The New Yorker
 
August 28, 2017
 
Who Owns the Internet?
What Big Tech's monopoly powers means for our  culture
 
By: Elizabeth Kolbert
 
 
On the night of November 7, 1876, Rutherford B. Hayes’s wife, Lucy, took to 
 her bed with a headache. The returns from the Presidential election were  
trickling in, and the Hayeses, who had been spending the evening in their  
parlor, in Columbus, Ohio,
were dismayed. Hayes himself remained up until midnight; then he, too,  
retired, convinced that his Democratic opponent, Samuel J. Tilden, would become 
 the next President.
 
Hayes had indeed lost the popular vote, by more than two  hundred and fifty 
thousand ballots. And he might have lost the Electoral College  as well had 
it not been for the machinations of journalists working in the shady  
corners of what’s been called “the Victorian Internet.” 
Chief among the plotters was an Ohioan named William Henry  Smith. Smith 
ran the western arm of the Associated Press, and in this way  controlled the 
bulk of the copy that ran in many small-town newspapers. The  Western A.P. 
operated in tight affiliation—some would say collusion—with Western  Union, 
which exercised a near-monopoly over the nation’s telegraph lines. Early  in 
the campaign, Smith decided that he would employ any means necessary to  
assure a victory for Hayes, who, at the time, was serving a third term as Ohio’
s  governor. In the run-up to the Republican National Convention, Smith  
orchestrated the release of damaging information about the Governor’s rivals.  
Then he had the Western A.P. blare Hayes’s campaign statements and mute  
Tilden’s. At one point, an unflattering piece about Hayes appeared in the  
Chicago Times, a Democratic paper. (The piece claimed that  Hayes, who had been 
a general in the Union Army, had accepted money from a  soldier to give to 
the man’s family, but had failed to pass it on when the  soldier died.) The 
A.P. flooded the wires with articles discrediting the  story. 
Once the votes had been counted, attention shifted to South  Carolina, 
Florida, and Louisiana—states where the results were disputed. Both  parties 
dispatched emissaries to the three states to try to influence the  Electoral 
College outcome. Telegrams sent by Tilden’s representatives were  passed on to 
Smith, courtesy of Western Union. Smith, in turn, shared the  contents of 
these dispatches with the Hayes forces. This proto-hack of the  Democrats’ 
private communications gave the Republicans an obvious edge.  Meanwhile, the 
A.P. sought and distributed legal opinions supporting Hayes.  (Outraged 
Tilden supporters took to calling it the “Hayesociated Press.”) As  Democrats 
watched what they considered to be the theft of the election, they  fell into 
a funk. 
“They are full of passion and want to do something desperate  but hardly 
know how to,” one observer noted. Two days before Hayes was  inaugurated, on 
March 5, 1877, the New York Sunappeared  with a black border on the front 
page. “These are days of humiliation, shame and  mourning for every patriotic 
American,” the paper’s editor wrote. 
History, Mark Twain is supposed to have said, doesn’t repeat  itself, but 
it does rhyme. Once again, the President of the United States is a  
Republican who lost the popular vote. Once again, he was abetted by shadowy  
agents 
who manipulated the news. And once again Democrats are in a  finger-pointing 
funk. 
Journalists, congressional committees, and a special counsel  are probing 
the details of what happened last fall. But two new books contend  that the 
large lines of the problem are already clear. As in the  eighteen-seventies, 
we are in the midst of a technological revolution that has  altered the flow 
of information. Now, as then, just a few companies have taken  control, and 
this concentration of power—which Americans have acquiesced to  without 
ever really intending to, simply by clicking away—is subverting our  democracy. 
 
