, first-mover advantage, and "
2296 "so on."
2297 msgstr ""
2298
2299 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2300 msgid ""
2301 "In support of this thesis, I offer the concentration that every "
2302 "<emphasis>other</emphasis> industry has undergone over the same period. From "
2303 "professional wrestling to consumer packaged goods to commercial property "
2304 "leasing to banking to sea freight to oil to record labels to newspaper "
2305 "ownership to theme parks, <emphasis>every</emphasis> industry has undergone "
2306 "a massive shift toward concentration. There’s no obvious network effects or "
2307 "first-mover advantage at play in these industries. However, in every case, "
2308 "these industries attained their concentrated status through tactics that "
2309 "were prohibited before Bork’s triumph: merging with major competitors, "
2310 "buying out innovative new market entrants, horizontal and vertical "
2311 "integration, and a suite of anti-competitive tactics that were once illegal "
2312 "but are not any longer."
2313 msgstr ""
2314
2315 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2316 msgid ""
2317 "Again: When you change the laws intended to prevent monopolies and then "
2318 "monopolies form in exactly the way the law was supposed to prevent, it is "
2319 "reasonable to suppose that these facts are related. Tech’s concentration "
2320 "can be readily explained without recourse to radical theories of network "
2321 "effects — but only if you’re willing to indict unregulated markets as "
2322 "tending toward monopoly. Just as a lifelong smoker can give you a hundred "
2323 "reasons why their smoking didn’t cause their cancer (<quote>It was the "
2324 "environmental toxins</quote>), true believers in unregulated markets have a "
2325 "whole suite of unconvincing explanations for monopoly in tech that leave "
2326 "capitalism intact."
2327 msgstr ""
2328
2329 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2330 msgid "Steering with the windshield wipers"
2331 msgstr ""
2332
2333 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2334 msgid ""
2335 "It’s been 40 years since Bork’s project to rehabilitate monopolies achieved "
2336 "liftoff, and that is a generation and a half, which is plenty of time to "
2337 "take a common idea and make it seem outlandish and vice versa. Before the "
2338 "1940s, affluent Americans dressed their baby boys in pink while baby girls "
2339 "wore blue (a <quote>delicate and dainty</quote> color). While gendered "
2340 "colors are obviously totally arbitrary, many still greet this news with "
2341 "amazement and find it hard to imagine a time when pink connoted masculinity."
2342 msgstr ""
2343
2344 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2345 msgid ""
2346 "After 40 years of studiously ignoring antitrust analysis and enforcement, "
2347 "it’s not surprising that we’ve all but forgotten that antitrust exists, that "
2348 "in living memory, growth through mergers and acquisitions were largely "
2349 "prohibited under law, that market-cornering strategies like vertical "
2350 "integration could land a company in court."
2351 msgstr ""
2352
2353 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2354 msgid ""
2355 "Antitrust is a market society’s steering wheel, the control of first resort "
2356 "to keep would-be masters of the universe in their lanes. But Bork and his "
2357 "cohort ripped out our steering wheel 40 years ago. The car is still "
2358 "barreling along, and so we’re yanking as hard as we can on all the "
2359 "<emphasis>other</emphasis> controls in the car as well as desperately "
2360 "flapping the doors and rolling the windows up and down in the hopes that one "
2361 "of these other controls can be repurposed to let us choose where we’re "
2362 "heading before we careen off a cliff."
2363 msgstr ""
2364
2365 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2366 msgid ""
2367 "It’s like a 1960s science-fiction plot come to life: People stuck in a "
2368 "<quote>generation ship,</quote> plying its way across the stars, a ship once "
2369 "piloted by their ancestors; and now, after a great cataclysm, the ship’s "
2370 "crew have forgotten that they’re in a ship at all and no longer remember "
2371 "where the control room is. Adrift, the ship is racing toward its extinction, "
2372 "and unless we can seize the controls and execute emergency course "
2373 "correction, we’re all headed for a fiery death in the heart of a sun."
2374 msgstr ""
2375
2376 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2377 msgid "Surveillance still matters"
2378 msgstr ""
2379
2380 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2381 msgid ""
2382 "None of this is to minimize the problems with surveillance. Surveillance "
2383 "matters, and Big Tech’s use of surveillance <emphasis>is</emphasis> an "
2384 "existential risk to our species, but that’s not because surveillance and "
2385 "machine learning rob us of our free will."
2386 msgstr ""
2387
2388 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2389 msgid ""
2390 "Surveillance has become <emphasis>much</emphasis> more efficient thanks to "
2391 "Big Tech. In 1989, the Stasi — the East German secret police — had the whole "
2392 "country under surveillance, a massive undertaking that recruited one out of "
2393 "every 60 people to serve as an informant or intelligence operative."
2394 msgstr ""
2395
2396 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2397 msgid ""
2398 "Today, we know that the NSA is spying on a significant fraction of the "
2399 "entire world’s population, and its ratio of surveillance operatives to the "
2400 "surveilled is more like 1:10,000 (that’s probably on the low side since it "
2401 "assumes that every American with top-secret clearance is working for the NSA "
2402 "on this project — we don’t know how many of those cleared people are "
2403 "involved in NSA spying, but it’s definitely not all of them)."
2404 msgstr ""
2405
2406 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2407 msgid ""
2408 "How did the ratio of surveillable citizens expand from 1:60 to 1:10,000 in "
2409 "less than 30 years? It’s thanks to Big Tech. Our devices and services gather "
2410 "most of the data that the NSA mines for its surveillance project. We pay for "
2411 "these devices and the services they connect to, and then we painstakingly "
2412 "perform the data-entry tasks associated with logging facts about our lives, "
2413 "opinions, and preferences. This mass surveillance project has been largely "
2414 "useless for fighting terrorism: The NSA can <ulink url=\"https://www."
2415 "washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-cites-case-as-success-of-"
2416 "phone-data-collection-program/2013/08/08/fc915e5a-feda-11e2-96a8-"
2417 "d3b921c0924a_story.html\">only point to a single minor success story</ulink> "
2418 "in which it used its data collection program to foil an attempt by a U.S. "
2419 "resident to wire a few thousand dollars to an overseas terror group. It’s "
2420 "ineffective for much the same reason that commercial surveillance projects "
2421 "are largely ineffective at targeting advertising: The people who want to "
2422 "commit acts of terror, like people who want to buy a refrigerator, are "
2423 "extremely rare. If you’re trying to detect a phenomenon whose base rate is "
2424 "one in a million with an instrument whose accuracy is only 99%, then every "
2425 "true positive will come at the cost of 9,999 false positives."
2426 msgstr ""
2427
2428 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2429 msgid ""
2430 "Let me explain that again: If one in a million people is a terrorist, then "
2431 "there will only be about one terrorist in a random sample of one million "
2432 "people. If your test for detecting terrorists is 99% accurate, it will "
2433 "identify 10,000 terrorists in your million-person sample (1% of one million "
2434 "is 10,000). For every true positive, you’ll get 9,999 false positives."
2435 msgstr ""
2436
2437 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2438 msgid ""
2439 "In reality, the accuracy of algorithmic terrorism detection falls far short "
2440 "of the 99% mark, as does refrigerator ad targeting. The difference is that "
2441 "being falsely accused of wanting to buy a fridge is a minor nuisance while "
2442 "being falsely accused of planning a terror attack can destroy your life and "
2443 "the lives of everyone you love."
2444 msgstr ""
2445
2446 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2447 msgid ""
2448 "Mass state surveillance is only feasible because of surveillance capitalism "
2449 "and its extremely low-yield ad-targeting systems, which require a constant "
2450 "feed of personal data to remain barely viable. Surveillance capitalism’s "
2451 "primary failure mode is mistargeted ads while mass state surveillance’s "
2452 "primary failure mode is grotesque human rights abuses, tending toward "
2453 "totalitarianism."
2454 msgstr ""
2455
2456 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2457 msgid ""
2458 "State surveillance is no mere parasite on Big Tech, sucking up its data and "
2459 "giving nothing in return. In truth, the two are symbiotes: Big Tech sucks up "
2460 "our data for spy agencies, and spy agencies ensure that governments don’t "
2461 "limit Big Tech’s activities so severely that it would no longer serve the "
2462 "spy agencies’ needs. There is no firm distinction between state surveillance "
2463 "and surveillance capitalism; they are dependent on one another."
2464 msgstr ""
2465
2466 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2467 msgid ""
2468 "To see this at work today, look no further than Amazon’s home surveillance "
2469 "device, the Ring doorbell, and its associated app, Neighbors. Ring — a "
2470 "product that Amazon acquired and did not develop in house — makes a camera-"
2471 "enabled doorbell that streams footage from your front door to your mobile "
2472 "device. The Neighbors app allows you to form a neighborhood-wide "
2473 "surveillance grid with your fellow Ring owners through which you can share "
2474 "clips of <quote>suspicious characters.</quote> If you’re thinking that this "
2475 "sounds like a recipe for letting curtain-twitching racists supercharge their "
2476 "suspicions of people with brown skin who walk down their blocks, <ulink url="
2477 "\"https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/07/amazons-ring-enables-over-policing-"
2478 "efforts-some-americas-deadliest-law-enforcement\">you’re right</ulink>. Ring "
2479 "has become a <emphasis>de facto,</emphasis> off-the-books arm of the police "
2480 "without any of the pesky oversight or rules."
2481 msgstr ""
2482
2483 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2484 msgid ""
2485 "In mid-2019, a series of public records requests revealed that Amazon had "
2486 "struck confidential deals with more than 400 local law enforcement agencies "
2487 "through which the agencies would promote Ring and Neighbors and in exchange "
2488 "get access to footage from Ring cameras. In theory, cops would need to "
2489 "request this footage through Amazon (and internal documents reveal that "
2490 "Amazon devotes substantial resources to coaching cops on how to spin a "
2491 "convincing story when doing so), but in practice, when a Ring customer turns "
2492 "down a police request, Amazon only requires the agency to formally request "
2493 "the footage from the company, which it will then produce."
2494 msgstr ""
2495
2496 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2497 msgid ""
2498 "Ring and law enforcement have found many ways to intertwine their "
2499 "activities. Ring strikes secret deals to acquire real-time access to 911 "
2500 "dispatch and then streams alarming crime reports to Neighbors users, which "
2501 "serve as convincers for anyone who’s contemplating a surveillance doorbell "
2502 "but isn’t sure whether their neighborhood is dangerous enough to warrant it."
2503 msgstr ""
2504
2505 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2506 msgid ""
2507 "The more the cops buzz-market the surveillance capitalist Ring, the more "
2508 "surveillance capability the state gets. Cops who rely on private entities "
2509 "for law-enforcement roles then brief against any controls on the deployment "
2510 "of that technology while the companies return the favor by lobbying against "
2511 "rules requiring public oversight of police surveillance technology. The more "
2512 "the cops rely on Ring and Neighbors, the harder it will be to pass laws to "
2513 "curb them. The fewer laws there are against them, the more the cops will "
2514 "rely on them."
2515 msgstr ""
2516
2517 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2518 msgid "Dignity and sanctuary"
2519 msgstr ""
2520
2521 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2522 msgid ""
2523 "But even if we could exercise democratic control over our states and force "
2524 "them to stop raiding surveillance capitalism’s reservoirs of behavioral "
2525 "data, surveillance capitalism would still harm us."
2526 msgstr ""
2527
2528 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2529 msgid ""
2530 "This is an area where Zuboff shines. Her chapter on <quote>sanctuary</quote> "
2531 "— the feeling of being unobserved — is a beautiful hymn to introspection, "
2532 "calmness, mindfulness, and tranquility."
2533 msgstr ""
2534
2535 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2536 msgid ""
2537 "When you are watched, something changes. Anyone who has ever raised a child "
2538 "knows this. You might look up from your book (or more realistically, from "
2539 "your phone) and catch your child in a moment of profound realization and "
2540 "growth, a moment where they are learning something that is right at the edge "
2541 "of their abilities, requiring their entire ferocious concentration. For a "
2542 "moment, you’re transfixed, watching that rare and beautiful moment of focus "
2543 "playing out before your eyes, and then your child looks up and sees you "
2544 "seeing them, and the moment collapses. To grow, you need to be and expose "
2545 "your authentic self, and in that moment, you are vulnerable like a hermit "
2546 "crab scuttling from one shell to the next. The tender, unprotected tissues "
2547 "you expose in that moment are too delicate to reveal in the presence of "
2548 "another, even someone you trust as implicitly as a child trusts their parent."
