http://www.cafebabel.co.uk/article/31676/internet-anarchy-europe-pirate-bay-
eircom-cinema.html
 
Internet: 'the great anarchist event' no longer ours to 'control'
Analysis
by
<http://www.cafebabel.fr/profile/display/b088b416-8a43-4060-a66b-617206237fb
1/> Tim Mac an Airchinnigh
27/10/09

When Irish telecommunications company Eircom blocked customer access to the
Pirate Bay in September, you could almost hear a faint, sardonic chuckle
erupt from internet users all over the world. As Britain and France impose
their own legislation to cut off internet access for filesharing offenders,
the EU parliament and commission hold talks to formalise their positions on
4 November.

Eircom's feeble assertions of communications control over the world's most
popular file-sharing website only highlights the fact that now, more than
ever, service providers are no longer in the driving seat when it comes to
the web. 'Waste of time,' declares one commentator on Irish student
directory Studentsmart.ie. 'Go to x.com and hit the button 'bypass eircom
block'. Moohahahha you're in. They're only going to push it underground,
there are so many damn ways to share files in reality that they would need
to shut the internet to stop it.'

 <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hONxklEYorE>
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hONxklEYorE.  Get used to seeing Youtube
videos like this one, which appeared onsite on the same day as Eircom
blocked its customer Pirate Bay access | (Video: Ccheeseylichous/ Youtube)

'Why pay if I can get it for free?'

Yet, the resounding sense of anarchy inherent in internet file sharing is
not simply about running circles around obdurately cash-hungry corporations.
Not only does the culture of free and uninterrupted file-exchange
interrogate the hegemony of private property, it has propagated an
international community of personal resources wherein money has simply been
removed from the equation. For many it has brought home the question of why
anyone was content to let media resources exist at the whim of multinational
corporations in the first place. As humiliated record and film companies
consistently fail to give a convincing argument as to why file-sharing is a
bad thing (inventive variations on 'we won't get to rip you off anymore' not
really cutting the mustard), a whole generation is now looking on digital
material less as something you 'own', than something in which you 'partake'.

'An unacceptable danger to free society'

While Leo Tolstoy was already preaching against copyright law over a century
ago, today anti-copyright lobby groups are spawning at an unprecented rate.
The French Association des Audionautes was formed in 2004 to provide legal
aid to those accused of copyright infringement. More and more digital
publications are making use of the 'Copyleft' licensing code, which protects
the freedom of the work to be reproduced and copied rather than restricting
it. Squatting movements in Berlin, Helsinki and Copenhagen are actively
participating in movements such as Pirate Cinema, whilst online
organisations like The Free Software Foundation (FSF) aim to liberate all
software from the idea of property at all. 'The corporations behind
proprietary software will often spy on your activities and restrict you from
sharing with others,' reads the FSF website. 'And because our computers
control much of our personal information and daily activities, proprietary
software represents an unacceptable danger to a free society.'


Pandora's box


One could say that the distribution of digital media on the internet has
opened something of a Pandora's box; the efforts of European governments to
clamp down on file-sharing have only seen an exponential expansion of the
phenomenon. Indeed, according to the Swedish daily Sydsvenskan, the majority
of this year's Swedish candidates for the EU parliament feel that Europe has
already gone too far with the issue. 'The EU laws are founded on a lobbying
campaign from Hollywood with blind faith in the total surveillance of the
internet,' green party member Carl Schlyter tells Anglophone newspaper The
Local, 'which is neither possible nor desirable.'


Elsewhere, a tactic of laborious social control is being favoured, in order
to keep the ideas of property and the internet from becoming mutually
exclusive. 'I do not accept the argument that there should be anarchy on the
internet,' pronounced UK culture secretary Ben Bradshaw on 20 October, 'that
everyone should be able to access what they like free of charge.' Yet, as
internet law specialist Alex Brown explains, spouting such high-blown
rhetoric isn't going to solve the problem any faster: 'What will stop people
is a technical solution,' he tells The Guardian. 'But we do not have one.'
On the recent and controversial EU directive IPRED (international property
rights enforcement directive), the average file-sharer doesn't seem
particularly phased. One comment on The Local's website exemplifies the
attitude of the fledgling file-sharing community, matching traditional
authority with unstoppable innovation. 'As wrong as this law is, technology
is never ending,' it reads, 'and there are many ways around the law.'
William Gibson, the American-Canadian science fiction author and first
person to use the term 'cyberspace', succinctly predicted this current
predicament back in 1984: 'The internet is strange,' he said. 'It doesn't
make any money, it is transnational and beyond anyone's control. It is the
great anarchist event.' Eric Schmidt, CEO of google, echoed his words: 'the
internet is the first thing that humanity has built that humanity doesn't
understand, the largest experiment in anarchy that we have ever had.' Fancy
bypassing the Chinese internet firewall? A quick google search should
provide all the tools you need.

Copyright C 2007 Babel International

----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness."
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace."
Aboneaza-te la  <mailto:[email protected]> ngo_list: o
alternativa moderata (un pic) la [ngolist]
Please consider the environment - do you really need to print this email?

Raspunde prin e-mail lui