This. 1000x.
At it's core this is essentially like sponsorship. Anecdote : I've always found sponsored content more useful than the ads that ad networks show me and they are also not creepy like traditional ads. Eg- I search for strawberries on google, click through a few links. Separately I visit a tech blog to learn about how to monitor a VPS, guess what shows up on a site about servers and software? Strawberries! Creepy as f*uck and completely out of place.
Do you think an ad network that focuses on targeting content rather than users will work? Are there any such networks already? If not, it's time to build one.
If this were a good opportunity for an ad network, then we wouldn't need any regulation to force it.
People will always respond better to novel forms of advertising, and it takes bad actors some time to figure out how to game new kinds of online advertising. The result is ever more invasive surveillance and tracking techniques, in a Red Queen's race.
For sites you tell that it's ethical, like above, and that users won't block it because it's cached at your own server (you can do that because you don't track users). That may compensate for the smaller price. If it doesn't now, it will once more people start blocking ads.
For users you tell that it won't harm them, so they don't need to look into blockers (it will work if you take some effort to avoid malware too), and if they start blocking this kind of ad, you won't have any competitive advantage so harmful ads will win.
The points about tech running amok with the surveillance capitalism are spot on. I do have some doubts about other parts though; here are they in somewhat random order:
-- Problem solving.
I'm not buying this villifying of tech world for trying to avoid the "dirty political work". In fact, I believe it's a good approach. Turning a problem into a political issue pretty much guarantees that it won't be solved as people take sides and then invent arguments to rationalize their positions. Just look at the climate change - since it became politicized, it's close to impossible to do anything in the area (Trump's election in the US is not helping either). The only way to address it now is by ignoring the democratic process altogether - by doing research, developing new technologies, and hoping for the market forces to sort things out.
Moreover, why does the tech industry is always blamed for trying to avoid political work? Like, are there no human beings who don't work in tech industry that could try a different approach? Why is tech industry expected to do everything, and then at the same time gets called out for hubris?
Related, on tech and life extension efforts. I call the Comet King principle - "somebody has to and no one else will". Why is nobody else besides tech billionaires interested in putting serious resources into solving that problem?
-- Poland.
Is it an evil surveillance state now? I live there and I haven't noticed it.
-- Trump.
I'm starting to get a feeling that some people on anti-Trump side are just sore losers, and can't accept that he won democratic elections; no, it must be some conspiracy. I'm not endorsing what Trump is doing, but the facts on the ground are that many people did vote for him, and denying them agency makes it more difficult to notice the problems those people face in their lives.
They actually don't. These people are throwing billions of dollars at the wrong problems. There are problems solvable with a fraction of that affecting Americans across the board. If they want people to live longer, patent reform (eg reducing patent length) devaluing cancer drugs/equipment followed by buying them and non-profit manufacturing (i.e. low margin) would save lots of lives or improve those who otherwise would mortgage a house. Likewise, hitting both copyright and patent law in a way to allow clean-slate clones of software like Oracle would fight lock-in. They could fund use of the courts plus tech-assisted cooperation on so many local issues that happen all over the place like gerrymandering or water supplies being poisoned. They might even build a new Tier 1 or Tier 3 ISP as a public benefit company w/ privacy and net neutrality in its charter plus a range of services from gigabit for businesses to wireless mesh for poor areas built on consumer routers. Edit to add investment into those lego-like, pre-fab houses and apartments that are dirt cheap vs traditional homes might make it easier to get more people affordable homes or reduce homelessness.
All kinds of existing problems can be solved with focused efforts by millionaires or billionaires. Instead, they're going to Mars, trying to live forever, or some other stuff while worrying about fantasy problems.
That's your (and idlewords's) opinion, but other people may disagree. In particular, I don't understand the desire to pick on Elon's work on the Mars program, when it pushes forward an industry with huge knock-on effects that are very beneficial to society[0], while he's also one of the few people doing high-impact work in fighting climate change. Tell me that's a "wrong" problem to solve.
You mention a bunch of other problems, but the thing is, most of them are problems that should be solved by our democratic governments. Who is a SV billionaire to tell us how copyright law should work? Not to mention, some of those problems are such that those billionaires could put all their wealth into solving them and in the end have little to show for it. Take gerrymandering - this is not something you can solve by just throwing money at it; the money will get stolen by the same people who perpetuate the problem.
Also, if you want billionaires to work on problems you deem to be "right", you should encourage them instead of mocking each one that choses to do some good instead of buying a new yacht. Or, if you prefer a less consequentialist approach, let's focus on insulting all the other rich people, both within and outside of tech industry, who don't help solve social problems.
> They might even build a new Tier 1 or Tier 3 ISP as a public benefit company w/ privacy and net neutrality in its charter plus a range of services from gigabit for businesses to wireless mesh for poor areas built on consumer routers.
SpaceX is actually on its way to do that with their LEO Internet satellites program.
