November 05, 2005

The Impossibility of the Web

In a Financial Times commentary on the fifteenth anniversary of the first Web page, James Boyle argues that the Web emerged in a rare climate of open protocols, regulations, and copyright openness that has since vanished.

Why might we not create the web today? The web became hugely popular too quickly to control. The lawyers and policymakers and copyright holders were not there at the time of its conception. What would they have said, had they been? What would a web designed by the World Intellectual Property Organisation or the Disney Corporation have looked like? It would have looked more like pay-television, or Minitel, the French computer network. Beforehand, the logic of control always makes sense. “Allow anyone to connect to the network? Anyone to decide what content to put up? That is a recipe for piracy and pornography."

And of course it is. But it is also much, much more. The lawyers have learnt their lesson now. The regulation of technological development proceeds apace. When the next disruptive communications technology – the next worldwide web – is thought up, the lawyers and the logic of control will be much more evident. That is not a happy thought.

[via Slashdot]

Posted by johndanseven at November 5, 2005 10:24 AM