2549 msgstr ""
2550
2551 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2552 msgid ""
2553 "In the digital age, our authentic selves are inextricably tied to our "
2554 "digital lives. Your search history is a running ledger of the questions "
2555 "you’ve pondered. Your location history is a record of the places you’ve "
2556 "sought out and the experiences you’ve had there. Your social graph reveals "
2557 "the different facets of your identity, the people you’ve connected with."
2558 msgstr ""
2559
2560 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2561 msgid ""
2562 "To be observed in these activities is to lose the sanctuary of your "
2563 "authentic self."
2564 msgstr ""
2565
2566 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2567 msgid ""
2568 "There’s another way in which surveillance capitalism robs us of our capacity "
2569 "to be our authentic selves: by making us anxious. Surveillance capitalism "
2570 "isn’t really a mind-control ray, but you don’t need a mind-control ray to "
2571 "make someone anxious. After all, another word for anxiety is agitation, and "
2572 "to make someone experience agitation, you need merely to agitate them. To "
2573 "poke them and prod them and beep at them and buzz at them and bombard them "
2574 "on an intermittent schedule that is just random enough that our limbic "
2575 "systems never quite become inured to it."
2576 msgstr ""
2577
2578 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2579 msgid ""
2580 "Our devices and services are <quote>general purpose</quote> in that they can "
2581 "connect anything or anyone to anything or anyone else and that they can run "
2582 "any program that can be written. This means that the distraction rectangles "
2583 "in our pockets hold our most precious moments with our most beloved people "
2584 "and their most urgent or time-sensitive communications (from <quote>running "
2585 "late can you get the kid?</quote> to <quote>doctor gave me bad news and I "
2586 "need to talk to you RIGHT NOW</quote>) as well as ads for refrigerators and "
2587 "recruiting messages from Nazis."
2588 msgstr ""
2589
2590 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2591 msgid ""
2592 "All day and all night, our pockets buzz, shattering our concentration and "
2593 "tearing apart the fragile webs of connection we spin as we think through "
2594 "difficult ideas. If you locked someone in a cell and agitated them like "
2595 "this, we’d call it <quote>sleep deprivation torture,</quote> and it would be "
2596 "<ulink url=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1SKpRbvnx6g\">a war crime under "
2597 "the Geneva Conventions</ulink>."
2598 msgstr ""
2599
2600 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2601 msgid "Afflicting the afflicted"
2602 msgstr ""
2603
2604 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2605 msgid ""
2606 "The effects of surveillance on our ability to be our authentic selves are "
2607 "not equal for all people. Some of us are lucky enough to live in a time and "
2608 "place in which all the most important facts of our lives are widely and "
2609 "roundly socially acceptable and can be publicly displayed without the risk "
2610 "of social consequence."
2611 msgstr ""
2612
2613 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2614 msgid ""
2615 "But for many of us, this is not true. Recall that in living memory, many of "
2616 "the ways of being that we think of as socially acceptable today were once "
2617 "cause for dire social sanction or even imprisonment. If you are 65 years "
2618 "old, you have lived through a time in which people living in <quote>free "
2619 "societies</quote> could be imprisoned or sanctioned for engaging in "
2620 "homosexual activity, for falling in love with a person whose skin was a "
2621 "different color than their own, or for smoking weed."
2622 msgstr ""
2623
2624 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2625 msgid ""
2626 "Today, these activities aren’t just decriminalized in much of the world, "
2627 "they’re considered normal, and the fallen prohibitions are viewed as "
2628 "shameful, regrettable relics of the past."
2629 msgstr ""
2630
2631 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2632 msgid ""
2633 "How did we get from prohibition to normalization? Through private, personal "
2634 "activity: People who were secretly gay or secret pot-smokers or who secretly "
2635 "loved someone with a different skin color were vulnerable to retaliation if "
2636 "they made their true selves known and were limited in how much they could "
2637 "advocate for their own right to exist in the world and be true to "
2638 "themselves. But because there was a private sphere, these people could form "
2639 "alliances with their friends and loved ones who did not share their "
2640 "disfavored traits by having private conversations in which they came out, "
2641 "disclosing their true selves to the people around them and bringing them to "
2642 "their cause one conversation at a time."
2643 msgstr ""
2644
2645 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2646 msgid ""
2647 "The right to choose the time and manner of these conversations was key to "
2648 "their success. It’s one thing to come out to your dad while you’re on a "
2649 "fishing trip away from the world and another thing entirely to blurt it out "
2650 "over the Christmas dinner table while your racist Facebook uncle is there to "
2651 "make a scene."
2652 msgstr ""
2653
2654 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2655 msgid ""
2656 "Without a private sphere, there’s a chance that none of these changes would "
2657 "have come to pass and that the people who benefited from these changes would "
2658 "have either faced social sanction for coming out to a hostile world or would "
2659 "have never been able to reveal their true selves to the people they love."
2660 msgstr ""
2661
2662 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2663 msgid ""
2664 "The corollary is that, unless you think that our society has attained social "
2665 "perfection — that your grandchildren in 50 years will ask you to tell them "
2666 "the story of how, in 2020, every injustice had been righted and no further "
2667 "change had to be made — then you should expect that right now, at this "
2668 "minute, there are people you love, whose happiness is key to your own, who "
2669 "have a secret in their hearts that stops them from ever being their "
2670 "authentic selves with you. These people are sorrowing and will go to their "
2671 "graves with that secret sorrow in their hearts, and the source of that "
2672 "sorrow will be the falsity of their relationship to you."
2673 msgstr ""
2674
2675 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2676 msgid "A private realm is necessary for human progress."
2677 msgstr ""
2678
2679 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2680 msgid "Any data you collect and retain will eventually leak"
2681 msgstr ""
2682
2683 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2684 msgid ""
2685 "The lack of a private life can rob vulnerable people of the chance to be "
2686 "their authentic selves and constrain our actions by depriving us of "
2687 "sanctuary, but there is another risk that is borne by everyone, not just "
2688 "people with a secret: crime."
2689 msgstr ""
2690
2691 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2692 msgid ""
2693 "Personally identifying information is of very limited use for the purpose of "
2694 "controlling peoples’ minds, but identity theft — really a catchall term for "
2695 "a whole constellation of terrible criminal activities that can destroy your "
2696 "finances, compromise your personal integrity, ruin your reputation, or even "
2697 "expose you to physical danger — thrives on it."
2698 msgstr ""
2699
2700 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2701 msgid ""
2702 "Attackers are not limited to using data from one breached source, either. "
2703 "Multiple services have suffered breaches that exposed names, addresses, "
2704 "phone numbers, passwords, sexual tastes, school grades, work performance, "
2705 "brushes with the criminal justice system, family details, genetic "
2706 "information, fingerprints and other biometrics, reading habits, search "
2707 "histories, literary tastes, pseudonymous identities, and other sensitive "
2708 "information. Attackers can merge data from these different breaches to build "
2709 "up extremely detailed dossiers on random subjects and then use different "
2710 "parts of the data for different criminal purposes."
2711 msgstr ""
2712
2713 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2714 msgid ""
2715 "For example, attackers can use leaked username and password combinations to "
2716 "hijack whole fleets of commercial vehicles that <ulink url=\"https://www."
2717 "vice.com/en_us/article/zmpx4x/hacker-monitor-cars-kill-engine-gps-tracking-"
2718 "apps\">have been fitted with anti-theft GPS trackers and immobilizers</"
2719 "ulink> or to hijack baby monitors in order to <ulink url=\"https://www."
2720 "washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/04/23/how-nest-designed-keep-intruders-"
2721 "out-peoples-homes-effectively-allowed-hackers-get/?"
2722 "utm_term=.15220e98c550\">terrorize toddlers with the audio tracks from "
2723 "pornography</ulink>. Attackers use leaked data to trick phone companies into "
2724 "giving them your phone number, then they intercept SMS-based two-factor "
2725 "authentication codes in order to take over your email, bank account, and/or "
2726 "cryptocurrency wallets."
2727 msgstr ""
2728
2729 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2730 msgid ""
2731 "Attackers are endlessly inventive in the pursuit of creative ways to "
2732 "weaponize leaked data. One common use of leaked data is to penetrate "
2733 "companies in order to access <emphasis>more</emphasis> data."
2734 msgstr ""
2735
2736 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2737 msgid ""
2738 "Like spies, online fraudsters are totally dependent on companies over-"
2739 "collecting and over-retaining our data. Spy agencies sometimes pay companies "
2740 "for access to their data or intimidate them into giving it up, but sometimes "
2741 "they work just like criminals do — by <ulink url=\"https://www.bbc.com/news/"
2742 "world-us-canada-24751821\">sneaking data out of companies’ databases</ulink>."
2743 msgstr ""
2744
2745 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2746 msgid ""
2747 "The over-collection of data has a host of terrible social consequences, from "
2748 "the erosion of our authentic selves to the undermining of social progress, "
2749 "from state surveillance to an epidemic of online crime. Commercial "
2750 "surveillance is also a boon to people running influence campaigns, but "
2751 "that’s the least of our troubles."
2752 msgstr ""
2753
2754 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2755 msgid "Critical tech exceptionalism is still tech exceptionalism"
2756 msgstr ""
2757
2758 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2759 msgid ""
2760 "Big Tech has long practiced technology exceptionalism: the idea that it "
2761 "should not be subject to the mundane laws and norms of <quote>meatspace.</"
2762 "quote> Mottoes like Facebook’s <quote>move fast and break things</quote> "
2763 "attracted justifiable scorn of the companies’ self-serving rhetoric."
2764 msgstr ""
2765
2766 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2767 msgid ""
2768 "Tech exceptionalism got us all into a lot of trouble, so it’s ironic and "
2769 "distressing to see Big Tech’s critics committing the same sin."
2770 msgstr ""
2771
2772 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2773 msgid ""
2774 "Big Tech is not a <quote>rogue capitalism</quote> that cannot be cured "
2775 "through the traditional anti-monopoly remedies of trustbusting (forcing "
2776 "companies to divest of competitors they have acquired) and bans on mergers "
2777 "to monopoly and other anti-competitive tactics. Big Tech does not have the "
2778 "power to use machine learning to influence our behavior so thoroughly that "
2779 "markets lose the ability to punish bad actors and reward superior "
2780 "competitors. Big Tech has no rule-writing mind-control ray that necessitates "
2781 "ditching our old toolbox."
2782 msgstr ""
2783
2784 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2785 msgid ""
2786 "The thing is, people have been claiming to have perfected mind-control rays "
2787 "for centuries, and every time, it turned out to be a con — though sometimes "
2788 "the con artists were also conning themselves."
2789 msgstr ""
2790
2791 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2792 msgid ""
2793 "For generations, the advertising industry has been steadily improving its "
2794 "ability to sell advertising services to businesses while only making "
2795 "marginal gains in selling those businesses’ products to prospective "
2796 "customers. John Wanamaker’s lament that <quote>50% of my advertising budget "
2797 "is wasted, I just don’t know which 50%</quote> is a testament to the triumph "
2798 "of <emphasis>ad executives</emphasis>, who successfully convinced Wanamaker "
2799 "that only half of the money he spent went to waste."
2800 msgstr ""
2801
2802 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2803 msgid ""
2804 "The tech industry has made enormous improvements in the science of "
2805 "convincing businesses that they’re good at advertising while their actual "
2806 "improvements to advertising — as opposed to targeting — have been pretty ho-"
2807 "hum. The vogue for machine learning — and the mystical invocation of "
2808 "<quote>artificial intelligence</quote> as a synonym for straightforward "
2809 "statistical inference techniques — has greatly boosted the efficacy of Big "
2810 "Tech’s sales pitch as marketers have exploited potential customers’ lack of "
2811 "technical sophistication to get away with breathtaking acts of overpromising "
2812 "and underdelivering."