Thirty years ago, almost no one used the Internet for  anything. Today, 
just about everybody uses it for everything. Even as the Web  has grown, 
however, it has narrowed. Google now controls nearly ninety per cent  of search 
advertising, Facebook almost eighty per cent of mobile social traffic,  and 
Amazon about seventy-five per cent of e-book sales. Such dominance, Jonathan  
Taplin argues, in “_Move Fast and Break Things: How Facebook,  Google, and 
Amazon Cornered Culture and Undermined Democracy_ 
(http://aax-us-east.amazon-adsystem.com/x/c/QgC3EqX6peh_A_vMNJlJxPkAAAFeCyqRswEAAAFKAcT5mec/https://www.
amazon.com/Move-Fast-Break-Things-Undermined/dp/0316275778/ref=as_at?linkCod
e=w50&tag=thneyo0f-20&imprToken=q8pl8m1OTb31oayo-8zw2g&slotNum=0) ” 
(Little,  Brown), is essentially monopolistic. In his account, the new 
monopolies 
are even  more powerful than the old ones, which tended to be limited to a 
single product  or service. Carnegie, Taplin suggests, would have been envious 
of the reach of  Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos. 
Taplin, who until recently directed the Annenberg Innovation  Lab, at the 
University of Southern California, started out as a tour manager. He  worked 
with Judy Collins, Bob Dylan, and the Band, and also with George  Harrison, 
on the Concert for Bangladesh. In “Move Fast and Break Things,” Taplin  
draws extensively on this experience to illustrate the damage, both deliberate  
and collateral, that Big Tech is wreaking. 
Consider _the case of Levon Helm_ 
(http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/levon-helms-midnight-rambles) . 
He was the drummer for the Band,  and, 
though he never got rich off his music, well into middle age he was  
supported by royalties. In 1999, he was diagnosed with throat cancer. That same 
 
year, Napster came along, followed by YouTube, in 2005. Helm’s royalty 
income,  which had run to about a hundred thousand  dollars a year, according 
to 
Taplin, dropped “to almost nothing.” When Helm  died, in 2012, millions of 
people were still listening to the Band’s music, but  hardly any of them were 
paying for it. (In the years between the founding of  Napster and Helm’s 
death, total consumer spending on recorded music in the  United States dropped 
by roughly seventy per cent.) Friends had to stage a  benefit for Helm’s 
widow so that she could hold on to their house. 
Google entered and more or less immediately took over the  music business 
when it acquired YouTube, in 2006, for $1.65 billion in stock. As  Taplin 
notes, just about “every single tune in the world is available on YouTube  as a 
simple audio file (most of them posted by users).” Many of these files are  
illegal, but to Google this is inconsequential. Under the Digital Media  
Copyright Act, signed into law by President Bill Clinton shortly after Google  
went live, Internet service providers aren’t liable for copyright 
infringement  as long as they “expeditiously” take down or block access to the 
material once  they’re notified of a problem. Musicians are constantly filing “
takedown”  notices—in just the first twelve weeks of last year, Google 
received such  notices for more than two hundred million links—but, often, 
after 
one link is  taken down, the song goes right back up at another one. In the 
fall of 2011,  legislation aimed at curbing online copyright infringement, 
the Stop Online  Piracy Act, was introduced. It had bipartisan support in 
Congress, and backing  from such disparate groups as the National District 
Attorneys Association, the  National League of Cities, the Association of 
Talent 
Agencies, and the  International Brotherhood of Teamsters. In January, 
2012, the bill seemed headed  toward passage, when Google _decided to flex its 
market-concentrated muscles_ 
(http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-internets-day-of-darkness) . 
In place  of its usual colorful logo, the 
company posted on its search page a black  rectangle along with the message “
Tell Congress: Please don’t censor the web!”  The resulting traffic 
overwhelmed congressional Web sites, and support for the  bill evaporated. 
(Senator 
Marco Rubio, of Florida, who had been one of the  bill’s co-sponsors, 
denounced it on Facebook.) 
Google itself doesn’t pirate music; it doesn’t have to. It’s  selling the 
traffic—and, just as significant, the data about the traffic. Like  the Koch 
brothers, Taplin observes, Google is “in the extraction industry.” Its  
business model is “to extract as much personal data from as many people in the 
 world at the lowest possible price and to resell that data to as many 
companies  as possible at the highest possible price.” And so Google profits 
from just  about everything: cat videos, beheadings, alt-right rants, the Band 
performing  “The Weight” at Woodstock, in 1969.
 
