[I'm using this English GB track to script audio descriptions - CA] [Innovation & its Enemies]
[<1>]
So, I apologize that I am going to introduce these
ideas so early in the morning,
after such a late night last night.
But I'll like you to think of an alcoholic.
[photo of drunk sleeping on the earth]
And I don't mean the kind of drop-dead
drunken alcoholic,
[picture of AA meeting]
or somebody who is even recovering from AA.
[Bottles: vodka and other spirits]
I am thinking just of the regular alcoholic
who works hard to control the addiction he has.
But this particular alcoholic, I want you to
imagine that, in addition to the addiction to alcohol,
he has a second addiction as well.
Not the debilitating addiction that keeps him
down all day.
And not a recovered drug addict.
But an addiction nonetheless
that continues to pull him in another way,
away from what he wants to do.
A person with two addictions, pulling different ways,
making him vulnerable, making him dangerous,
as he is susceptible to the temptations of each.
And the trick for this soul is to control
and to regulate these addictions, to keep them under control.
Now I give you this picture because
I think it is a good picture of modern democratic government.
Modern democratic government too, is pulled
by these two separate kinds of addictions.
Constantly pulled by craziness.
Craziness to one side for the people, or at least wrongly,
as the people push the government to do what
is not in the public interest.
Think of Peronism,
or the kind of populism that drove the
banking and housing bubble in the United States.
Or in the other hand, an addiction to special interests,
let's call them "incumbents", constantly tempting the government
to do something crazy for public policy
in the name of benefiting the incumbents.
And here, in the United States at least, you can think about
just about every major policy issue where this addiction
has had its role.
Each of these pulling constantly,
constantly tempting, always the government is vulnerable.
Always, as libertarians insist, it is dangerous
because it can always be exploited
by one of these two sources at least,
the temptations of the incumbents.
OK now, the Internet is a platform,
it is an architecture,
it is an architecture with consequences.
It is an architecture that enables innovation,
or at least enables a certain kind of innovation.
Think of the history of innovation in the Internet.
Netscape, started by a drop-out from undergraduate university.
Hotmail, started by an Indian immigrant, sold to
Microsoft for 400 million dollars.
ICQ, started by an Israeli kid and then his father, who was here,
selling it to AOL for 400 million dollars.
Google, started by two Stanford dropouts.
Napster, started by a dropout and someone who
hadn't yet been able to be a dropout,
sitting on this panel, here, today.
Youtube, started by two Stanford students.
Kazaa and Skype, started by kids from Denmark and Sweden.
And then, of course, Facebook, and Twitter, started by kids.
What unites all of these innovations?
They were all done by kids, dropouts, and non-americans.
Outsiders.
Because this is what that architecture invited.
It invited outsider innovation.
Now, outsider innovation threatens the "incumbents".
Skype threatens telephone companies.
Youtube threatens television companies.
Netflix threatens cable companies.
Twitter threatens sanity -
not that sanity was ever an incumbent.
But then the threatened respond to this threat.
By turning to the addict, modern democratic government,
and using drug of choice (which in the United States at least
is an endless amount of campaign cash),
using that drug to secure the protection
against these threats that the incumbent faces.
Now this was the point that I think president Sarkozy missed yesterday,
and the question that Jeff Jarvis raised when he suggested
that the principle that should be carried to the G8
is that the government "do no harm".
President Sarkozy said, no, but we have important
policy issues to resolve. But here is the point.
We get that there are "hard policy" issues here.
From copyright, to privacy to security to the problem of monopoly. We get it.
The point is, is we don't trust the answers the
government gives.
And for good reasons we don't trust these answers,
because on issue after issue, the answer that
modern democratic government has given here,
is an answer that happens to benefit
the incumbents.
And ignores an answer that might actually
encourage more innovation.
So think for example about the matter of copyright.
Of course we need a system of copyright
that guarantees that creators get compensated
and secures their independence to create.
No one serious denies that we have to have
that system of protection.
The question is not whether copyright should be protected.
The question is how to protect copyright
in a digital era.
Whether the architecture of copyright,
built for the XIX century,
continues to make sense in the XXI.
And what is the architecture that would make sense in the XXI?
Now, is this the question the government is asking?
I think the answer to that is no.
Instead, what the government is proposing,
around the world, specially here,
and I apologize to my colleagues from France,
but this is a technical legal term.
The proposal suggested here is a "brain-dead"
3-strikes proposal that happens to benefit incumbents.
Ignoring the potential of innovation that could come from
a new architecture for securing copyright.
And you don't have to take my view for this.
The recent report from the conservative government in Britain,
the Hargreaves report, says of copyright:
"Could it be true that laws designed more than three centuries
ago with the express purpose of creating economic
incentives for innovation,
by protecting creators' rights
are today obstructing innovation and economic growth?"
The short answer is: "yes".
"In the case of copyright policy, there is no doubt
that the persuasive powers of celebrities and
important UK creative companies
have distorted policy outcomes."
And not just, I suggest, in the UK.
Think about the question of broadband policy.
Europe, has actually been quite successful,
in pushing competition in broadband,
and therefore pushing broadband growth.
The US has been a dismal failure in this respect.
As we watch the US going from number 1 in broadband penetration,
now to, depending on the scale,
number 18, 19, or 28.
And that change is because of policies that
effectively block competition
for broadband providers.
Their answer, these broadband providers brought to
our government, and got our government to impose
actually benefited them and destroyed the incentives
for them to compete in a way that would drive
broadband penetration.
I think in light of these examples,
it is completely fair to be skeptical
of the anwer modern democratic governments give.
We should say to modern democratic government,
you need to beware of incumbents bearing policy fixes.
Because their job, the job of the incumbents,
is not the same as your job, the job of the public policy maker.
Their job is profit for them.
Your job is the public good.
And it is completely fair, for us to say,
that until this addiction is solved, we should
insist on minimalism in what government does.
The kind of minimalism Jeff Jarvis spoke off when he
spoke of "do no harm".
An internet that embraces principles of open and free
access, a neutral network to guarantee
this open access, to protect the outsider.
But here is the one think we know about this meeting,
and its relationship to the future of the internet.
The future of the internet is not Twitter,
it is not Facebook, it is not Google,
it is not even Rupert Murdoch.
The future of the internet is not here.
It wasn't invited, it does not even know how to be invited,
because it doesn't yet focus on policies and fora like this.
The least we can do is to preserve the architecture
of this network that protects this future
that is not here.
Thank you very much.