2813 msgstr ""
2814
2815 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2816 msgid ""
2817 "It’s tempting to think that if businesses are willing to pour billions into "
2818 "a venture that the venture must be a good one. Yet there are plenty of times "
2819 "when this rule of thumb has led us astray. For example, it’s virtually "
2820 "unheard of for managed investment funds to outperform simple index funds, "
2821 "and investors who put their money into the hands of expert money managers "
2822 "overwhelmingly fare worse than those who entrust their savings to index "
2823 "funds. But managed funds still account for the majority of the money "
2824 "invested in the markets, and they are patronized by some of the richest, "
2825 "most sophisticated investors in the world. Their vote of confidence in an "
2826 "underperforming sector is a parable about the role of luck in wealth "
2827 "accumulation, not a sign that managed funds are a good buy."
2828 msgstr ""
2829
2830 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2831 msgid ""
2832 "The claims of Big Tech’s mind-control system are full of tells that the "
2833 "enterprise is a con. For example, <ulink url=\"https://www.frontiersin.org/"
2834 "articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01415/full\">the reliance on the <quote>Big "
2835 "Five</quote> personality traits</ulink> as a primary means of influencing "
2836 "people even though the <quote>Big Five</quote> theory is unsupported by any "
2837 "large-scale, peer-reviewed studies and is <ulink url=\"https://www.wired.com/"
2838 "story/the-noisy-fallacies-of-psychographic-targeting/\">mostly the realm of "
2839 "marketing hucksters and pop psych</ulink>."
2840 msgstr ""
2841
2842 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2843 msgid ""
2844 "Big Tech’s promotional materials also claim that their algorithms can "
2845 "accurately perform <quote>sentiment analysis</quote> or detect peoples’ "
2846 "moods based on their <quote>microexpressions,</quote> but <ulink url="
2847 "\"https://www.npr.org/2018/09/12/647040758/advertising-on-facebook-is-it-"
2848 "worth-it\">these are marketing claims, not scientific ones</ulink>. These "
2849 "methods are largely untested by independent scientific experts, and where "
2850 "they have been tested, they’ve been found sorely wanting. Microexpressions "
2851 "are particularly suspect as the companies that specialize in training people "
2852 "to detect them <ulink url=\"https://theintercept.com/2017/02/08/tsas-own-"
2853 "files-show-doubtful-science-behind-its-behavior-screening-program/\">have "
2854 "been shown</ulink> to underperform relative to random chance."
2855 msgstr ""
2856
2857 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2858 msgid ""
2859 "Big Tech has been so good at marketing its own supposed superpowers that "
2860 "it’s easy to believe that they can market everything else with similar "
2861 "acumen, but it’s a mistake to believe the hype. Any statement a company "
2862 "makes about the quality of its products is clearly not impartial. The fact "
2863 "that we distrust all the things that Big Tech says about its data handling, "
2864 "compliance with privacy laws, etc., is only reasonable — but why on Earth "
2865 "would we treat Big Tech’s marketing literature as the gospel truth? Big Tech "
2866 "lies about just about <emphasis>everything</emphasis>, including how well "
2867 "its machine-learning fueled persuasion systems work."
2868 msgstr ""
2869
2870 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2871 msgid ""
2872 "That skepticism should infuse all of our evaluations of Big Tech and its "
2873 "supposed abilities, including our perusal of its patents. Zuboff vests these "
2874 "patents with enormous significance, pointing out that Google claimed "
2875 "extensive new persuasion capabilities in <ulink url=\"https://patents.google."
2876 "com/patent/US20050131762A1/en\">its patent filings</ulink>. These claims are "
2877 "doubly suspect: first, because they are so self-serving, and second, because "
2878 "the patent itself is so notoriously an invitation to exaggeration."
2879 msgstr ""
2880
2881 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2882 msgid ""
2883 "Patent applications take the form of a series of claims and range from broad "
2884 "to narrow. A typical patent starts out by claiming that its authors have "
2885 "invented a method or system for doing every conceivable thing that anyone "
2886 "might do, ever, with any tool or device. Then it narrows that claim in "
2887 "successive stages until we get to the actual <quote>invention</quote> that "
2888 "is the true subject of the patent. The hope is that the patent examiner — "
2889 "who is almost certainly overworked and underinformed — will miss the fact "
2890 "that some or all of these claims are ridiculous, or at least suspect, and "
2891 "grant the patent’s broader claims. Patents for unpatentable things are still "
2892 "incredibly useful because they can be wielded against competitors who might "
2893 "license that patent or steer clear of its claims rather than endure the "
2894 "lengthy, expensive process of contesting it."
2895 msgstr ""
2896
2897 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2898 msgid ""
2899 "What’s more, software patents are routinely granted even though the filer "
2900 "doesn’t have any evidence that they can do the thing claimed by the patent. "
2901 "That is, you can patent an <quote>invention</quote> that you haven’t "
2902 "actually made and that you don’t know how to make."
2903 msgstr ""
2904
2905 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2906 msgid ""
2907 "With these considerations in hand, it becomes obvious that the fact that a "
2908 "Big Tech company has patented what it <emphasis>says</emphasis> is an "
2909 "effective mind-control ray is largely irrelevant to whether Big Tech can in "
2910 "fact control our minds."
2911 msgstr ""
2912
2913 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2914 msgid ""
2915 "Big Tech collects our data for many reasons, including the diminishing "
2916 "returns on existing stores of data. But many tech companies also collect "
2917 "data out of a mistaken tech exceptionalist belief in the network effects of "
2918 "data. Network effects occur when each new user in a system increases its "
2919 "value. The classic example is fax machines: A single fax machine is of no "
2920 "use, two fax machines are of limited use, but every new fax machine that’s "
2921 "put to use after the first doubles the number of possible fax-to-fax links."
2922 msgstr ""
2923
2924 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2925 msgid ""
2926 "Data mined for predictive systems doesn’t necessarily produce these "
2927 "dividends. Think of Netflix: The predictive value of the data mined from a "
2928 "million English-speaking Netflix viewers is hardly improved by the addition "
2929 "of one more user’s viewing data. Most of the data Netflix acquires after "
2930 "that first minimum viable sample duplicates existing data and produces only "
2931 "minimal gains. Meanwhile, retraining models with new data gets progressively "
2932 "more expensive as the number of data points increases, and manual tasks like "
2933 "labeling and validating data do not get cheaper at scale."
2934 msgstr ""
2935
2936 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2937 msgid ""
2938 "Businesses pursue fads to the detriment of their profits all the time, "
2939 "especially when the businesses and their investors are not motivated by the "
2940 "prospect of becoming profitable but rather by the prospect of being acquired "
2941 "by a Big Tech giant or by having an IPO. For these firms, ticking faddish "
2942 "boxes like <quote>collects as much data as possible</quote> might realize a "
2943 "bigger return on investment than <quote>collects a business-appropriate "
2944 "quantity of data.</quote>"
2945 msgstr ""
2946
2947 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2948 msgid ""
2949 "This is another harm of tech exceptionalism: The belief that more data "
2950 "always produces more profits in the form of more insights that can be "
2951 "translated into better mind-control rays drives firms to over-collect and "
2952 "over-retain data beyond all rationality. And since the firms are behaving "
2953 "irrationally, a good number of them will go out of business and become ghost "
2954 "ships whose cargo holds are stuffed full of data that can harm people in "
2955 "myriad ways — but which no one is responsible for antey longer. Even if the "
2956 "companies don’t go under, the data they collect is maintained behind the "
2957 "minimum viable security — just enough security to keep the company viable "
2958 "while it waits to get bought out by a tech giant, an amount calculated to "
2959 "spend not one penny more than is necessary on protecting data."
2960 msgstr ""
2961
2962 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
2963 msgid ""
2964 "How monopolies, not mind control, drive surveillance capitalism: The "
2965 "Snapchat story"
2966 msgstr ""
2967
2968 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2969 msgid ""
2970 "For the first decade of its existence, Facebook competed with the social "
2971 "media giants of the day (Myspace, Orkut, etc.) by presenting itself as the "
2972 "pro-privacy alternative. Indeed, Facebook justified its walled garden — "
2973 "which let users bring in data from the web but blocked web services like "
2974 "Google Search from indexing and caching Facebook pages — as a pro-privacy "
2975 "measure that protected users from the surveillance-happy winners of the "
2976 "social media wars like Myspace."
2977 msgstr ""
2978
2979 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2980 msgid ""
2981 "Despite frequent promises that it would never collect or analyze its users’ "
2982 "data, Facebook periodically created initiatives that did just that, like the "
2983 "creepy, ham-fisted Beacon tool, which spied on you as you moved around the "
2984 "web and then added your online activities to your public timeline, allowing "
2985 "your friends to monitor your browsing habits. Beacon sparked a user revolt. "
2986 "Every time, Facebook backed off from its surveillance initiative, but not "
2987 "all the way; inevitably, the new Facebook would be more surveilling than the "
2988 "old Facebook, though not quite as surveilling as the intermediate Facebook "
2989 "following the launch of the new product or service."
2990 msgstr ""
2991
2992 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
2993 msgid ""
2994 "The pace at which Facebook ramped up its surveillance efforts seems to have "
2995 "been set by Facebook’s competitive landscape. The more competitors Facebook "
2996 "had, the better it behaved. Every time a major competitor foundered, "
2997 "Facebook’s behavior <ulink url=\"https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?"
2998 "abstract_id=3247362\">got markedly worse</ulink>."
2999 msgstr ""
3000
3001 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3002 msgid ""
3003 "All the while, Facebook was prodigiously acquiring companies, including a "
3004 "company called Onavo. Nominally, Onavo made a battery-monitoring mobile app. "
3005 "But the permissions that Onavo required were so expansive that the app was "
3006 "able to gather fine-grained telemetry on everything users did with their "
3007 "phones, including which apps they used and how they were using them."
3008 msgstr ""
3009
3010 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3011 msgid ""
3012 "Through Onavo, Facebook discovered that it was losing market share to "
3013 "Snapchat, an app that — like Facebook a decade before — billed itself as the "
3014 "pro-privacy alternative to the status quo. Through Onavo, Facebook was able "
3015 "to mine data from the devices of Snapchat users, including both current and "
3016 "former Snapchat users. This spurred Facebook to acquire Instagram — some "
3017 "features of which competed with Snapchat — and then allowed Facebook to fine-"
3018 "tune Instagram’s features and sales pitch to erode Snapchat’s gains and "
3019 "ensure that Facebook would not have to face the kinds of competitive "
3020 "pressures it had earlier inflicted on Myspace and Orkut."
3021 msgstr ""
3022
3023 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3024 msgid ""
3025 "The story of how Facebook crushed Snapchat reveals the relationship between "
3026 "monopoly and surveillance capitalism. Facebook combined surveillance with "
3027 "lax antitrust enforcement to spot the competitive threat of Snapchat on its "
3028 "horizon and then take decisive action against it. Facebook’s surveillance "
3029 "capitalism let it avert competitive pressure with anti-competitive tactics. "
3030 "Facebook users still want privacy — Facebook hasn’t used surveillance to "
3031 "brainwash them out of it — but they can’t get it because Facebook’s "
3032 "surveillance lets it destroy any hope of a rival service emerging that "
3033 "competes on privacy features."
3034 msgstr ""
3035
3036 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
3037 msgid "A monopoly over your friends"
3038 msgstr ""
3039
3040 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3041 msgid ""
3042 "A decentralization movement has tried to erode the dominance of Facebook and "
3043 "other Big Tech companies by fielding <quote>indieweb</quote> alternatives — "
3044 "Mastodon as a Twitter alternative, Diaspora as a Facebook alternative, etc. "
3045 "— but these efforts have failed to attain any kind of liftoff."
3046 msgstr ""
3047
3048 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3049 msgid ""
3050 "Fundamentally, each of these services is hamstrung by the same problem: "
3051 "Every potential user for a Facebook or Twitter alternative has to convince "
3052 "all their friends to follow them to a decentralized web alternative in order "
3053 "to continue to realize the benefit of social media. For many of us, the only "
3054 "reason to have a Facebook account is that our friends have Facebook "
3055 "accounts, and the reason they have Facebook accounts is that <emphasis>we</"
3056 "emphasis> have Facebook accounts."