“I wasn’t always so skeptical,” Franklin Foer announces at  the start of “
_World Without Mind: The Existential Threat of  Big Tech_ 
(http://aax-us-east.amazon-adsystem.com/x/c/QgC3EqX6peh_A_vMNJlJxPkAAAFeCyqRswEAAAFKAcT5mec/ht
tps://www.amazon.com/World-Without-Mind-Existential-Threat/dp/1101981113/ref
=as_at?linkCode=w50&tag=thneyo0f-20&imprToken=q8pl8m1OTb31oayo-8zw2g&slotNum
=1) ” (Penguin Press). Franklin, the eldest of the three famous Foer  
brothers, is a journalist, and he began his career, in the mid-nineties, 
working  
for Slate, which had then just been founded by Microsoft. The experience, 
Foer  writes, was “exhilarating.” Later, he became the editor of The New  
Republic. The magazine was on the brink of ruin when, in 2012, it was  
purchased by Chris Hughes, a co-founder of Facebook, whose personal fortune was 
 
estimated at half a billion dollars. 
Foer saw Hughes as a “savior,” who could provide, in addition  to cash, “
an insider’s knowledge of social media” and “a millennial imprimatur.”  The 
two men set out to revitalize the magazine, hiring high-priced talent and  
redesigning the Web site. Foer recounts that he became so consumed with  
monitoring traffic to the magazine’s site, using a tool called Chartbeat, that  
he checked it even while standing at the urinal. 
The era of good feeling _didn’t last_ 
(http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/inside-collapse-new-republic) . In the 
fall of 2014, Foer heard that 
Hughes  had hired someone to replace him, and that this shadow editor was “
lunching  around New York offering jobs at The New  Republic.” Before Hughes 
had 
a chance to fire him, Foer quit, and most of  the magazine’s editorial 
staff left with him. “World Without Mind” is a  reflection on Foer’s 
experiences and on the larger forces reshaping American  arts and letters, or 
what’s 
nowadays often called “content.” 
“I hope this book doesn’t come across as fueled by anger, but  I don’t 
want to deny my anger either,” he writes. “The tech companies are  destroying 
something precious. . . . They have eroded the  integrity of institutions—
media, publishing—that supply the intellectual  material that provokes thought 
and guides democracy. Their most precious asset  is our most precious 
asset, our attention, and they have abused  it.”

 
Much of Foer’s anger, like Taplin’s, is directed at piracy.  “Once an 
underground, amateur pastime,” he writes, “the bootlegging of  intellectual 
property” has become “an accepted business practice.” He points to  the 
Huffington Post, since shortened to HuffPost, which rose to prominence  largely 
by 
aggregating—or, if you prefer, pilfering—content from publications  like 
the Times and  the Washington Post. Then there’s Google Books. Google_set out 
to scan every book in creation_ 
(http://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/what-ever-happened-to-google-books) 
 and make the volumes available online, 
 without bothering to consult the copyright holders. (The project has been  
hobbled by lawsuits.) Newspapers and magazines (including this one) have 
tried  to disrupt the disrupters by placing articles behind paywalls, but, 
Foer  contends, in the contest against Big Tech publishers can’t win; the 
lineup is  too lopsided. “When newspapers and magazines require subscriptions 
to 
access  their pieces, Google and Facebook tend to bury them,” he writes. “
Articles  protected by stringent paywalls almost never have the popularity 
that algorithms  reward with prominence.” 
Foer acknowledges that prominence and popularity have always  mattered in 
publishing. In every generation, the primary business of journalism  has been 
to stay in business. In the nineteen-eighties, Dick Stolley, the  founding 
editor of People, developed what might be thought of as an  algorithm for 
the pre-digital age. It was a formula for picking cover images,  and it ran as 
follows: Young is better than old. Pretty is better than ugly.  Rich is 
better than poor. Movies are better than music. Music is better than  
television. Television is better than sports. And anything is better than  
politics. 
But Stolley’s Law is to Chartbeat what a Boy Scout’s compass  is to G.P.S. 
It is now possible to determine not just which covers sell  magazines but 
which articles are getting the most traction, who’s e-mailing and  tweeting 
them, and how long individual readers are sticking with them before  clicking 
away. This sort of detailed information, combined with the pressure to  
generate traffic, has resulted in what Foer sees as a golden age of banality. 
He  cites the “memorable yet utterly forgettable example” of Cecil the lion. 
In  2015, Cecil was shot with an arrow outside Hwange National Park, in 
Zimbabwe, by  a dentist from Minnesota. For whatever reason, the killing went 
viral and,  according to Foer, “every news organization” (including, once 
again, this one)  rushed to get in on the story, “so it could scrape some 
traffic from it.” He  lists with evident scorn the titles of posts from Vox—“
Eating Chicken Is Morally  Worse Than Killing Cecil the Lion”—and The  
Atlantic’s Web site: “From  Cecil the Lion to Climate Change: A Perfect Storm 
of 
Outrage.” (In July, Cecil’s  son, Xanda, was shot, prompting another 
digital outpouring.) 
Donald Trump, Foer argues, represents “the culmination” of  this trend. In 
the lead-up to the campaign, Trump’s politics, such as they were,  
consisted of empty and outrageous claims. Although none deserved to be taken  
seriously, many had that coveted viral something. Trump’s utterances as a  
candidate were equally appalling, but on the Internet apparently nobody knows  
you’
re a demagogue. “Trump began as Cecil the Lion, and then ended up president  
of the United States,” Foer writes. 
 
