Yearly Archives: 2010

Links for this week

Every week, I help compile a short mail out of interesting stories for the Open Society Institute’s Information Program, which aims to update their colleagues in the Soros network and friends further afield about the news, opinions and events the Program team have their eye on. Since the mailout is released Creative Commons, and usually contains a really excellent spectrum of information society issues, I’m going to start sharing the links on this blog. Here’s the first issue:

Why is there resistance to prize funds?
Prize funds are mechanisms for stimulating innovation. In healthcare, prize funds present an attractive alternative to patent-based mechanisms, and can be particularly useful in stimulating research around treatments for neglected diseases. Here, Jamie Love of Knowledge Ecology International tracks the history of prize funds, and examines why they still encounter such resistance from commercial organisations.

The death of fixed lines in Africa
Steve Song challenges the notion that Africa’s future communication infrastructure will be 100% mobile, and offers three reasons why fixed line communication should be viewed as a complementary technology with its own role to play.

The Partisan Internet and the Wider World
Is the internet making us ideologically isolated? Ethan Zuckerman dissects a recent study of how the internet affects our political views and associations, providing a good summary of the various arguments around this question so far, and raising some interesting questions about the most current research.

Access Controlled: The Shaping of Power, Rights, and Rule in Cyberspace
This new book from MIT Press, which features chapters from academics and practitioners associated with the Open Net Initiative, examines the state of privacy and free expression online, and the trends that got us here. Part II contains a series of informative regional profiles.

Deploying Ushahidi – Allocation of Time
Ushahidi community member Chris Blow shares his experiences of deploying Ushahidi, and reveals where Ushahidi-based projects most often fail.

Diasporas: A new sort of togetherness
This Economist feature posits that diasporas are being revived by social media.

The web’s first Cyrillic top level domain
This month, the first Cyrillic top level domain “.рф” (“.rf”) came online. This article examines take-up of the new domain, and questions whether this introduction of Cyrillic threatens the internet as a global and open space.

Facebook responds to privacy outcry
Facebook has announced a new simplified approach to user privacy, following growing concerns that the company was misusing personal data by making it harder to opt out of commercial data-sharing schemes. The new arrangement will provide users with a single page from which they can control all their privacy settings.

Tajikistan: President moves to ban cell-phones
President Rahmon of Tajikistan has “declared war” on mobile phones, citing dangers to health they are alleged to pose, and complaining that the revenues of Tajikistan’s burgeoning telecommunications sector are difficult to track. One source quoted in this report suspects that the revolution in neighbouring Kyrgyzstan might also have something to do with the move.

East African Community countries to register all SIM cards
The East Africa Communications Organisations (EACO) has agreed to register all mobile phone SIM cards across the region by June 2012. A representative from the Uganda Communications Commission said “The decision to register SIM cards was reached at for security purposes and for protection of our consumers,” claiming that registering SIM cards would stop anonymous, abusive phonecalls.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Claim “Iranian Cyber Army”
A spokesperson for Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has claimed that the “Iranian Cyber Army”, a group of hackers implicated in attacks on Twitter, Baidu and reformist Iranian web targets, “looks to” the Revolutionary Guard for direction.

Three Strikes… and you’re out?

Could it be the curse of Gowers? It’s been over 3 years since the former Financial Times editor made his seemingly doomed 39th recommendation in his otherwise excellent review of intellectual property:

Observe the industry agreement of protocols for sharing data between ISPs and rights holders to remove and disbar users engaged in ‘piracy’. If this has not proved operationally successful by the end of 2007, Government should consider whether to legislate.

Since then, it seems every minister tasked with overseeing implementing his idea has only just got in post before they are running for the door again. The news today that Sion Simon MP will step down as creative industries minister (and, indeed, get out of Westminster altogether) inspired me to write a list of all the other Ministers I could think of who’ve once been responsible for this policy, then legged it.

  • Baroness Delyth Morgan (reshuffled)
  • Baroness Shriti Vadera (stepped down to advise G20)
  • Andy Burnham MP (promoted)
  • Lord Stephen Carter (resigned)
  • Sion Simon MP(resigned)

I’m not sure this list is chronological, or indeed exhaustive – please help me revise it if you can. And of course, it may yet be incomplete. Last Summer, I predicted that the Digital Economy Bill – the latest zombie incarnation of this wretched policy – would be Peter Madelson’s undoing. I remain hopeful I was right.

Stewart Brand

I’ve got a review of Stewart Brand’s new book Whole Earth Discipline in this week’s New Statesman. It doesn’t appear to be on their website yet, so I’ve re-produced it below.

I became interested in Stewart Brand after reading Fred Turner’s excellent (if a little dry) book From Counterculture to Cyberculture last year (see this previous post). Like a secret time-traveller, Brand pops up at various moments that would go on to define the development of personal computing: filming the “mother of all demos” in the 60s; funding the Homebrew Computer Club in the 70s; coining the phrase “information wants to be free” in the 80s. You can hear me interviewing Stewart for my favourite independent radio show, Little Atoms, on Resonance FM next Friday.