3057 msgstr ""
3058
3059 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3060 msgid ""
3061 "All of this has conspired to make Facebook — and other dominant platforms — "
3062 "into <quote>kill zones</quote> that investors will not fund new entrants for."
3063 msgstr ""
3064
3065 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3066 msgid ""
3067 "And yet, all of today’s tech giants came into existence despite the "
3068 "entrenched advantage of the companies that came before them. To understand "
3069 "how that happened, you have to understand both interoperability and "
3070 "adversarial interoperability."
3071 msgstr ""
3072
3073 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><blockquote><para>
3074 msgid "The hard problem of our species is coordination."
3075 msgstr ""
3076
3077 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3078 msgid ""
3079 "<quote>Interoperability</quote> is the ability of two technologies to work "
3080 "with one another: Anyone can make an LP that will play on any record player, "
3081 "anyone can make a filter you can install in your stove’s extractor fan, "
3082 "anyone can make gasoline for your car, anyone can make a USB phone charger "
3083 "that fits in your car’s cigarette lighter receptacle, anyone can make a "
3084 "light bulb that works in your light socket, anyone can make bread that will "
3085 "toast in your toaster."
3086 msgstr ""
3087
3088 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3089 msgid ""
3090 "Interoperability is often a source of innovation and consumer benefit: Apple "
3091 "made the first commercially successful PC, but millions of independent "
3092 "software vendors made interoperable programs that ran on the Apple II Plus. "
3093 "The simple analog antenna inputs on the back of TVs first allowed cable "
3094 "operators to connect directly to TVs, then they allowed game console "
3095 "companies and then personal computer companies to use standard televisions "
3096 "as displays. Standard RJ-11 telephone jacks allowed for the production of "
3097 "phones from a variety of vendors in a variety of forms, from the free "
3098 "football-shaped phone that came with a <emphasis>Sports Illustrated</"
3099 "emphasis> subscription to business phones with speakers, hold functions, and "
3100 "so on and then answering machines and finally modems, paving the way for the "
3101 "internet revolution."
3102 msgstr ""
3103
3104 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3105 msgid ""
3106 "<quote>Interoperability</quote> is often used interchangeably with "
3107 "<quote>standardization,</quote> which is the process when manufacturers and "
3108 "other stakeholders hammer out a set of agreed-upon rules for implementing a "
3109 "technology, such as the electrical plug on your wall, the CAN bus used by "
3110 "your car’s computer systems, or the HTML instructions that your browser "
3111 "interprets."
3112 msgstr ""
3113
3114 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3115 msgid ""
3116 "But interoperability doesn’t require standardization — indeed, "
3117 "standardization often proceeds from the chaos of ad hoc interoperability "
3118 "measures. The inventor of the cigarette-lighter USB charger didn’t need to "
3119 "get permission from car manufacturers or even the manufacturers of the "
3120 "dashboard lighter subcomponent. The automakers didn’t take any "
3121 "countermeasures to prevent the use of these aftermarket accessories by their "
3122 "customers, but they also didn’t do anything to make life easier for the "
3123 "chargers’ manufacturers. This is a kind of <quote>neutral interoperability.</"
3124 "quote>"
3125 msgstr ""
3126
3127 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3128 msgid ""
3129 "Beyond neutral interoperability, there is <quote>adversarial "
3130 "interoperability.</quote> That’s when a manufacturer makes a product that "
3131 "interoperates with another manufacturer’s product <emphasis>despite the "
3132 "second manufacturer’s objections</emphasis> and <emphasis>even if that means "
3133 "bypassing a security system designed to prevent interoperability</emphasis>."
3134 msgstr ""
3135
3136 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3137 msgid ""
3138 "Probably the most familiar form of adversarial interoperability is third-"
3139 "party printer ink. Printer manufacturers claim that they sell printers below "
3140 "cost and that the only way they can recoup the losses they incur is by "
3141 "charging high markups on ink. To prevent the owners of printers from buying "
3142 "ink elsewhere, the printer companies deploy a suite of anti-customer "
3143 "security systems that detect and reject both refilled and third-party "
3144 "cartridges."
3145 msgstr ""
3146
3147 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3148 msgid ""
3149 "Owners of printers take the position that HP and Epson and Brother are not "
3150 "charities and that customers for their wares have no obligation to help them "
3151 "survive, and so if the companies choose to sell their products at a loss, "
3152 "that’s their foolish choice and their consequences to live with. Likewise, "
3153 "competitors who make ink or refill kits observe that they don’t owe printer "
3154 "companies anything, and their erosion of printer companies’ margins are the "
3155 "printer companies’ problems, not their competitors’. After all, the printer "
3156 "companies shed no tears when they drive a refiller out of business, so why "
3157 "should the refillers concern themselves with the economic fortunes of the "
3158 "printer companies?"
3159 msgstr ""
3160
3161 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3162 msgid ""
3163 "Adversarial interoperability has played an outsized role in the history of "
3164 "the tech industry: from the founding of the <quote>alt.*</quote> Usenet "
3165 "hierarchy (which was started against the wishes of Usenet’s maintainers and "
3166 "which grew to be bigger than all of Usenet combined) to the browser wars "
3167 "(when Netscape and Microsoft devoted massive engineering efforts to making "
3168 "their browsers incompatible with the other’s special commands and "
3169 "peccadilloes) to Facebook (whose success was built in part by helping its "
3170 "new users stay in touch with friends they’d left behind on Myspace because "
3171 "Facebook supplied them with a tool that scraped waiting messages from "
3172 "Myspace and imported them into Facebook, effectively creating an Facebook-"
3173 "based Myspace reader)."
3174 msgstr ""
3175
3176 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3177 msgid ""
3178 "Today, incumbency is seen as an unassailable advantage. Facebook is where "
3179 "all of your friends are, so no one can start a Facebook competitor. But "
3180 "adversarial compatibility reverses the competitive advantage: If you were "
3181 "allowed to compete with Facebook by providing a tool that imported all your "
3182 "users’ waiting Facebook messages into an environment that competed on lines "
3183 "that Facebook couldn’t cross, like eliminating surveillance and ads, then "
3184 "Facebook would be at a huge disadvantage. It would have assembled all "
3185 "possible ex-Facebook users into a single, easy-to-find service; it would "
3186 "have educated them on how a Facebook-like service worked and what its "
3187 "potential benefits were; and it would have provided an easy means for "
3188 "disgruntled Facebook users to tell their friends where they might expect "
3189 "better treatment."
3190 msgstr ""
3191
3192 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3193 msgid ""
3194 "Adversarial interoperability was once the norm and a key contributor to the "
3195 "dynamic, vibrant tech scene, but now it is stuck behind a thicket of laws "
3196 "and regulations that add legal risks to the tried-and-true tactics of "
3197 "adversarial interoperability. New rules and new interpretations of existing "
3198 "rules mean that a would-be adversarial interoperator needs to steer clear of "
3199 "claims under copyright, terms of service, trade secrecy, tortious "
3200 "interference, and patent."
3201 msgstr ""
3202
3203 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3204 msgid ""
3205 "In the absence of a competitive market, lawmakers have resorted to assigning "
3206 "expensive, state-like duties to Big Tech firms, such as automatically "
3207 "filtering user contributions for copyright infringement or terrorist and "
3208 "extremist content or detecting and preventing harassment in real time or "
3209 "controlling access to sexual material."
3210 msgstr ""
3211
3212 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3213 msgid ""
3214 "These measures put a floor under how small we can make Big Tech because only "
3215 "the very largest companies can afford the humans and automated filters "
3216 "needed to perform these duties."
3217 msgstr ""
3218
3219 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3220 msgid ""
3221 "But that’s not the only way in which making platforms responsible for "
3222 "policing their users undermines competition. A platform that is expected to "
3223 "police its users’ conduct must prevent many vital adversarial "
3224 "interoperability techniques lest these subvert its policing measures. For "
3225 "example, if someone using a Twitter replacement like Mastodon is able to "
3226 "push messages into Twitter and read messages out of Twitter, they could "
3227 "avoid being caught by automated systems that detect and prevent harassment "
3228 "(such as systems that use the timing of messages or IP-based rules to make "
3229 "guesses about whether someone is a harasser)."
3230 msgstr ""
3231
3232 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3233 msgid ""
3234 "To the extent that we are willing to let Big Tech police itself — rather "
3235 "than making Big Tech small enough that users can leave bad platforms for "
3236 "better ones and small enough that a regulation that simply puts a platform "
3237 "out of business will not destroy billions of users’ access to their "
3238 "communities and data — we build the case that Big Tech should be able to "
3239 "block its competitors and make it easier for Big Tech to demand legal "
3240 "enforcement tools to ban and punish attempts at adversarial interoperability."
3241 msgstr ""
3242
3243 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3244 msgid ""
3245 "Ultimately, we can try to fix Big Tech by making it responsible for bad acts "
3246 "by its users, or we can try to fix the internet by cutting Big Tech down to "
3247 "size. But we can’t do both. To replace today’s giant products with "
3248 "pluralistic protocols, we need to clear the legal thicket that prevents "
3249 "adversarial interoperability so that tomorrow’s nimble, personal, small-"
3250 "scale products can federate themselves with giants like Facebook, allowing "
3251 "the users who’ve left to continue to communicate with users who haven’t left "
3252 "yet, reaching tendrils over Facebook’s garden wall that Facebook’s trapped "
3253 "users can use to scale the walls and escape to the global, open web."
3254 msgstr ""
3255
3256 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
3257 msgid "Fake news is an epistemological crisis"
3258 msgstr ""
3259
3260 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3261 msgid ""
3262 "Tech is not the only industry that has undergone massive concentration since "
3263 "the Reagan era. Virtually every major industry — from oil to newspapers to "
3264 "meatpacking to sea freight to eyewear to online pornography — has become a "
3265 "clubby oligarchy that just a few players dominate."
3266 msgstr ""
3267
3268 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3269 msgid ""
3270 "At the same time, every industry has become something of a tech industry as "
3271 "general-purpose computers and general-purpose networks and the promise of "
3272 "efficiencies through data-driven analysis infuse every device, process, and "
3273 "firm with tech."
3274 msgstr ""
3275
3276 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3277 msgid ""
3278 "This phenomenon of industrial concentration is part of a wider story about "
3279 "wealth concentration overall as a smaller and smaller number of people own "
3280 "more and more of our world. This concentration of both wealth and industries "
3281 "means that our political outcomes are increasingly beholden to the parochial "
3282 "interests of the people and companies with all the money."
3283 msgstr ""
3284
3285 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3286 msgid ""
3287 "That means that whenever a regulator asks a question with an obvious, "
3288 "empirical answer (<quote>Are humans causing climate change?</quote> or "
3289 "<quote>Should we let companies conduct commercial mass surveillance?</quote> "
3290 "or <quote>Does society benefit from allowing network neutrality violations?</"
3291 "quote>), the answer that comes out is only correct if that correctness meets "
3292 "with the approval of rich people and the industries that made them so "
3293 "wealthy."
3294 msgstr ""
3295
3296 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3297 msgid ""
3298 "Rich people have always played an outsized role in politics and more so "
3299 "since the Supreme Court’s <emphasis>Citizens United</emphasis> decision "
3300 "eliminated key controls over political spending. Widening inequality and "
3301 "wealth concentration means that the very richest people are now a lot richer "
3302 "and can afford to spend a lot more money on political projects than ever "
3303 "before. Think of the Koch brothers or George Soros or Bill Gates."
3304 msgstr ""
3305
3306 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3307 msgid ""
3308 "But the policy distortions of rich individuals pale in comparison to the "
3309 "policy distortions that concentrated industries are capable of. The "
3310 "companies in highly concentrated industries are much more profitable than "
3311 "companies in competitive industries — no competition means not having to "
3312 "reduce prices or improve quality to win customers — leaving them with bigger "
3313 "capital surpluses to spend on lobbying."
3314 msgstr ""
3315
3316 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3317 msgid ""
3318 "Concentrated industries also find it easier to collaborate on policy "
3319 "objectives than competitive ones. When all the top execs from your industry "
3320 "can fit around a single boardroom table, they often do. And <emphasis>when</"
3321 "emphasis> they do, they can forge a consensus position on regulation."