Both Taplin and Foer begin their books with a discussion of  the early days 
of personal computers, when the Web was still a Pynchonesque  fantasy and 
lots of smart people believed that connecting the world’s PCs would  lead to 
a more peaceful, just, and groovy society. Both cite Stewart Brand, who,  
after hanging out with Ken Kesey, dropping a lot of acid, and editing “The 
Whole  Earth Catalog,” went on to create one of the first virtual networks, the 
Whole  Earth ’Lectronic Link, otherwise known as well. 
In an influential piece that appeared in Rolling  Stone in 1972, Brand  
prophesied that, when computers became widely available, everyone would become 
a  “computer bum” and “more empowered as individuals and co-operators.” 
This, he  further predicted, could enhance “the richness and rigor of 
spontaneous creation  and human interaction.” No longer would it be the editors 
at 
the Times and the Washington Post and the producers at CBS News who  decided 
what the public did (or didn’t) learn. No longer would the suits at the  
entertainment companies determine what the public did (or didn’t) hear. 
“The Internet was supposed to be a boon for artists,” Taplin  observes. “
It was supposed to eliminate the ‘gatekeepers’—the big studios and  record 
companies that decide which movies and music get widespread  distribution.” 
Silicon Valley, Foer writes, was supposed to be a liberating  force—“the 
disruptive agent that shatters the grip of the sclerotic,  self-perpetuating 
mediocrity that constitutes the American elite.” 
The Internet revolution has, indeed, sent heads rolling, as  legions of 
bookstore owners, music critics, and cirrhotic editors can attest.  But Brand’s 
dream, Taplin and Foer argue, has not been realized. Google, Amazon,  
Facebook, and Apple—Europeans refer to the group simply as gafa—didn’t 
eliminate 
the gatekeepers; they took their  place. Instead of becoming more 
egalitarian, the country has become less so: the  gap between America’s rich 
and poor 
grows ever wider. Meanwhile, politically,  the nation has lurched to the 
right. In Foer’s telling, it would be a lot easier  to fix an election these 
days than it was in 1876, and a lot harder for anyone  to know about it. All 
the Big Tech firms would have to do is tinker with some  algorithms. They 
have become, Foer writes, “the most imposing gatekeepers in  human history.” 
This is a simple, satisfying narrative, and it allows Taplin  and Foer to 
focus their ire on GAFAgazillionaires, like  Zuckerberg and Larry Page. But, 
as an account of the “unpresidented” world in  which we live, it seems to 
miss the point. Say what you will about Silicon  Valley, most of its major 
players backed Hillary Clinton. This is confirmed by  campaign-finance filings 
and, as it happens, by the Russian hack of Democratic  National Committee 
e-mails. “I hope you are well—thinking of all of you often  and following 
every move!” Facebook’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg,  wrote to 
Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, at one point. 
It is troubling that Facebook, Google, and Amazon have  managed to grab for 
themselves such a large share of online revenue while  relying on content 
created by others. Quite possibly, it is also  anti-competitive. Still, it 
seems a stretch to blame gafa for  the popularity of listicles or fake news. 
Last fall, some Times reporters went looking for the source  of a stream of 
largely fabricated pro-Trump stories that had run on a Web site  called 
Departed. They traced them to a twenty-two-year-old computer-science  student 
in Tbilisi named Beqa Latsabidze. He told the Times that he had begun the 
election season  by pumping out flattering stories about Hillary Clinton, but 
the site hadn’t  generated much interest. When he switched to pro-Trump 
nonsense, traffic had  soared, and so had the site’s revenues. “For me, this is 
all about income,”  Latsabidze said. Perhaps the real problem is not that 
Brand’s prophecy failed  but that it came true. A “computer bum” sitting in 
Tbilisi is now so “empowered”  as an individual that he can help turn an 
election halfway around the world. 
Either out of conviction or simply out of habit, the  gatekeepers of yore 
set a certain tone. They waved through news about state  budget deficits and 
arms-control talks, while impeding the flow of loony  conspiracy theories. 
Now Chartbeat allows everyone to see just how many (or,  more to the point, 
how few) readers there really are for that report on the  drought in South 
Sudan or that article on monopoly power and the Internet. And  so it follows 
that there will be fewer such reports and fewer such articles. The  Web is 
designed to give people what they want, which, for better or worse, is  also 
the function of democracy.
 
