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Pretty much every other communication medium has somebody in control.
Telephone systems are run by telephone companies and regulated by governments;
postal services are a mixture of national monopolies and enterprise, usually
regulated by governments; newspapers, TV and radio are run by corporations
and regulated by - guess who? - governments yet again.
But not the
Internet.
Actually
that's not entirely true. Corporations and governments do have a say about
the way the Internet is run. What sets it apart is the small degree of
control they're able to exercise, and the fact that so many corporations
and governments are involved that none of them individually has much power.
Corporate
Bull
There are thousands of companies involved, yet none has succeeded in getting
any kind of vertical grip on the Internet as a whole, with a controlling
interest at all the different levels: browsers, operating systems, hardware,
telecoms, ISPs, servers, hosting, site design software and finally site
content.
Maybe Microsoft
comes closest, but losing its anti-trust case is a significant setback.
In any case, it's still weak in many areas, especially telecoms and hardware,
though it continues to buy into companies that can help in these departments.
Also it's not a strong ISP, it isn't winning its battles over server software
and site design software, and isn't the word on everybody's lips when
it comes to site content. Definitely not a fully-fledged vertically-integrated
irresistible force.
AOL is another
huge player, but only as an ISP and content provider. Hardware and software
are out of its control. UUNet is massive on the telecoms side and as an
ISP, but in no other areas. Cisco makes almost all the routers used on
the Internet, and its other business areas are, er
yes, exactly.
Government
How about governments? Do any nations exert great influence? A few have
gone for the iron fist approach. Examples are China, Burma, Indonesia
and Australia, where Internet access is tightly controlled and only people
with sufficient technical knowledge are able to break the law and use
the Internet as they want.
Elsewhere,
there have been a lot of words spoken but not much action. The UK has
forced all ISPs to route a bugging tap to its Intelligence Services, allowing
easy access to every Internet message transmitted through the UK. It's
exerting its control in a sneaky manner.
Naturally
the major national player is the US Government. But by happy coincidence
it's the government least likely to kill a goose that lays golden eggs
just because the goose gets uppity and bites it in the butt from time
to time. While the Internet continues to power the US economy and keep
the voters rich and happy, the US government won't try to shackle it.
If it fails
to drive the US economy, all bets are off. The weak points of the Internet
are domain registration and DNS (as any hacker will tell you) and the
US government is very close to these. Though fortunately the Internet
has probably grown up enough to resist American interference. There are
now more non-American Internet users (185m) than American users (130m)
in the world.
Everybody
else
As in all great balanced power structures, there are lots of other power-mongers
too, all with very little control but as a group counting for plenty in
the grand scheme of things.
First there's
the W3C, working hard to establish standards and help the Web in whichever
direction it goes. It has to be the most powerful non-corporate and non-governmental
body on the Internet.
Then there's
the Internet Engineering Task Force, and a dozen other worthy bodies who
do far more than keep the wheels greased on the Internet express train
- they've way out in front clearing trees and checking the ground isn't
too boggy to lay fresh tracks. Hats off to them.
But actually
all these identifiable bodies and companies and nation states are way
outnumbered by the last group of people who have a big say in controlling
the Internet. I'm talking here about network managers.
They're the
people who decide in practice, on a day to day level, how things are run.
They decide whose offensive site gets flamed off the server, whose abusive
emails disappear into the ether never to be seen again, whose DNS entries
are restored when the system mysteriously loses them, who is given that
extra level of support that keeps their site going, and all kinds of small
but desperately important things that are somehow similar to the humdrum
but crucial things that mothers do in the non-technical world.
There are
hundreds of thousands of networks all around the world connected to the
Internet, and hundreds of thousands of matching network managers doing
that technical mother thing right now.
A lot of
power lies in the hands of this barely identifiable group of geeks. In
the past the world was run by military adventurers, by royalty, by great
leaders of faiths, by countries, by landed families. But now we're in
the odd position of passing a large slice of the world's power to an amorphous
collection of technical people.
These people
are rational, highly-educated, scientific, international, low-profile
and manage to function as a group through mutual consent without big formal
structures or lots of friction. It can't possibly last. Despots, meglomaniacs
and corporate sharks must be getting ready to move in soon.
But for now,
at least, it's true. The Internet is controlled by a vast army of techies,
along with a range of companies without much power and governments that
generally prefer to leave it alone.
"Who
controls the Internet?"
Everybody.
Yet everybody
to such an equal extent that nobody is in control.
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