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When I talk about "unwarranted jabs", I mean things like the whole "Irreality" chapter of the talk, which is one long mix of ad-hominems and mocking people that disagree with him. So Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are suddenly trying to cause "the collapse of representative government". OpenAI is a cult now[1]. And anti-aging is obviously meant to ensure "that our big idea men don’t expire before the world has been received the full measure of their genius".
This is stuff that I'd expect to hear from John Oliver, who's running a comedy show. Not from someone who attempts to discuss serious issues.
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[0] - For starters, I'll refer you to WTFNasa, existence of GPS and the impact satellites have on global agriculture, healthcare, logistics and disease management.
[1] - his reasoning is explaioned more by his previous talk of AI; I'll leave discussing that particular talk to Scott Alexander - http://slatestarcodex.com/2017/04/01/g-k-chesterton-on-ai-ri....
EDIT:
Also, "you lost me" kool kid dismissal is supposed to be used with things mentioned early in the piece of writing, not with literally the last two sentences of the post. You admitted that you read everything, so no points for style :P.
"Regulate, regulate, regulate!", Maciej urges.
Erdogan of Turkey says, "OK, Maciej!" – blocking Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, & Wikipedia in the name of social order.
Putin of Russia says, "OK, Maciej!" – running the Zuckerberg-of-Russia (Durov) out of the country, blocking protest websites, and moving Russia towards a Chinese model of internet content control.
Newly-elected Macron of France says, "OK, Maciej!" – following previous French initiatives to fine Google for failing to delete truthful news worldwide under EU 'Right to be Forgotten' rules, and to ban 'terrorist' websites by administrative decree, Macron pledges further regulations to "stop fake news".
Theresa May of the UK says, "OK, Maciej!" – unveiling a manifesto to make Britain "the global leader in the regulation of the use of personal data and the internet", penalizing internet companies that "direct users – even unintentionally – to hate speech, pornography, or other sources of harm".
Your "regulate, regulate, regulate" chant about the evil influences of the American internet will in practice drive more censorship then privacy protection – even when, as with the Tories' new internet-regulation manifesto, the censorship is itself dressed up in "data protection" guise.
If you want implementation of the six fixes you list there (which in general I think are pretty reasonable), you need to be out there beating that list specifically into peoples' heads, over and over again. You can't just call for blanket regulation, which will be interpreted in whatever self-serving way the politician who enacts it wants. Those six fixes need to be a meme in their own right in public consciousness, such that failure to implement them and only them will doom a politician in elections.
This trend may have the effect of coercing users to stay connected. (Even if the "requirement" is not truly a requirement but merely a suggestion or recommendation disguised as a directive.)
As such, users with the "right to go offline" may not do so because a company is telling them they must stay connected in order for some (non-networking) software to work.
There are many examples of such software, and at the risk of annoying some people, I will provide some.
But the nature of my question arises from the simple idea that sometimes software can accomplish it purpose without an internet connection, as will be familar to anyone who used such software before internet connections were inexpensive, "always on" or fast.
This a broad concept. It applies to all software.
Random example 1: Professional/hobbyist audio recording, editing software
Random example 2: Unnamed operating system setting world records for number of "updates"
"Office suite" software, e.g., word processor, spreadsheet, etc.
Can a user record and edit audio without having an internet connection?
Can a user read, create, edit a document or spreadsheet while being disconnected from the internet?
There are reasons that companies want users to stay connected.
However users are not always given full details on those reasons.
Obviously leaving computers connected poses risks for the user.
Users have to weight those risks. Should users be entitled to the full details? (Without having to use a program like "Little Snitch".)
The first question to ask is: Can a given program accomplish it purpose without using the network?
If yes, then the next question is: Why does a company "require" a user to have a working internet connection for the use of this software?
Free use of a user's internet connection by a company enables collecting user data and potentially generating revenue from user data, e.g., through advertising.
But should users give away their network bandwidth to companies to use however they see fit?
Even more, should users give away their RAM as if it was an inexpensive, infinite resource?
Software programs that generate revenue routinely increase "minimum RAM requirements" year by year but many times users receive no details on why the increases are needed.
The reasons could be legitimate however they might also be questionable. Without consideration of the undisclosed details, how can users make informed decisions?
in other words: a straw man.
nothing you mention is advocated by the presenter.
It's what those independent European politicians are already pushing. They couldn't care less about a little technocratic tweak like "only target ads based on content". They want rules, fines, and discretion that lets them bend internet media to match their ideologies and establishments. (Not to advance the progressive aims Ceglowski prefers.)
Maybe in a future presentation Ceglowski can explain the specific regulations he wants – how they can win enactment & then achieve good results. But he didn't even get to them in his time here, and even in the full transcript they're just superficial bullet points. That makes them seem like perfunctory afterthoughts – not at all ready to appear on the agenda, compared to the actual, rapidly-advancing internet-censorship regulations that Europe is already pushing.
There are five Internet companies — Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook. Together they have a market capitalization just under 3 trillion dollars.
And please regulate, regulate, regulate this industry, while you can."
The trouble for calling for regulation is that what you get is Theresa May's version.[1] Or the Great Firewall of China.
[1] http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/new...