Post-Cecil, post-fact, and mid-Trump, is there anything to be  done? Taplin 
proposes a few fixes. To start, he wants the federal government to  treat 
companies like Google and Facebook as monopolies and regulate them  
accordingly. (Relying on similar thinking, regulators in the European Union  
recently 
slapped Google with a $2.7-billion fine.) 
Taplin notes that, in the late nineteen-forties, the U.S.  Department of 
Justice went after A.T. & T., the Google of its day, for  violating the 
Sherman Antitrust Act. The consent decree in the case, signed in  1956, 
compelled 
A.T. & T. to license all the patents owned by its  research arm, Bell Labs, 
for a small fee. (One of the technologies affected by  the decree was the 
transistor, which later proved essential to computers.)  Google, he argues, 
could be similarly compelled to license its thousands of  patents, including 
those for search algorithms, cell-phone operating systems,  self-driving 
cars, smart thermostats, advertising exchanges, and virtual-reality  platforms. 
“It would seem that such a licensing program would be totally  in line with 
Google’s stated ‘Don’t be evil’ corporate philosophy,” Taplin  writes. At 
the same time, he urges musicians and filmmakers to take matters into  
their own hands by establishing their own distribution networks, along the 
lines 
 of Magnum Photos, formed by Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and others 
in  1947. 
“What if artists ran a video and audio streaming site as a  nonprofit 
cooperative (perhaps employing the technology in some of those free  Google 
patents)?” he asks at one point. “I have no illusion that the existing  
business 
structures of cultural marketing will go away,” he observes at another.  “
But my hope is that we can build a parallel structure that will benefit all  
creators.” 
Foer prefers the model of artisanal cheesemakers. ( “World  Without Mind” 
apparently went to press before Amazon _announced its intention_ 
(http://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/what-amazons-purchase-of-whole-foods-really-
means)  to buy Whole Foods.) “The culture  industries need to present 
themselves as the organic alternative, a symbol of  status and aspiration,” he 
writes. “Subscriptions are the route away from the  aisles of clickbait.” 
Just after the election, he notes, the Times added more than a hundred thousand 
new  subscribers by marketing itself as a fake-news antidote. And, as an 
act of  personal resistance, he suggests picking up a book. “If the tech 
companies hope  to absorb the totality of human existence,” he writes, “then 
reading on paper is  one of the few slivers of life that they can’t fully 
integrate.” 
These remedies are all backward-looking. They take as a point  of reference 
a world that has vanished, or is about to. (If Amazon has its way,  even 
artisanal cheese will soon be delivered by drone.) Depending on how you  look 
at things, this is either a strange place for meditations about the future  
to end up or a predictable one. People who worry about the fate of democracy 
 still write (and read) books. Those who are determining it prefer  to tweet

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