A great post from Clay Shirky, who needs to get back onto silk sometime. <g>

This adds some much-needed nuance to the public discourse. Speaking
for myself, I believe that Wikileaks is a symptom of some backpressure
from the collective unconscious - a move towards some form of
sousveillance [1]  and that we will see more such efforts [2].

Maybe this is the 21st century version of Gilmore's Law [3] ? I can
hope, can't I?

Udhay


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sousveillance
[2] As a start point, wikileaks now has ~800 mirror sites. See
http://wikileaks.ch/mirrors.html
[3] http://blog.futurestreetconsulting.com/?p=11

http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2010/12/wikileaks-and-the-long-haul/

Wikileaks and the Long Haul

Like a lot of people, I am conflicted about Wikileaks.

Citizens of a functioning democracy must be able to know what the
state is saying and doing in our name, to engage in what Pierre
Rosanvallon calls “counter-democracy”*, the democracy of citizens
distrusting rather than legitimizing the actions of the state.
Wikileaks plainly improves those abilities.

On the other hand, human systems can’t stand pure transparency. For
negotiation to work, people’s stated positions have to change, but
change is seen, almost universally, as weakness. People trying to come
to consensus must be able to privately voice opinions they would
publicly abjure, and may later abandon. Wikileaks plainly damages
those abilities. (If Aaron Bady’s analysis is correct, it is the
damage and not the oversight that Wikileaks is designed to create.*)

And so we have a tension between two requirements for democratic
statecraft, one that can’t be resolved, but can be brought to an
acceptable equilibrium. Indeed, like the virtues of equality vs.
liberty, or popular will vs. fundamental rights, it has to be brought
into such an equilibrium for democratic statecraft not to be wrecked
either by too much secrecy or too much transparency.

As Tom Slee puts it, “Your answer to ‘what data should the government
make public?’ depends not so much on what you think about data, but
what you think about the government.”* My personal view is that there
is too much secrecy in the current system, and that a corrective
towards transparency is a good idea. I don’t, however, believe in
total transparency, and even more importantly, I don’t think that
independent actors who are subject to no checks or balances is a good
idea in the long haul.

If the long haul were all there was, Wikileaks would be an obviously
bad thing. The practical history of politics, however, suggests that
the periodic appearance of such unconstrained actors in the short haul
is essential to increased democratization, not just of politics but of
thought.

We celebrate the printers of 16th century Amsterdam for making it
impossible for the Catholic Church to constrain the output of the
printing press to Church-approved books*, a challenge that helped
usher in, among other things, the decentralization of scientific
inquiry and the spread of politically seditious writings advocating
democracy.

This intellectual and political victory didn’t, however, mean that the
printing press was then free of all constraints. Over time, a set of
legal limitations around printing rose up, including restrictions on
libel, the publication of trade secrets, and sedition. I don’t agree
with all of these laws, but they were at least produced by some legal
process.

Unlike the United States’ current pursuit of Wikileaks.*

I am conflicted about the right balance between the visibility
required for counter-democracy and the need for private speech among
international actors. Here’s what I’m not conflicted about: When
authorities can’t get what they want by working within the law, the
right answer is not to work outside the law. The right answer is that
they can’t get what they want.

The Unites States is — or should be — subject to the rule of law,
which makes the extra-judicial pursuit of Wikileaks especially
nauseating. (Calls for Julian’s assassination are even more
nauseating.) It may be that what Julian has done is a crime. (I know
him casually, but not well enough to vouch for his motivations, nor am
I a lawyer.) In that case, the right answer is to bring the case to a
trial.

IIn the US, however, the government has a “heavy burden” for engaging
in prior restraint of even secret documents, an established principle
since New York Times Co. vs. The United States*, when the Times
published the Pentagon Papers. If we want a different answer for
Wikileaks, we need a different legal framework first.

Though I don’t like Senator Joseph Lieberman’s proposed SHIELD law
(Securing Human Intelligence and Enforcing Lawful Dissemination*), I
do like the fact that it is a law, and not an extra-legal avenue (of
which Senator Lieberman is also guilty.*) I also like the fact that
the SHIELD Law makes it clear what’s at stake: the law proposes new
restraints on publishers, and would apply to the New York Times and
The Guardian as it well as to Wikileaks. (As Matthew Ingram points
out, “Like it or not, Wikileaks is a media entity.”*) SHIELD amounts
to an attempt to reverse parts of New York Times Co. vs. The United
States.

I don’t think such a law should pass. I think the current laws, which
criminalize the leaking of secrets but not the publishing of leaks,
strike the right balance. However, as a citizen of a democracy, I’m
willing to be voted down, and I’m willing to see other democratically
proposed restrictions on Wikileaks put in place. It may even be that
whatever checks and balances do get put in place by the democratic
process make anything like Wikileaks impossible to sustain in the
future.

The key, though, is that democracies have a process for creating such
restrictions, and as a citizen it sickens me to see the US trying to
take shortcuts. The leaders of Myanmar and Belarus, or Thailand and
Russia, can now rightly say to us “You went after Wikileaks’ domain
name, their hosting provider, and even denied your citizens the
ability to register protest through donations, all without a warrant
and all targeting overseas entities, simply because you decided you
don’t like the site. If that’s the way governments get to behave, we
can live with that.”

Over the long haul, we will need new checks and balances for newly
increased transparency — Wikileaks shouldn’t be able to operate as a
law unto itself anymore than the US should be able to. In the short
haul, though, Wikileaks is our Amsterdam. Whatever restrictions we
eventually end up enacting, we need to keep Wikileaks alive today,
while we work through the process democracies always go through to
react to change. If it’s OK for a democracy to just decide to run
someone off the internet for doing something they wouldn’t prosecute a
newspaper for doing, the idea of an internet that further democratizes
the public sphere will have taken a mortal blow.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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