Here’s my review (note this is unedited copy, but it doesn’t differ much from what you’ll find on p.54 of today’s Staggers):

Social entrepreneur and technology guru Stewart Brand’s first significant contribution to the environmental movement came to him as he sat on a rooftop in 1966. Tripping on LSD, he looked up at the stars and asked “Why haven’t we seen a picture of the whole earth yet”? Forty years later, Brand has given up the drugs and the mysticism of 1960s San Francisco, but he’s still thinking about the planet. This time, he doesn’t just want a photograph (that happened in 1968, leading to the first Earth Day in the US), he wants “a constant, real-time high-resolution video of the Earth turning in the sunlight” – the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR), abandoned before launch by the Bush administration because it had been Al Gore’s idea. Much more than DSCOVR, though, Brand wants us to break free from our various ideological shackles and begin focussing on the task at hand – saving civilisation.

Whole Earth Discipline: an Ecopragmatist Manifesto is a rich, compelling guide to how old wisdom and new technologies can combine to help civilisation survive manmade climate change. But it should be read as much for its dissection of the way ideologies distort decision-making on science and technology. Why did the anti-state right oppose fluoridisation and the anti-corporate left oppose GM? “A political agenda is… poor at solving problems”, writes Brand. “Accustomed to saving natural systems from civilisation, Greens now have the unfamiliar task of saving civilisation from a natural system”. The ensuing ideological backflip will spread its own kind of chaos – a chaos budding ecopragmatists must learn to sidestep.

The book proposes three ideological heresies about to break on the shores of environmental consciousness: urbanisation; GM; nuclear. Earth’s population became mostly urban in 2007. The dream of going back to the land – an ideal Brand gained his fame by promoting in Whole Earth Catalog, a kind of Sears for hippy communes – is wrong-headed, because cities turn out to be the greener option. Urbanisation slows population growth (as women choose education and opportunity over large families), concentrates resource needs, and gradually empties rural areas of subsistence farmers, allowing planned approaches to agriculture that reduce environmental impact and leave more land surface to be gardened into “natural” ecosystems that will mitigate climate harm.

But urban populations demand grid electricity, and that means re-evaluating the nuclear option. The rejection of nuclear stems from our revulsion of nuclear weapons; the “absolute” nature of our other concerns – on grounds of safety, cost and waste storage – all flow from here. Brand dismisses each objection with a mix of hope and hard science. A trip to the experimental Yucca mountain 10,000-year storage facility leaves him agreeing with James Lovelock that “we need it about as much as we need a facility for imprisoning dangerous extraterrestrials”. We should divert the $28bn set aside to store waste from the nuclear we’ve already used towards research into new micro-reactors and the possibility of substituting uranium with thorium. Brand’s own ideological shift – here and elsewhere – is away from 60s individualism toward 21st century governance. Post-Copenhagen, we might wish that his proposed blend of the internet-inspired engineer/hacker frame with approaches to economic planning that might alarm the folks back home was a little less vague.

Most compelling is the book’s defence of GM agriculture. Here, Brand the trained biologist puts the leaders of Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth in the same dock as the leaders of Exxon Mobil for their crimes against science and humanity. Environmentalists who label GM “unnatural” have confused agriculture with nature, when agriculture itself is one of the world’s worst climate criminals. The work of Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth in demonising GM has left millions of Africans starving to defend a misguided European ideology. The organic and GM movements must converge around the shared goal of soil quality through no-till agriculture – the only thing stopping them from doing so is moral panic. Brand drolly reminds us that Frankenstein was the inventor of a creature that was mistaken by the public for a monster. “Of course, that’s a rhetorical argument, devoid of meaning. But so is the term Frankenfood.”

Urbanisation, nuclear, GM: all will happen whether the environmental movement adopts Brand’s manifesto or not. But if Greens take up his call, if they start working to “Green the Hell” out of the world’s new mega-cities, go “Glow-in-the-Dark” Green and make sure nuclear power adoption is directed in the right way, or encourage GM technology out of the patent portfolios of Monsanto and into the hands of local specialists (“Biotech wants to be free”), all three will happen better. Like adolescents emerging into adulthood, it’s time to put away our inner grudges and get used to the idea that we alone are masters of our own destiny. “We are as gods and have to get good at it”.

Stewart Brands campaigning buttons

Google in China, Pt. 3

I’m enjoying some of the early comment on Google’s announcement that it no longer intends to censor google.cn. When Google first went into China back in 2006, I predicted that both Chinese-sponsored cybercrime and user privacy were likely to feature in future twists in the tale of Google in China. The company appears to be performing much better than the subtext of this piece implied it would. So hats off, I guess.

One thing I’d like to know is what’s happened to Google’s 2.4% stake in Baidu – the search engine with majority market share in China – in the intervening years since I wrote this piece. Answers sent over https to my gmail account, please!