3322 msgstr ""
3323
3324 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3325 msgid ""
3326 "Rising through the ranks in a concentrated industry generally means working "
3327 "at two or three of the big companies. When there are only relatively few "
3328 "companies in a given industry, each company has a more ossified executive "
3329 "rank, leaving ambitious execs with fewer paths to higher positions unless "
3330 "they are recruited to a rival. This means that the top execs in concentrated "
3331 "industries are likely to have been colleagues at some point and socialize in "
3332 "the same circles — connected through social ties or, say, serving as "
3333 "trustees for each others’ estates. These tight social bonds foster a "
3334 "collegial, rather than competitive, attitude."
3335 msgstr ""
3336
3337 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3338 msgid ""
3339 "Highly concentrated industries also present a regulatory conundrum. When an "
3340 "industry is dominated by just four or five companies, the only people who "
3341 "are likely to truly understand the industry’s practices are its veteran "
3342 "executives. This means that top regulators are often former execs of the "
3343 "companies they are supposed to be regulating. These turns in government are "
3344 "often tacitly understood to be leaves of absence from industry, with former "
3345 "employers welcoming their erstwhile watchdogs back into their executive "
3346 "ranks once their terms have expired."
3347 msgstr ""
3348
3349 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3350 msgid ""
3351 "All this is to say that the tight social bonds, small number of firms, and "
3352 "regulatory capture of concentrated industries give the companies that "
3353 "comprise them the power to dictate many, if not all, of the regulations that "
3354 "bind them."
3355 msgstr ""
3356
3357 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3358 msgid ""
3359 "This is increasingly obvious. Whether it’s payday lenders <ulink url="
3360 "\"https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/02/25/how-payday-lending-"
3361 "industry-insider-tilted-academic-research-its-favor/\">winning the right to "
3362 "practice predatory lending</ulink> or Apple <ulink url=\"https://www.vice."
3363 "com/en_us/article/mgxayp/source-apple-will-fight-right-to-repair-legislation"
3364 "\">winning the right to decide who can fix your phone</ulink> or Google and "
3365 "Facebook winning the right to breach your private data without suffering "
3366 "meaningful consequences or victories for pipeline companies or impunity for "
3367 "opioid manufacturers or massive tax subsidies for incredibly profitable "
3368 "dominant businesses, it’s increasingly apparent that many of our official, "
3369 "evidence-based truth-seeking processes are, in fact, auctions for sale to "
3370 "the highest bidder."
3371 msgstr ""
3372
3373 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3374 msgid ""
3375 "It’s really impossible to overstate what a terrifying prospect this is. We "
3376 "live in an incredibly high-tech society, and none of us could acquire the "
3377 "expertise to evaluate every technological proposition that stands between us "
3378 "and our untimely, horrible deaths. You might devote your life to acquiring "
3379 "the media literacy to distinguish good scientific journals from corrupt pay-"
3380 "for-play lookalikes and the statistical literacy to evaluate the quality of "
3381 "the analysis in the journals as well as the microbiology and epidemiology "
3382 "knowledge to determine whether you can trust claims about the safety of "
3383 "vaccines — but that would still leave you unqualified to judge whether the "
3384 "wiring in your home will give you a lethal shock <emphasis>and</emphasis> "
3385 "whether your car’s brakes’ software will cause them to fail unpredictably "
3386 "<emphasis>and</emphasis> whether the hygiene standards at your butcher are "
3387 "sufficient to keep you from dying after you finish your dinner."
3388 msgstr ""
3389
3390 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3391 msgid ""
3392 "In a world as complex as this one, we have to defer to authorities, and we "
3393 "keep them honest by making those authorities accountable to us and binding "
3394 "them with rules to prevent conflicts of interest. We can’t possibly acquire "
3395 "the expertise to adjudicate conflicting claims about the best way to make "
3396 "the world safe and prosperous, but we <emphasis>can</emphasis> determine "
3397 "whether the adjudication process itself is trustworthy."
3398 msgstr ""
3399
3400 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3401 msgid "Right now, it’s obviously not."
3402 msgstr ""
3403
3404 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3405 msgid ""
3406 "The past 40 years of rising inequality and industry concentration, together "
3407 "with increasingly weak accountability and transparency for expert agencies, "
3408 "has created an increasingly urgent sense of impending doom, the sense that "
3409 "there are vast conspiracies afoot that operate with tacit official approval "
3410 "despite the likelihood they are working to better themselves by ruining the "
3411 "rest of us."
3412 msgstr ""
3413
3414 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3415 msgid ""
3416 "For example, it’s been decades since Exxon’s own scientists concluded that "
3417 "its products would render the Earth uninhabitable by humans. And yet those "
3418 "decades were lost to us, in large part because Exxon lobbied governments and "
3419 "sowed doubt about the dangers of its products and did so with the "
3420 "cooperation of many public officials. When the survival of you and everyone "
3421 "you love is threatened by conspiracies, it’s not unreasonable to start "
3422 "questioning the things you think you know in an attempt to determine whether "
3423 "they, too, are the outcome of another conspiracy."
3424 msgstr ""
3425
3426 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3427 msgid ""
3428 "The collapse of the credibility of our systems for divining and upholding "
3429 "truths has left us in a state of epistemological chaos. Once, most of us "
3430 "might have assumed that the system was working and that our regulations "
3431 "reflected our best understanding of the empirical truths of the world as "
3432 "they were best understood — now we have to find our own experts to help us "
3433 "sort the true from the false."
3434 msgstr ""
3435
3436 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3437 msgid ""
3438 "If you’re like me, you probably believe that vaccines are safe, but you "
3439 "(like me) probably also can’t explain the microbiology or statistics. Few of "
3440 "us have the math skills to review the literature on vaccine safety and "
3441 "describe why their statistical reasoning is sound. Likewise, few of us can "
3442 "review the stats in the (now discredited) literature on opioid safety and "
3443 "explain how those stats were manipulated. Both vaccines and opioids were "
3444 "embraced by medical authorities, after all, and one is safe while the other "
3445 "could ruin your life. You’re left with a kind of inchoate constellation of "
3446 "rules of thumb about which experts you trust to fact-check controversial "
3447 "claims and then to explain how all those respectable doctors with their peer-"
3448 "reviewed research on opioid safety <emphasis>were</emphasis> an aberration "
3449 "and then how you know that the doctors writing about vaccine safety are "
3450 "<emphasis>not</emphasis> an aberration."
3451 msgstr ""
3452
3453 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3454 msgid ""
3455 "I’m 100% certain that vaccinating is safe and effective, but I’m also at "
3456 "something of a loss to explain exactly, <emphasis>precisely,</emphasis> why "
3457 "I believe this, given all the corruption I know about and the many times the "
3458 "stamp of certainty has turned out to be a parochial lie told to further "
3459 "enrich the super rich."
3460 msgstr ""
3461
3462 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3463 msgid ""
3464 "Fake news — conspiracy theories, racist ideologies, scientific denialism — "
3465 "has always been with us. What’s changed today is not the mix of ideas in the "
3466 "public discourse but the popularity of the worst ideas in that mix. "
3467 "Conspiracy and denial have skyrocketed in lockstep with the growth of Big "
3468 "Inequality, which has also tracked the rise of Big Tech and Big Pharma and "
3469 "Big Wrestling and Big Car and Big Movie Theater and Big Everything Else."
3470 msgstr ""
3471
3472 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3473 msgid ""
3474 "No one can say for certain why this has happened, but the two dominant camps "
3475 "are idealism (the belief that the people who argue for these conspiracies "
3476 "have gotten better at explaining them, maybe with the help of machine-"
3477 "learning tools) or materialism (the ideas have become more attractive "
3478 "because of material conditions in the world)."
3479 msgstr ""
3480
3481 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3482 msgid ""
3483 "I’m a materialist. I’ve been exposed to the arguments of conspiracy "
3484 "theorists all my life, and I have not experienced any qualitative leap in "
3485 "the quality of those arguments."
3486 msgstr ""
3487
3488 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3489 msgid ""
3490 "The major difference is in the world, not the arguments. In a time where "
3491 "actual conspiracies are commonplace, conspiracy theories acquire a ring of "
3492 "plausibility."
3493 msgstr ""
3494
3495 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3496 msgid ""
3497 "We have always had disagreements about what’s true, but today, we have a "
3498 "disagreement over how we know whether something is true. This is an "
3499 "epistemological crisis, not a crisis over belief. It’s a crisis over the "
3500 "credibility of our truth-seeking exercises, from scientific journals (in an "
3501 "era where the biggest journal publishers have been caught producing pay-to-"
3502 "play journals for junk science) to regulations (in an era where regulators "
3503 "are routinely cycling in and out of business) to education (in an era where "
3504 "universities are dependent on corporate donations to keep their lights on)."
3505 msgstr ""
3506
3507 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3508 msgid ""
3509 "Targeting — surveillance capitalism — makes it easier to find people who are "
3510 "undergoing this epistemological crisis, but it doesn’t create the crisis. "
3511 "For that, you need to look to corruption."
3512 msgstr ""
3513
3514 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3515 msgid ""
3516 "And, conveniently enough, it’s corruption that allows surveillance "
3517 "capitalism to grow by dismantling monopoly protections, by permitting "
3518 "reckless collection and retention of personal data, by allowing ads to be "
3519 "targeted in secret, and by foreclosing on the possibility of going somewhere "
3520 "else where you might continue to enjoy your friends without subjecting "
3521 "yourself to commercial surveillance."
3522 msgstr ""
3523
3524 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
3525 msgid "Tech is different"
3526 msgstr ""
3527
3528 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3529 msgid ""
3530 "I reject both iterations of technological exceptionalism. I reject the idea "
3531 "that tech is uniquely terrible and led by people who are greedier or worse "
3532 "than the leaders of other industries, and I reject the idea that tech is so "
3533 "good — or so intrinsically prone to concentration — that it can’t be blamed "
3534 "for its present-day monopolistic status."
3535 msgstr ""
3536
3537 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3538 msgid ""
3539 "I think tech is just another industry, albeit one that grew up in the "
3540 "absence of real monopoly constraints. It may have been first, but it isn’t "
3541 "the worst nor will it be the last."
3542 msgstr ""
3543
3544 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3545 msgid ""
3546 "But there’s one way in which I <emphasis>am</emphasis> a tech "
3547 "exceptionalist. I believe that online tools are the key to overcoming "
3548 "problems that are much more urgent than tech monopolization: climate change, "
3549 "inequality, misogyny, and discrimination on the basis of race, gender "
3550 "identity, and other factors. The internet is how we will recruit people to "
3551 "fight those fights, and how we will coordinate their labor. Tech is not a "
3552 "substitute for democratic accountability, the rule of law, fairness, or "
3553 "stability — but it’s a means to achieve these things."
3554 msgstr ""
3555
3556 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3557 msgid ""
3558 "The hard problem of our species is coordination. Everything from climate "
3559 "change to social change to running a business to making a family work can be "
3560 "viewed as a collective action problem."
3561 msgstr ""
3562
3563 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3564 msgid ""
3565 "The internet makes it easier than at any time before to find people who want "
3566 "to work on a project with you — hence the success of free and open-source "
3567 "software, crowdfunding, and racist terror groups — and easier than ever to "
3568 "coordinate the work you do."
3569 msgstr ""
3570
3571 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3572 msgid ""
3573 "The internet and the computers we connect to it also possess an exceptional "
3574 "quality: general-purposeness. The internet is designed to allow any two "
3575 "parties to communicate any data, using any protocol, without permission from "
3576 "anyone else. The only production design we have for computers is the general-"
3577 "purpose, <quote>Turing complete</quote> computer that can run every program "
3578 "we can express in symbolic logic."
3579 msgstr ""
3580
3581 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3582 msgid ""
3583 "This means that every time someone with a special communications need "
3584 "invests in infrastructure and techniques to make the internet faster, "
3585 "cheaper, and more robust, this benefit redounds to everyone else who is "
3586 "using the internet to communicate. And this also means that every time "
3587 "someone with a special computing need invests to make computers faster, "
3588 "cheaper, and more robust, every other computing application is a potential "
3589 "beneficiary of this work."
