Written by Juan Ortiz
Freuler and first published at Common
Dreams
Cambridge Analytica is on the cover of every
newspaper. The company managed to get hold of millions of data points of very
sensitive data from Facebook users. Most reporters focus on the meaning of
consent in the digital age and Facebook's inability to enforce it. Most
reporters covering the Cambridge Analytica story are missing out on the big
picture.
The scale of the operation was only possible because Facebook has too
much data about too many people. Cambridge Analytica is a cautionary tale about
the risks of centralizing data and control over the flows of information. The
internet and the web were designed to decentralize data and power. Cambridge
Analytica's use of Facebook is an example of what a system with a single point
of failure leads to.
Many claim
the internet is broken. As I’ve argued in these articles – here and here –
these claims are often examples of misdirected anger. The social contract is
broken. Inequality is rising, and the tensions associated with injustice are
spilling into online space. Since the internet facilitates the collection of
structured data and statistical analysis, it allows us to measure and reveal
the overarching social tensions as never before. Media and unsavvy researchers
often take a narrow focus that places the blame on the messenger, instead of
talking about the broader problems that underpin the symptoms of the sick
society their investigations reveal. Many claim the internet is broken… The
social contract is broken.
The internet,
with its capacity to facilitate communication, aggregate opinion, and
coordinate by the thousands in real time, is arguably the most powerful tool at
our disposal to solve the social issues at hand. The internet has made it
easier for women to coordinate around the #MeToo movement, as it has enabled
the growth of Black Lives Matter, to mention two recent examples. Rape,
misogyny and racially targeted police violence are not new issues, but the
internet provided a platform for these covered-up conversations to take place.
From the
development of written language to the printing press; from the telegraph to
the web, accessing and sharing knowledge has fuelled humankind’s progress and
development. Much of what was considered
revolutionary only decades ago is mistakenly taken for granted today.
The problem
with misdirected anger is that it leads to misdirected policies that could
undermine the internet’s capacity to catalyze much-needed social change. We
need to ensure that when we think about internet policy we think about it with
a political lens: how can we ensure the internet will enable us as citizens to
share ideas freely, coordinate around common interests, and act in defense of
our rights and interests?
How can we ensure that people are afforded these
conversations as a right today and in the future? How can we ensure these
protections even in scenarios where the powers-that-be feel profoundly
challenged by people’s capacity to coordinate? How can we ensure these
protections even in scenarios where the powers-that-be feel profoundly
challenged by people’s capacity to coordinate?
If we accept
that the internet has become a key tool for politics in this broad sense of the
term, we can see the internet is indeed facing a problem. A problem that is often
neglected for being less tangible, but that underlies much of what concerns the
public about the internet. A problem that not only reflects but can reinforce
current social problems, and frustrate the goal of ensuring meaningful
political participation: centralization.
Centralization
and decentralization
Centralization
is the process through which intermediaries have reshaped the internet and the
web, placing themselves as gatekeepers of information. In the context of an
increasingly centralized web the ethos of “move fast and break things” that
promoted and spurred bold innovations a decade ago has become deeply
problematic. Each ‘mistake’ on the centralized internet of today causes harm to
thousands if not millions. And
technological developments are increasing the powers intermediation affords the
corporations that now employ what used to be a crowd of free-coders.
We the people
cannot afford the risks this entails to the internet of tomorrow, and its
ability to deliver social change. Decentralization is about creating
architectural barricades to this process so that power remains distributed
across the network.
The battle
for the net takes place today and everyday. There are no straightforward
solutions. Every turn implies hard choices. It is therefore time to involve as
many people as possible in this process about thinking about solutions.
Unsurprisingly, we need to be aware not only of the power these intermediaries
exercise over politics, academia, and the private sector, but how delving into
certain of these topics havs become interestingly and unacceptably taboo.
Decentralization is about creating architectural barricades to this process so
that power remains distributed across the network.
If we hope to
protect the citizens of tomorrow from expected and unexpected scenarios we need
to get creative and bold today. And we need the mass of netizens on board. We
need open and robust debates. We cannot afford anything less than this. Too
much is at stake.
If the reason
for much of the misdirected anger is that the centralization process is less
tangible than the symptoms it might trigger, perhaps a first step must be to
make this underlying layer more visible and part of our public discourse.
The closed
environments in which technology is being developed by private companies, and
its metaphors – such as “the Cloud”– which have been used to over-simplify the
internet’s architecture, have done nothing but obscure the key political
battleground of this century. The intermediaries have the upper hand unless we
can shed some light over this structure.
