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Old 01-21-2014, 04:51 PM   #3
Undertoad
Radical Centrist
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Cottage of Prussia
Posts: 31,423
We've already discussed this you know. It was 2006, and the threat was

The Internet is over!

It was driven by a Nation article The End of the Internet?.

Quote:
The nation's largest telephone and cable companies are crafting an alarming set of strategies that would transform the free, open and nondiscriminatory Internet of today to a privately run and branded service that would charge a fee for virtually everything we do online.
That's horrible! But when does their evil plan begin? Because while they can "craft" "strategies" all day long, here we are 8 years into the plan and -- hey, wait a minute... a fee for everything we do online... are they talking about Candy Crush?

~

My post in "The Internet is over!" is one I'm still proud of. Proud, you know, proud like hey I squeezed out a particularly nice turd today. But I would still call you over to admire my turd, which applies here in this thread as much as it did those many years ago. It said:
Quote:
People, please. This is the Internet, and we are in charge here.

There is no advantage in being a big company on the Internet. Bigness doesn't really matter on the net. No single entity can hope to truly control any major part of the net; the net won't tolerate it.

This is the internet. Every product on the Internet is one click away from every other product. Companies that charge must actually add value. And as only a select few have learned, on the Internet, it is extremely difficult to gain power by exercising control. Google found that it gained power by giving power away. By doing so it has accumulated more net worth faster than any company in history.

This is the Internet. We are not "consumers", eating products and shitting money. We are all partners. No single company can control you - that is, unless you allow it.
This is the Internet, and we are in charge here. I promise you, that is true. The network is many protocols, and it will be many protocols. These protocols are here to serve us. When they don't, they will be discarded, overridden. Many have been discarded and overridden before. It's part of the whole point.

"The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it." -- John Gilmore

Still true today. It's because humans are part of the network. That's US. WE are in charge here.
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