3590 msgstr ""
3591
3592 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3593 msgid ""
3594 "For these reasons, every type of communication is gradually absorbed into "
3595 "the internet, and every type of device — from airplanes to pacemakers — "
3596 "eventually becomes a computer in a fancy case."
3597 msgstr ""
3598
3599 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3600 msgid ""
3601 "While these considerations don’t preclude regulating networks and computers, "
3602 "they do call for gravitas and caution when doing so because changes to "
3603 "regulatory frameworks could ripple out to have unintended consequences in "
3604 "many, many other domains."
3605 msgstr ""
3606
3607 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3608 msgid ""
3609 "The upshot of this is that our best hope of solving the big coordination "
3610 "problems — climate change, inequality, etc. — is with free, fair, and open "
3611 "tech. Our best hope of keeping tech free, fair, and open is to exercise "
3612 "caution in how we regulate tech and to attend closely to the ways in which "
3613 "interventions to solve one problem might create problems in other domains."
3614 msgstr ""
3615
3616 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
3617 msgid "Ownership of facts"
3618 msgstr ""
3619
3620 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3621 msgid ""
3622 "Big Tech has a funny relationship with information. When you’re generating "
3623 "information — anything from the location data streaming off your mobile "
3624 "device to the private messages you send to friends on a social network — it "
3625 "claims the rights to make unlimited use of that data."
3626 msgstr ""
3627
3628 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3629 msgid ""
3630 "But when you have the audacity to turn the tables — to use a tool that "
3631 "blocks ads or slurps your waiting updates out of a social network and puts "
3632 "them in another app that lets you set your own priorities and suggestions or "
3633 "crawls their system to allow you to start a rival business — they claim that "
3634 "you’re stealing from them."
3635 msgstr ""
3636
3637 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3638 msgid ""
3639 "The thing is, information is a very bad fit for any kind of private property "
3640 "regime. Property rights are useful for establishing markets that can lead to "
3641 "the effective development of fallow assets. These markets depend on clear "
3642 "titles to ensure that the things being bought and sold in them can, in fact, "
3643 "be bought and sold."
3644 msgstr ""
3645
3646 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3647 msgid ""
3648 "Information rarely has such a clear title. Take phone numbers: There’s "
3649 "clearly something going wrong when Facebook slurps up millions of users’ "
3650 "address books and uses the phone numbers it finds in them to plot out social "
3651 "graphs and fill in missing information about other users."
3652 msgstr ""
3653
3654 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3655 msgid ""
3656 "But the phone numbers Facebook nonconsensually acquires in this transaction "
3657 "are not the <quote>property</quote> of the users they’re taken from nor do "
3658 "they belong to the people whose phones ring when you dial those numbers. The "
3659 "numbers are mere integers, 10 digits in the U.S. and Canada, and they "
3660 "appear in millions of places, including somewhere deep in pi as well as "
3661 "numerous other contexts. Giving people ownership titles to integers is an "
3662 "obviously terrible idea."
3663 msgstr ""
3664
3665 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3666 msgid ""
3667 "Likewise for the facts that Facebook and other commercial surveillance "
3668 "operators acquire about us, like that we are the children of our parents or "
3669 "the parents to our children or that we had a conversation with someone else "
3670 "or went to a public place. These data points can’t be property in the sense "
3671 "that your house or your shirt is your property because the title to them is "
3672 "intrinsically muddy: Does your mom own the fact that she is your mother? Do "
3673 "you? Do both of you? What about your dad — does he own this fact too, or "
3674 "does he have to license the fact from you (or your mom or both of you) in "
3675 "order to use this fact? What about the hundreds or thousands of other people "
3676 "who know these facts?"
3677 msgstr ""
3678
3679 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3680 msgid ""
3681 "If you go to a Black Lives Matter demonstration, do the other demonstrators "
3682 "need your permission to post their photos from the event? The online fights "
3683 "over <ulink url=\"https://www.wired.com/story/how-to-take-photos-at-protests/"
3684 "\">when and how to post photos from demonstrations</ulink> reveal a nuanced, "
3685 "complex issue that cannot be easily hand-waved away by giving one party a "
3686 "property right that everyone else in the mix has to respect."
3687 msgstr ""
3688
3689 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3690 msgid ""
3691 "The fact that information isn’t a good fit with property and markets doesn’t "
3692 "mean that it’s not valuable. Babies aren’t property, but they’re inarguably "
3693 "valuable. In fact, we have a whole set of rules just for babies as well as a "
3694 "subset of those rules that apply to humans more generally. Someone who "
3695 "argues that babies won’t be truly valuable until they can be bought and sold "
3696 "like loaves of bread would be instantly and rightfully condemned as a "
3697 "monster."
3698 msgstr ""
3699
3700 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3701 msgid ""
3702 "It’s tempting to reach for the property hammer when Big Tech treats your "
3703 "information like a nail — not least because Big Tech are such prolific "
3704 "abusers of property hammers when it comes to <emphasis>their</emphasis> "
3705 "information. But this is a mistake. If we allow markets to dictate the use "
3706 "of our information, then we’ll find that we’re sellers in a buyers’ market "
3707 "where the Big Tech monopolies set a price for our data that is so low as to "
3708 "be insignificant or, more likely, set at a nonnegotiable price of zero in a "
3709 "click-through agreement that you don’t have the opportunity to modify."
3710 msgstr ""
3711
3712 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3713 msgid ""
3714 "Meanwhile, establishing property rights over information will create "
3715 "insurmountable barriers to independent data processing. Imagine that we "
3716 "require a license to be negotiated when a translated document is compared "
3717 "with its original, something Google has done and continues to do billions of "
3718 "times to train its automated language translation tools. Google can afford "
3719 "this, but independent third parties cannot. Google can staff a clearances "
3720 "department to negotiate one-time payments to the likes of the EU (one of the "
3721 "major repositories of translated documents) while independent watchdogs "
3722 "wanting to verify that the translations are well-prepared, or to root out "
3723 "bias in translations, will find themselves needing a staffed-up legal "
3724 "department and millions for licenses before they can even get started."
3725 msgstr ""
3726
3727 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3728 msgid ""
3729 "The same goes for things like search indexes of the web or photos of "
3730 "peoples’ houses, which have become contentious thanks to Google’s Street "
3731 "View project. Whatever problems may exist with Google’s photographing of "
3732 "street scenes, resolving them by letting people decide who can take pictures "
3733 "of the facades of their homes from a public street will surely create even "
3734 "worse ones. Think of how street photography is important for newsgathering — "
3735 "including informal newsgathering, like photographing abuses of authority — "
3736 "and how being able to document housing and street life are important for "
3737 "contesting eminent domain, advocating for social aid, reporting planning and "
3738 "zoning violations, documenting discriminatory and unequal living conditions, "
3739 "and more."
3740 msgstr ""
3741
3742 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3743 msgid ""
3744 "The ownership of facts is antithetical to many kinds of human progress. It’s "
3745 "hard to imagine a rule that limits Big Tech’s exploitation of our collective "
3746 "labors without inadvertently banning people from gathering data on online "
3747 "harassment or compiling indexes of changes in language or simply "
3748 "investigating how the platforms are shaping our discourse — all of which "
3749 "require scraping data that other people have created and subjecting it to "
3750 "scrutiny and analysis."
3751 msgstr ""
3752
3753 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
3754 msgid "Persuasion works… slowly"
3755 msgstr ""
3756
3757 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3758 msgid ""
3759 "The platforms may oversell their ability to persuade people, but obviously, "
3760 "persuasion works sometimes. Whether it’s the private realm that LGBTQ people "
3761 "used to recruit allies and normalize sexual diversity or the decadeslong "
3762 "project to convince people that markets are the only efficient way to solve "
3763 "complicated resource allocation problems, it’s clear that our societal "
3764 "attitudes <emphasis>can</emphasis> change."
3765 msgstr ""
3766
3767 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3768 msgid ""
3769 "The project of shifting societal attitudes is a game of inches and years. "
3770 "For centuries, svengalis have purported to be able to accelerate this "
3771 "process, but even the most brutal forms of propaganda have struggled to make "
3772 "permanent changes. Joseph Goebbels was able to subject Germans to daily, "
3773 "mandatory, hourslong radio broadcasts, to round up and torture and murder "
3774 "dissidents, and to seize full control over their children’s education while "
3775 "banning any literature, broadcasts, or films that did not comport with his "
3776 "worldview."
3777 msgstr ""
3778
3779 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3780 msgid ""
3781 "Yet, after 12 years of terror, once the war ended, Nazi ideology was largely "
3782 "discredited in both East and West Germany, and a program of national truth "
3783 "and reconciliation was put in its place. Racism and authoritarianism were "
3784 "never fully abolished in Germany, but neither were the majority of Germans "
3785 "irrevocably convinced of Nazism — and the rise of racist authoritarianism in "
3786 "Germany today tells us that the liberal attitudes that replaced Nazism were "
3787 "no more permanent than Nazism itself."
3788 msgstr ""
3789
3790 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3791 msgid ""
3792 "Racism and authoritarianism have also always been with us. Anyone who’s "
3793 "reviewed the kind of messages and arguments that racists put forward today "
3794 "would be hard-pressed to say that they have gotten better at presenting "
3795 "their ideas. The same pseudoscience, appeals to fear, and circular logic "
3796 "that racists presented in the 1980s, when the cause of white supremacy was "
3797 "on the wane, are to be found in the communications of leading white "
3798 "nationalists today."
3799 msgstr ""
3800
3801 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3802 msgid ""
3803 "If racists haven’t gotten more convincing in the past decade, then how is it "
3804 "that more people were convinced to be openly racist at that time? I believe "
3805 "that the answer lies in the material world, not the world of ideas. The "
3806 "ideas haven’t gotten more convincing, but people have become more afraid. "
3807 "Afraid that the state can’t be trusted to act as an honest broker in life-or-"
3808 "death decisions, from those regarding the management of the economy to the "
3809 "regulation of painkillers to the rules for handling private information. "
3810 "Afraid that the world has become a game of musical chairs in which the "
3811 "chairs are being taken away at a never-before-seen rate. Afraid that justice "
3812 "for others will come at their expense. Monopolism isn’t the cause of these "
3813 "fears, but the inequality and material desperation and policy malpractice "
3814 "that monopolism contributes to is a significant contributor to these "
3815 "conditions. Inequality creates the conditions for both conspiracies and "
3816 "violent racist ideologies, and then surveillance capitalism lets "
3817 "opportunists target the fearful and the conspiracy-minded."
3818 msgstr ""
3819
3820 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
3821 msgid "Paying won’t help"
3822 msgstr ""
3823
3824 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3825 msgid ""
3826 "As the old saw goes, <quote>If you’re not paying for the product, you’re the "
3827 "product.</quote>"
3828 msgstr ""
3829
3830 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3831 msgid ""
3832 "It’s a commonplace belief today that the advent of free, ad-supported media "
3833 "was the original sin of surveillance capitalism. The reasoning is that the "
3834 "companies that charged for access couldn’t <quote>compete with free</quote> "
3835 "and so they were driven out of business. Their ad-supported competitors, "
3836 "meanwhile, declared open season on their users’ data in a bid to improve "
3837 "their ad targeting and make more money and then resorted to the most "
3838 "sensationalist tactics to generate clicks on those ads. If only we’d pay for "
3839 "media again, we’d have a better, more responsible, more sober discourse that "
3840 "would be better for democracy."
3841 msgstr ""
3842
3843 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3844 msgid ""
3845 "But the degradation of news products long precedes the advent of ad-"
3846 "supported online news. Long before newspapers were online, lax antitrust "
3847 "enforcement had opened the door for unprecedented waves of consolidation and "
3848 "roll-ups in newsrooms. Rival newspapers were merged, reporters and ad sales "
3849 "staff were laid off, physical plants were sold and leased back, leaving the "
3850 "companies loaded up with debt through leveraged buyouts and subsequent "
3851 "profit-taking by the new owners. In other words, it wasn’t merely shifts in "
3852 "the classified advertising market, which was long held to be the primary "
3853 "driver in the decline of the traditional newsroom, that made news companies "
3854 "unable to adapt to the internet — it was monopolism."