The Neutrality Pyramid
The pyramid
below has the humble purpose of re-stating the physical existence of
intermediaries, and their power. It shows some of the distinctive layers in
which gatekeeping is being exercised today, and which could affect users’
ability to share ideas and produce meaningful change tomorrow.
The pyramidal
structure suggests that, from a user perspective, different actors exercise
various types of control over our ability to deliver a message. Re-aligning incentives for these
intermediaries to work in favour of society’s goals might require developing a
multi-pronged strategy, with tailored and targeted approaches for each level of
the pyramid.
If an ISP
decides that no data packets containing certain keywords should be delivered,
then it doesn’t matter what device we have, or what platform we rely on: the
message will not be delivered. If a device does not allow the use of certain
apps, then certain tools may become unavailable, and so on. The lower an actor
is placed on the pyramid, the greater the risk that they pose to the open
internet and the open web as tools for social change.
1.
Seeing the pyramid: As users and responsible consumers
we need to be aware of exactly who each of these intermediaries are and how
they manage their role as intermediaries. If they do not respect our rights, we
should shift to more decent providers or services.
2.
Observing behaviors within each layer: As a community we need to promote
enforceable rules to ensure that each level of the pyramid will be kept from
abusing its intermediary powers. Public committees should be set up to assess
the degree of horizontal integration and its impact on innovation and
competition. Control over personal data and public discourse is increasingly in
the hands of a few private companies, and this tendency unchecked leads towards
an even bleaker future.
3.
Observing dynamics between layers: As a community we need to ensure
each intermediary stays within its segment of the pyramid, ruling out any
further vertical integration, and promoting the re-fragmentation of companies
that have integrated across these layers over the past decades. Public
committees should be set up to assess the degree of horizontal integration and
its impact on innovation and competition.
This is not a
new fight. A handful of avant-garde activists and innovators are already onto
it. But it is ultimately up to us (the mass of citizens, users, and consumers)
to signal to representatives and markets alike that we want change.
Personal control over personal data
On the one
hand, new blockchain-based platforms like Filecoin, Sia, Storj and MaidSafe
seek to decentralize data storage by offering crypto-coins for players who put
their latent storage capacity on the market. On the other hand, Tim
Berners-Lee, inventor of the Web, is developing Solid (Social Linked Data),
through which he seeks to complete the original web ideal by decoupling data
from the applications that silo it today. Data will be owned and stored by the
people, and applications will compete on how they visualize the data, and
enhance user experience. An effective implementation would automatically create
cross-platform interoperability, making platform neutrality less of a problem.
Think about
how you can send emails from a Gmail account to an Outlook one, but you can’t
tweet to a Facebook user. Silos are socially inefficient but continue to exist
because they allow big companies to ensure we don’t leave their walled gardens.
You social graph should be yours to keep.
Platform neutrality
Last year the
EU fined Google for giving unfair and prominent placement of their own
comparison shopping services. India has recently followed this decision, and
fined Google based on the same behaviour.
Device neutrality
Whereas in
Russia Android was fined for continuing to pre-install its associated Google
Apps, in 2014 South Korea ruled pre-installed apps should be removable, and the
EU started studying the effects of pre-installed apps in 2016.
More
recently, a Member of the Italian Parliament, Stefano Quintarelli, has been
promoting a bill since 2015 that would grant users the right to use any
software they like, from sources other than the official – vertically
integrated – store. Now the French telecom regulator seems to be picking up
that idea as well.
Net Neutrality
Perhaps the
most well known of all the layers of the pyramid. Regulators in India, EU and
elsewhere have effectively pushed against the pressure exerted by ISPs to keep
the owners of the infrastructure from discriminating between the content that
travels through the network. As the basis of the pyramid, failure to ensure
neutrality of the net would arguably collapse the rest of the layers.
Silos are
socially inefficient but continue to exist because they allow big companies to
ensure we don’t leave their walled gardens.
The battle to
ensure the internet remains a tool for citizens to create a more just society
will be our constant companion throughout the next decade. The battle is
uphill. With each day that goes by without a thorough debate on our rights, the
odds of winning the battle get slimmer.
The sketch
outlined here, and elsewhere this series, suggests difficult trade-offs. Many
questions remain. Yet we should not feel paralyzed by the grave asymmetry of
information between us and the intermediaries. Intermediaries rely on the
opacity of their systems strategically, and continuously leverage it, to stall
conversations about the risk they represent to us and our political system. I
hope these pieces illuminate a space around which we can gather and think out
loud.
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