Return to Video

F2C2012: Eben Moglen keynote - "Innovation under Austerity"

  • 0:01 - 0:07
    [David Isenberg] I've asked Doc Searls and Isaac Wilder to come up and sit with Eben and continue the discussion.
  • 0:07 - 0:09
    Eben Moglen. Thank You. [Applause]
  • 0:11 - 0:16
    [Eben Moglen] Thank you. it's a pleasure to be here, and to see so many friends.
  • 0:16 - 0:21
    I'm very grateful to David for the invitation, it's a privilege to be here.
  • 0:21 - 0:25
    I'm going to talk of mostly
  • 0:25 - 0:34
    about a subject almost as geeky as the stuff we all talk about all the time,namely political economy.
  • 0:34 - 0:41
    I'm going to try and make it less snooze-worthy than it sometimes seems to be,
  • 0:42 - 0:50
    but you'll forgive me I'm sure for starting fairly far from OpenSSL,
  • 0:50 - 0:52
    we'll get closer as time goes by.
  • 0:54 - 0:59
    The developed economies around the world, all of them now,
  • 0:59 - 1:07
    are beginning to experience a fundamentally similar and very depressing condition.
  • 1:07 - 1:20
    They are required to impose austerity because levels of private debt have gummed up the works
  • 1:20 - 1:27
    and the determination of the owners of capital to take vast risks with other peoples money
  • 1:27 - 1:32
    have worked out extremely badly for the last half decade.
  • 1:32 - 1:42
    And so austerity is the inevitable and politically damaging position for all the governments in the developed world,
  • 1:42 - 1:47
    and some of those governments have begun to slip into a death spiral,
  • 1:47 - 1:55
    in which the need to impose austerity and reduce public investment and welfare support for the young
  • 1:55 - 2:04
    is harming economic growth, which prevents the austerity from having its desirable consequences.
  • 2:04 - 2:09
    Instead of bad asset values being worked off and growth resuming,
  • 2:09 - 2:15
    we are watching as the third largest economy in the world, the European Union,
  • 2:15 - 2:23
    finds itself at the very verge of a currency collapse and a lost generation,
  • 2:23 - 2:30
    which would have a profoundly depressing effects on the entire global economy.
  • 2:30 - 2:32
    For the policy-makers
  • 2:32 - 2:38
    --I recognize that few of them are here, they have of course, better things to do than to listen to us--
  • 2:39 - 2:46
    for the policy-makers in other words, an overwhelming problem is now at hand,
  • 2:46 - 2:51
    how do we have innovation and economic growth under austerity?
  • 2:53 - 2:56
    They do not know the answer to this question
  • 2:56 - 3:02
    and it is becoming so urgent that it is beginning to deteriorate their political control.
  • 3:03 - 3:09
    Marginal parties in several very highly developed and thoughtful societies
  • 3:09 - 3:12
    are beginning to attract substantial numbers of votes,
  • 3:12 - 3:19
    and threatening the very stability of the economic planners' capacity to solve,
  • 3:19 - 3:25
    or to attempt to solve, the problem of innovation under austerity.
  • 3:25 - 3:27
    This is not good news for anybody.
  • 3:28 - 3:30
    This is not good for anybody.
  • 3:30 - 3:33
    We have no opportunity to cheer for this outcome,
  • 3:33 - 3:40
    which is largely the result of incompetence in those people who claim to be worth all that money because they're so smart,
  • 3:41 - 3:48
    it is partly the result of the political cowardice that gave them too much room to swing their cats.
  • 3:49 - 3:56
    It is not that we are glad to see this happen, but there is a silver lining to the cloud.
  • 3:58 - 4:03
    There are very few people in the world who know how to have innovation under austerity.
  • 4:03 - 4:05
    We are they.
  • 4:06 - 4:11
    We have produced innovation under austerity for the last generation
  • 4:11 - 4:13
    and not only did we produce pretty good innovation
  • 4:13 - 4:19
    we've produced innovation that all the other smart rich people took most of the credit for.
  • 4:20 - 4:22
    Most of the growth that occurred
  • 4:22 - 4:28
    during this wild and wacky period in which they took other people's money and went to the racetrack with it,
  • 4:28 - 4:31
    was with innovation we produced for them.
  • 4:32 - 4:39
    So now, despite the really bad circumstances which we too can deplore,
  • 4:39 - 4:43
    because the unemployment is my graduating law students, your children,
  • 4:43 - 4:52
    and all those other young people whose lives are being harmed for good by current bad economic circumstances.
  • 4:53 - 4:59
    The people beginning their careers now will suffer substantial wage losses throughout their lifetimes.
  • 5:00 - 5:04
    Their children will get a less good start in life because of what is happening now,
  • 5:04 - 5:06
    we cannot be pleased about this.
  • 5:08 - 5:11
    But we have a very substantial political opportunity.
  • 5:13 - 5:15
    Because we do have the answer
  • 5:15 - 5:22
    to the most important question pushing all the policy-makers in the developed world right now.