3855 msgstr ""
3856
3857 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3858 msgid ""
3859 "Then, as news companies <emphasis>did</emphasis> come online, the ad "
3860 "revenues they commanded dropped even as the number of internet users (and "
3861 "thus potential online readers) increased. That shift was a function of "
3862 "consolidation in the ad sales market, with Google and Facebook emerging as "
3863 "duopolists who made more money every year from advertising while paying less "
3864 "and less of it to the publishers whose work the ads appeared alongside. "
3865 "Monopolism created a buyer’s market for ad inventory with Facebook and "
3866 "Google acting as gatekeepers."
3867 msgstr ""
3868
3869 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3870 msgid ""
3871 "Paid services continue to exist alongside free ones, and often it is these "
3872 "paid services — anxious to prevent people from bypassing their paywalls or "
3873 "sharing paid media with freeloaders — that exert the most control over their "
3874 "customers. Apple’s iTunes and App Stores are paid services, but to maximize "
3875 "their profitability, Apple has to lock its platforms so that third parties "
3876 "can’t make compatible software without permission. These locks allow the "
3877 "company to exercise both editorial control (enabling it to exclude <ulink "
3878 "url=\"https://ncac.org/news/blog/does-apples-strict-app-store-content-policy-"
3879 "limit-freedom-of-expression\">controversial political material</ulink>) and "
3880 "technological control, including control over who can repair the devices it "
3881 "makes. If we’re worried that ad-supported products deprive people of their "
3882 "right to self-determination by using persuasion techniques to nudge their "
3883 "purchase decisions a few degrees in one direction or the other, then the "
3884 "near-total control a single company holds over the decision of who gets to "
3885 "sell you software, parts, and service for your iPhone should have us very "
3886 "worried indeed."
3887 msgstr ""
3888
3889 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3890 msgid ""
3891 "We shouldn’t just be concerned about payment and control: The idea that "
3892 "paying will improve discourse is also dangerously wrong. The poor success "
3893 "rate of targeted advertising means that the platforms have to incentivize "
3894 "you to <quote>engage</quote> with posts at extremely high levels to generate "
3895 "enough pageviews to safeguard their profits. As discussed earlier, to "
3896 "increase engagement, platforms like Facebook use machine learning to guess "
3897 "which messages will be most inflammatory and make a point of shoving those "
3898 "into your eyeballs at every turn so that you will hate-click and argue with "
3899 "people."
3900 msgstr ""
3901
3902 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3903 msgid ""
3904 "Perhaps paying would fix this, the reasoning goes. If platforms could be "
3905 "economically viable even if you stopped clicking on them once your "
3906 "intellectual and social curiosity had been slaked, then they would have no "
3907 "reason to algorithmically enrage you to get more clicks out of you, right?"
3908 msgstr ""
3909
3910 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3911 msgid ""
3912 "There may be something to that argument, but it still ignores the wider "
3913 "economic and political context of the platforms and the world that allowed "
3914 "them to grow so dominant."
3915 msgstr ""
3916
3917 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3918 msgid ""
3919 "Platforms are world-spanning and all-encompassing because they are "
3920 "monopolies, and they are monopolies because we have gutted our most "
3921 "important and reliable anti-monopoly rules. Antitrust was neutered as a key "
3922 "part of the project to make the wealthy wealthier, and that project has "
3923 "worked. The vast majority of people on Earth have a negative net worth, and "
3924 "even the dwindling middle class is in a precarious state, undersaved for "
3925 "retirement, underinsured for medical disasters, and undersecured against "
3926 "climate and technology shocks."
3927 msgstr ""
3928
3929 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3930 msgid ""
3931 "In this wildly unequal world, paying doesn’t improve the discourse; it "
3932 "simply prices discourse out of the range of the majority of people. Paying "
3933 "for the product is dandy, if you can afford it."
3934 msgstr ""
3935
3936 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3937 msgid ""
3938 "If you think today’s filter bubbles are a problem for our discourse, imagine "
3939 "what they’d be like if rich people inhabited free-flowing Athenian "
3940 "marketplaces of ideas where you have to pay for admission while everyone "
3941 "else lives in online spaces that are subsidized by wealthy benefactors who "
3942 "relish the chance to establish conversational spaces where the <quote>house "
3943 "rules</quote> forbid questioning the status quo. That is, imagine if the "
3944 "rich seceded from Facebook, and then, instead of running ads that made money "
3945 "for shareholders, Facebook became a billionaire’s vanity project that also "
3946 "happened to ensure that nobody talked about whether it was fair that only "
3947 "billionaires could afford to hang out in the rarified corners of the "
3948 "internet."
3949 msgstr ""
3950
3951 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3952 msgid ""
3953 "Behind the idea of paying for access is a belief that free markets will "
3954 "address Big Tech’s dysfunction. After all, to the extent that people have a "
3955 "view of surveillance at all, it is generally an unfavorable one, and the "
3956 "longer and more thoroughly one is surveilled, the less one tends to like it. "
3957 "Same goes for lock-in: If HP’s ink or Apple’s App Store were really "
3958 "obviously fantastic, they wouldn’t need technical measures to prevent users "
3959 "from choosing a rival’s product. The only reason these technical "
3960 "countermeasures exist is that the companies don’t believe their customers "
3961 "would <emphasis>voluntarily</emphasis> submit to their terms, and they want "
3962 "to deprive them of the choice to take their business elsewhere."
3963 msgstr ""
3964
3965 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3966 msgid ""
3967 "Advocates for markets laud their ability to aggregate the diffused knowledge "
3968 "of buyers and sellers across a whole society through demand signals, price "
3969 "signals, and so on. The argument for surveillance capitalism being a "
3970 "<quote>rogue capitalism</quote> is that machine-learning-driven persuasion "
3971 "techniques distort decision-making by consumers, leading to incorrect "
3972 "signals — consumers don’t buy what they prefer, they buy what they’re "
3973 "tricked into preferring. It follows that the monopolistic practices of lock-"
3974 "in, which do far more to constrain consumers’ free choices, are even more of "
3975 "a <quote>rogue capitalism.</quote>"
3976 msgstr ""
3977
3978 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3979 msgid ""
3980 "The profitability of any business is constrained by the possibility that its "
3981 "customers will take their business elsewhere. Both surveillance and lock-in "
3982 "are anti-features that no customer wants. But monopolies can capture their "
3983 "regulators, crush their competitors, insert themselves into their customers’ "
3984 "lives, and corral people into <quote>choosing</quote> their services "
3985 "regardless of whether they want them — it’s fine to be terrible when there "
3986 "is no alternative."
3987 msgstr ""
3988
3989 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
3990 msgid ""
3991 "Ultimately, surveillance and lock-in are both simply business strategies "
3992 "that monopolists can choose. Surveillance companies like Google are "
3993 "perfectly capable of deploying lock-in technologies — just look at the "
3994 "onerous Android licensing terms that require device-makers to bundle in "
3995 "Google’s suite of applications. And lock-in companies like Apple are "
3996 "perfectly capable of subjecting their users to surveillance if it means "
3997 "keeping the Chinese government happy and preserving ongoing access to "
3998 "Chinese markets. Monopolies may be made up of good, ethical people, but as "
3999 "institutions, they are not your friend — they will do whatever they can get "
4000 "away with to maximize their profits, and the more monopolistic they are, the "
4001 "more they <emphasis>can</emphasis> get away with."
4002 msgstr ""
4003
4004 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
4005 msgid "An <quote>ecology</quote> moment for trustbusting"
4006 msgstr ""
4007
4008 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4009 msgid ""
4010 "If we’re going to break Big Tech’s death grip on our digital lives, we’re "
4011 "going to have to fight monopolies. That may sound pretty mundane and old-"
4012 "fashioned, something out of the New Deal era, while ending the use of "
4013 "automated behavioral modification feels like the plotline of a really cool "
4014 "cyberpunk novel."
4015 msgstr ""
4016
4017 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4018 msgid ""
4019 "Meanwhile, breaking up monopolies is something we seem to have forgotten how "
4020 "to do. There is a bipartisan, trans-Atlantic consensus that breaking up "
4021 "companies is a fool’s errand at best — liable to mire your federal "
4022 "prosecutors in decades of litigation — and counterproductive at worst, "
4023 "eroding the <quote>consumer benefits</quote> of large companies with massive "
4024 "efficiencies of scale."
4025 msgstr ""
4026
4027 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4028 msgid ""
4029 "But trustbusters once strode the nation, brandishing law books, terrorizing "
4030 "robber barons, and shattering the illusion of monopolies’ all-powerful grip "
4031 "on our society. The trustbusting era could not begin until we found the "
4032 "political will — until the people convinced politicians they’d have their "
4033 "backs when they went up against the richest, most powerful men in the world."
4034 msgstr ""
4035
4036 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4037 msgid "Could we find that political will again?"
4038 msgstr ""
4039
4040 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4041 msgid ""
4042 "Copyright scholar James Boyle has described how the term <quote>ecology</"
4043 "quote> marked a turning point in environmental activism. Prior to the "
4044 "adoption of this term, people who wanted to preserve whale populations "
4045 "didn’t necessarily see themselves as fighting the same battle as people who "
4046 "wanted to protect the ozone layer or fight freshwater pollution or beat back "
4047 "smog or acid rain."
4048 msgstr ""
4049
4050 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4051 msgid ""
4052 "But the term <quote>ecology</quote> welded these disparate causes together "
4053 "into a single movement, and the members of this movement found solidarity "
4054 "with one another. The people who cared about smog signed petitions "
4055 "circulated by the people who wanted to end whaling, and the anti-whalers "
4056 "marched alongside the people demanding action on acid rain. This uniting "
4057 "behind a common cause completely changed the dynamics of environmentalism, "
4058 "setting the stage for today’s climate activism and the sense that preserving "
4059 "the habitability of the planet Earth is a shared duty among all people."
4060 msgstr ""
4061
4062 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4063 msgid ""
4064 "I believe we are on the verge of a new <quote>ecology</quote> moment "
4065 "dedicated to combating monopolies. After all, tech isn’t the only "
4066 "concentrated industry nor is it even the <emphasis>most</emphasis> "
4067 "concentrated of industries."
4068 msgstr ""
4069
4070 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4071 msgid ""
4072 "You can find partisans for trustbusting in every sector of the economy. "
4073 "Everywhere you look, you can find people who’ve been wronged by monopolists "
4074 "who’ve trashed their finances, their health, their privacy, their "
4075 "educations, and the lives of people they love. Those people have the same "
4076 "cause as the people who want to break up Big Tech and the same enemies. When "
4077 "most of the world’s wealth is in the hands of a very few, it follows that "
4078 "nearly every large company will have overlapping shareholders."
4079 msgstr ""
4080
4081 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4082 msgid ""
4083 "That’s the good news: With a little bit of work and a little bit of "
4084 "coalition building, we have more than enough political will to break up Big "
4085 "Tech and every other concentrated industry besides. First we take Facebook, "
4086 "then we take AT&amp;T/WarnerMedia."
4087 msgstr ""
4088
4089 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4090 msgid ""
4091 "But here’s the bad news: Much of what we’re doing to tame Big Tech "
4092 "<emphasis>instead</emphasis> of breaking up the big companies also "
4093 "forecloses on the possibility of breaking them up later."
4094 msgstr ""
4095
4096 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4097 msgid ""
4098 "Big Tech’s concentration currently means that their inaction on harassment, "
4099 "for example, leaves users with an impossible choice: absent themselves from "
4100 "public discourse by, say, quitting Twitter or endure vile, constant abuse. "
4101 "Big Tech’s over-collection and over-retention of data results in horrific "
4102 "identity theft. And their inaction on extremist recruitment means that white "
4103 "supremacists who livestream their shooting rampages can reach an audience of "
4104 "billions. The combination of tech concentration and media concentration "
4105 "means that artists’ incomes are falling even as the revenue generated by "
4106 "their creations are increasing."
