I wrote this essay back in 2001 in late August as the start of a book proposal. Any traction that it was likely to get was obliterated in the events of 9/11. But it is still one of the most heavy linked things I’ve ever written, so I’m reposting it without comments or updates. Eventually I’d like to come back to it and update.
In the long run, we must find mechanisms that will separate the interests of Falun Gong members from those of pedophiles. In the absence of such mechanisms their interests (and our interests) are identical.
- Dana Blankenhorn, A-Clue.Com
Medianet |
I use the term Medianet to encompass all media content created by both professional and amateur content creators, the broadband network that transports that content and the devices attached to the network to publish and consume that content. I will outline a rough feature set of the ideal Medianet from the point of view of the three major entities with vested interests in the evolution of the Medianet, the consumer, the publisher and the government. While there is much commonality of interests between the three entities (fast, cheap, always available) there are also some fundamental conflicts that must be resolved. Scenarios based on potential resolution of these conflicts are both interesting and enlightening, and I believe, a rich ground for strategic planning. |
The ideal consumer Medianet |
The ideal consumer Medianet must be able to:
Generally speaking, government concerns and corporate intellectual property concerns have been the only real impediments to the implementation of features that would make the ideal consumer Medianet, the technology hurdles are far from insurmountable. |
The ideal publisher Medianet |
In addition to instantaneous content availability, the ideal publisher Medianet must be able to:
Unsurprisingly media companies have had no real success in creating content platforms that cater to their needs instead of the needs of the consumer. I would argue that the failure of Divx vs. DVDs is directly attributable to favoring publishing companies’ interests over consumers’. SDMI will continue to flounder because the various content publishing companies have different agendas for business models and feature sets. Any medium whose distribution system disallows equal access to content from both amateur and professional publishers won’t work in a broadband |
The ideal government Medianet |
From a government point of view the ideal Medianet must:
I believe the government’s needs are the hardest to logically justify, as arguably there is no such thing as criminally illegal content (i.e. there is no pedophilic content without child abuse, conspiracy to commit terrorism has nothing to do with the channel of information exchange, and violation of intellectual property is a civil issue, not a criminal one).That doesn’t mean that government will stop trying, but it does mean that government needs must be couched in terms of enabling either business (copyright violations and the CDMA) or consumer needs (privacy), or to be couched in terms of a threat to the state (terrorism) to succeed in overriding either consumer or corporate needs. |
Which Master will be served? |
We could try to be crisper about the ideal features, but the point is already obvious: many of these “features” are fundamentally in conflict. In fact, all features differentiating the Medianet from raw broadband ip networks are areas of contention between government, content producers and consumers. However, if the Medianet is ever to reach fruition through the evolution of the Internet these conflicts must be resolved. It is my opinion that the consumer actually Fragmentation of government interests: Pressures against the consumer-focused Medianet are different internationally; consumer privacy against corporate intrusion is better protected in the European Union, while consumer privacy against government intrusion is better protected in the United States. Least common denominator content is not compelling: Any great deviation of features from the ideal consumer Medianet encourages a widespread disregard for the law or even organized internet civil disobedience: The ease with which laws may be broken and the lack of sophistication on the part law enforcement has made the risk of technology crimes very low as the growth of web site defacement and virus creation clearly shows. Media content is not considered property: |
Technology influences |
Some random thoughts about factors influencing the evolution towards the Medianet:
Closed platform vs. open platform
General purpose content applications and open source
Governmental reactions to internet “openness”
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