4107 msgstr ""
4108
4109 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4110 msgid ""
4111 "Yet governments confronting all of these problems all inevitably converge on "
4112 "the same solution: deputize the Big Tech giants to police their users and "
4113 "render them liable for their users’ bad actions. The drive to force Big Tech "
4114 "to use automated filters to block everything from copyright infringement to "
4115 "sex-trafficking to violent extremism means that tech companies will have to "
4116 "allocate hundreds of millions to run these compliance systems."
4117 msgstr ""
4118
4119 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4120 msgid ""
4121 "These rules — the EU’s new Directive on Copyright, Australia’s new terror "
4122 "regulation, America’s FOSTA/SESTA sex-trafficking law and more — are not "
4123 "just death warrants for small, upstart competitors that might challenge Big "
4124 "Tech’s dominance but who lack the deep pockets of established incumbents to "
4125 "pay for all these automated systems. Worse still, these rules put a floor "
4126 "under how small we can hope to make Big Tech."
4127 msgstr ""
4128
4129 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4130 msgid ""
4131 "That’s because any move to break up Big Tech and cut it down to size will "
4132 "have to cope with the hard limit of not making these companies so small that "
4133 "they can no longer afford to perform these duties — and it’s "
4134 "<emphasis>expensive</emphasis> to invest in those automated filters and "
4135 "outsource content moderation. It’s already going to be hard to unwind these "
4136 "deeply concentrated, chimeric behemoths that have been welded together in "
4137 "the pursuit of monopoly profits. Doing so while simultaneously finding some "
4138 "way to fill the regulatory void that will be left behind if these self-"
4139 "policing rulers were forced to suddenly abdicate will be much, much harder."
4140 msgstr ""
4141
4142 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4143 msgid ""
4144 "Allowing the platforms to grow to their present size has given them a "
4145 "dominance that is nearly insurmountable — deputizing them with public duties "
4146 "to redress the pathologies created by their size makes it virtually "
4147 "impossible to reduce that size. Lather, rinse, repeat: If the platforms "
4148 "don’t get smaller, they will get larger, and as they get larger, they will "
4149 "create more problems, which will give rise to more public duties for the "
4150 "companies, which will make them bigger still."
4151 msgstr ""
4152
4153 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4154 msgid ""
4155 "We can work to fix the internet by breaking up Big Tech and depriving them "
4156 "of monopoly profits, or we can work to fix Big Tech by making them spend "
4157 "their monopoly profits on governance. But we can’t do both. We have to "
4158 "choose between a vibrant, open internet or a dominated, monopolized internet "
4159 "commanded by Big Tech giants that we struggle with constantly to get them to "
4160 "behave themselves."
4161 msgstr ""
4162
4163 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
4164 msgid "Make Big Tech small again"
4165 msgstr ""
4166
4167 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4168 msgid ""
4169 "Trustbusting is hard. Breaking big companies into smaller ones is expensive "
4170 "and time-consuming. So time-consuming that by the time you’re done, the "
4171 "world has often moved on and rendered years of litigation irrelevant. From "
4172 "1969 to 1982, the U.S. government pursued an antitrust case against IBM over "
4173 "its dominance of mainframe computing — but the case collapsed in 1982 "
4174 "because mainframes were being speedily replaced by PCs."
4175 msgstr ""
4176
4177 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><blockquote><para>
4178 msgid ""
4179 "A future U.S. president could simply direct their attorney general to "
4180 "enforce the law as it was written."
4181 msgstr ""
4182
4183 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4184 msgid ""
4185 "It’s far easier to prevent concentration than to fix it, and reinstating the "
4186 "traditional contours of U.S. antitrust enforcement will, at the very least, "
4187 "prevent further concentration. That means bans on mergers between large "
4188 "companies, on big companies acquiring nascent competitors, and on platform "
4189 "companies competing directly with the companies that rely on the platforms."
4190 msgstr ""
4191
4192 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4193 msgid ""
4194 "These powers are all in the plain language of U.S. antitrust laws, so in "
4195 "theory, a future U.S. president could simply direct their attorney general "
4196 "to enforce the law as it was written. But after decades of judicial "
4197 "<quote>education</quote> in the benefits of monopolies, after multiple "
4198 "administrations that have packed the federal courts with lifetime-appointed "
4199 "monopoly cheerleaders, it’s not clear that mere administrative action would "
4200 "do the trick."
4201 msgstr ""
4202
4203 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4204 msgid ""
4205 "If the courts frustrate the Justice Department and the president, the next "
4206 "stop would be Congress, which could eliminate any doubt about how antitrust "
4207 "law should be enforced in the U.S. by passing new laws that boil down to "
4208 "saying, <quote>Knock it off. We all know what the Sherman Act says. Robert "
4209 "Bork was a deranged fantasist. For avoidance of doubt, <emphasis>fuck that "
4210 "guy</emphasis>.</quote> In other words, the problem with monopolies is "
4211 "<emphasis>monopolism</emphasis> — the concentration of power into too few "
4212 "hands, which erodes our right to self-determination. If there is a monopoly, "
4213 "the law wants it gone, period. Sure, get rid of monopolies that create "
4214 "<quote>consumer harm</quote> in the form of higher prices, but also, "
4215 "<emphasis>get rid of other monopolies, too</emphasis>."
4216 msgstr ""
4217
4218 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4219 msgid ""
4220 "But this only prevents things from getting worse. To help them get better, "
4221 "we will have to build coalitions with other activists in the anti-monopoly "
4222 "ecology movement — a pluralism movement or a self-determination movement — "
4223 "and target existing monopolies in every industry for breakup and structural "
4224 "separation rules that prevent, for example, the giant eyewear monopolist "
4225 "Luxottica from dominating both the sale and the manufacture of spectacles."
4226 msgstr ""
4227
4228 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4229 msgid ""
4230 "In an important sense, it doesn’t matter which industry the breakups begin "
4231 "in. Once they start, shareholders in <emphasis>every</emphasis> industry "
4232 "will start to eye their investments in monopolists skeptically. As "
4233 "trustbusters ride into town and start making lives miserable for "
4234 "monopolists, the debate around every corporate boardroom’s table will shift. "
4235 "People within corporations who’ve always felt uneasy about monopolism will "
4236 "gain a powerful new argument to fend off their evil rivals in the corporate "
4237 "hierarchy: <quote>If we do it my way, we make less money; if we do it your "
4238 "way, a judge will fine us billions and expose us to ridicule and public "
4239 "disapprobation. So even though I get that it would be really cool to do that "
4240 "merger, lock out that competitor, or buy that little company and kill it "
4241 "before it can threaten it, we really shouldn’t — not if we don’t want to get "
4242 "tied to the DOJ’s bumper and get dragged up and down Trustbuster Road for "
4243 "the next 10 years.</quote>"
4244 msgstr ""
4245
4246 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
4247 msgid "20 GOTO 10"
4248 msgstr ""
4249
4250 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4251 msgid ""
4252 "Fixing Big Tech will require a lot of iteration. As cyber lawyer Lawrence "
4253 "Lessig wrote in his 1999 book, <emphasis>Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace</"
4254 "emphasis>, our lives are regulated by four forces: law (what’s legal), code "
4255 "(what’s technologically possible), norms (what’s socially acceptable), and "
4256 "markets (what’s profitable)."
4257 msgstr ""
4258
4259 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4260 msgid ""
4261 "If you could wave a wand and get Congress to pass a law that re-fanged the "
4262 "Sherman Act tomorrow, you could use the impending breakups to convince "
4263 "venture capitalists to fund competitors to Facebook, Google, Twitter, and "
4264 "Apple that would be waiting in the wings after they were cut down to size."
4265 msgstr ""
4266
4267 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4268 msgid ""
4269 "But getting Congress to act will require a massive normative shift, a mass "
4270 "movement of people who care about monopolies — and pulling them apart."
4271 msgstr ""
4272
4273 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4274 msgid ""
4275 "Getting people to care about monopolies will take technological "
4276 "interventions that help them to see what a world free from Big Tech might "
4277 "look like. Imagine if someone could make a beloved (but unauthorized) third-"
4278 "party Facebook or Twitter client that dampens the anxiety-producing "
4279 "algorithmic drumbeat and still lets you talk to your friends without being "
4280 "spied upon — something that made social media more sociable and less toxic. "
4281 "Now imagine that it gets shut down in a brutal legal battle. It’s always "
4282 "easier to convince people that something must be done to save a thing they "
4283 "love than it is to excite them about something that doesn’t even exist yet."
4284 msgstr ""
4285
4286 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4287 msgid ""
4288 "Neither tech nor law nor code nor markets are sufficient to reform Big Tech. "
4289 "But a profitable competitor to Big Tech could bankroll a legislative push; "
4290 "legal reform can embolden a toolsmith to make a better tool; the tool can "
4291 "create customers for a potential business who value the benefits of the "
4292 "internet but want them delivered without Big Tech; and that business can get "
4293 "funded and divert some of its profits to legal reform. 20 GOTO 10 (or "
4294 "lather, rinse, repeat). Do it again, but this time, get farther! After all, "
4295 "this time you’re starting with weaker Big Tech adversaries, a constituency "
4296 "that understands things can be better, Big Tech rivals who’ll help ensure "
4297 "their own future by bankrolling reform, and code that other programmers can "
4298 "build on to weaken Big Tech even further."
4299 msgstr ""
4300
4301 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4302 msgid ""
4303 "The surveillance capitalism hypothesis — that Big Tech’s products really "
4304 "work as well as they say they do and that’s why everything is so screwed up "
4305 "— is way too easy on surveillance and even easier on capitalism. Companies "
4306 "spy because they believe their own BS, and companies spy because governments "
4307 "let them, and companies spy because any advantage from spying is so short-"
4308 "lived and minor that they have to do more and more of it just to stay in "
4309 "place."
4310 msgstr ""
4311
4312 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4313 msgid ""
4314 "As to why things are so screwed up? Capitalism. Specifically, the monopolism "
4315 "that creates inequality and the inequality that creates monopolism. It’s a "
4316 "form of capitalism that rewards sociopaths who destroy the real economy to "
4317 "inflate the bottom line, and they get away with it for the same reason "
4318 "companies get away with spying: because our governments are in thrall to "
4319 "both the ideology that says monopolies are actually just fine and in thrall "
4320 "to the ideology that says that in a monopolistic world, you’d better not "
4321 "piss off the monopolists."
4322 msgstr ""
4323
4324 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4325 msgid ""
4326 "Surveillance doesn’t make capitalism rogue. Capitalism’s unchecked rule "
4327 "begets surveillance. Surveillance isn’t bad because it lets people "
4328 "manipulate us. It’s bad because it crushes our ability to be our authentic "
4329 "selves — and because it lets the rich and powerful figure out who might be "
4330 "thinking of building guillotines and what dirt they can use to discredit "
4331 "those embryonic guillotine-builders before they can even get to the "
4332 "lumberyard."
4333 msgstr ""
4334
4335 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><title>
4336 msgid "Up and through"
4337 msgstr ""
4338
4339 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4340 msgid ""
4341 "With all the problems of Big Tech, it’s tempting to imagine solving the "
4342 "problem by returning to a world without tech at all. Resist that temptation."
4343 msgstr ""
4344
4345 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4346 msgid ""
4347 "The only way out of our Big Tech problem is up and through. If our future is "
4348 "not reliant upon high tech, it will be because civilization has fallen. Big "
4349 "Tech wired together a planetary, species-wide nervous system that, with the "
4350 "proper reforms and course corrections, is capable of seeing us through the "
4351 "existential challenge of our species and planet. Now it’s up to us to seize "
4352 "the means of computation, putting that electronic nervous system under "
4353 "democratic, accountable control."
4354 msgstr ""
4355
4356 #. type: Content of: <article><sect1><para>
4357 msgid ""
4358 "I am, secretly, despite what I have said earlier, a tech exceptionalist. Not "
4359 "in the sense of thinking that tech should be given a free pass to monopolize "
4360 "because it has <quote>economies of scale</quote> or some other nebulous "
4361 "feature. I’m a tech exceptionalist because I believe that getting tech right "
4362 "matters and that getting it wrong will be an unmitigated catastrophe — and "
4363 "doing it right can give us the power to work together to save our "
4364 "civilization, our species, and our planet."
4365 msgstr ""