  • 5:24 - 5:29
    That means we have something very important to say and I came here this morning primarily
  • 5:29 - 5:34
    to begin the discussion about precisely how we should say it.
  • 5:36 - 5:41
    And I want to present a working first draft of our argument,
  • 5:42 - 5:46
    I say "our" because I look around the room and I see it's us here this morning.
  • 5:47 - 5:53
    Our argument, about what to do with the quandary the world is in.
  • 5:55 - 5:59
    Innovation under austerity is not produced
  • 6:00 - 6:06
    by collecting lots of money and paying it to innovation intermediaries.
  • 6:07 - 6:12
    One of the most important aspects of 21st century political economy
  • 6:13 - 6:19
    is that the process we call disintermediation,
  • 6:19 - 6:27
    when we're begin jargony about it, is ruthless, consistent, and relentless.
  • 6:28 - 6:30
    Television is melting.
  • 6:31 - 6:33
    I don't need to tell you that, you know already.
  • 6:33 - 6:39
    Nobody will ever try to create a commercial encyclopedia again.
  • 6:41 - 6:49
    Amazon's lousy little I-will-let-you-read-some-books-unless-I-decide-to-take-them-back machine
  • 6:50 - 6:58
    is transforming publishing by eliminating the selective power of the book publishers,
  • 6:58 - 7:07
    much as Mr. Jobs almost destroyed the entire global music industry under the pretense of saving it.
  • 7:08 - 7:14
    A task his ghost is already performing for the magazine publishers as you can see.
  • 7:15 - 7:21
    Disintermediation, the movement of power out of the middle of the net,
  • 7:21 - 7:26
    is a crucial fact about 21st century political economy.
  • 7:27 - 7:29
    It proves itself all the time.
  • 7:30 - 7:37
    Somebody's going to win a Nobel Prize in economics for describing in formal terms the nature of disintermediation.
  • 7:38 - 7:46
    The intermediaries who did well during the past 10 years, are limited to two sets:
  • 7:46 - 7:54
    health insurers in the United States owing to political pathology, and the financial industry.
  • 7:55 - 8:01
    Health insurers in the United States may be able to capitalize on the continuing political pathology
  • 8:01 - 8:06
    to remain failing and expensive intermediaries for a while longer.
  • 8:07 - 8:15
    But the financial industry crapped in it's own nest and is shrinking now and will continue for some time to do so.
  • 8:17 - 8:25
    The consequence of which is that throughout the economic system, as the policy-maker observes it,
  • 8:25 - 8:31
    the reality that disintermediation happens and you can't stop it
  • 8:32 - 8:37
    becomes a guiding light in the formation of national industrial policy.
  • 8:38 - 8:42
    So we need to say it's true about innovation also.
  • 8:43 - 8:50
    The greatest technological innovation of the late 20th century is the thing we now call the World Wide Web.
  • 8:51 - 8:55
    An invention less than 8000 days old.
  • 8:58 - 9:06
    That invention is already transforming human society more rapidly than anything since the adoption of writing.
  • 9:08 - 9:10
    We will see more of it.
  • 9:11 - 9:18
    The nature of that process, that innovation, both fuels disintermediation,
  • 9:19 - 9:28
    by allowing all sorts of human contacts to occur without intermediaries, buyers, sellers, agents, and controllers.
  • 9:28 - 9:36
    And poses a platform in which a war over the depth and power of social control goes on,
  • 9:36 - 9:38
    a subject I'll come back to in a few minutes.
  • 9:39 - 9:46
    For now what I want to call attention to is the crucial fact that the World Wide Web is itself
  • 9:46 - 9:49
    a result of disintermediated innovation.
  • 9:50 - 9:55
    What Tim first did at CERN was not the Web as we know it now,
  • 9:56 - 10:04
    the Web as we know it now was made by the disintermediated innovation of an enormous number of individual people.
  • 10:05 - 10:12
    I look back on what I wrote about the future of personal homepages in 1995,
  • 10:12 - 10:18
    and I see pretty much what I thought then would happen happening,
  • 10:18 - 10:25
    I said then those few personal homepages are grass seed and a prairie is going to grow, and so it did.
  • 10:27 - 10:31
    Of course, like all other innovation there were unintended consequences.
  • 10:32 - 10:36
    The browser made the Web very easy to read.
  • 10:38 - 10:42
    Though we built Apache, though we built the browsers,
  • 10:42 - 10:47
    though we built enormous numbers of things on top of Apache and the browsers,
  • 10:48 - 10:51
    we did not make the Web easy to write.
  • 10:53 - 10:59
    So a little thug in a hooded sweatshirt made the Web easy to write,
  • 11:00 - 11:03
    and created a man in the middle attack on human civilization,
  • 11:03 - 11:05
    [Little Laughs]
  • 11:05 - 11:11
    which is unrolling now to an enormous music of social harm.
  • 11:13 - 11:19
    But that's the intermediary innovation that we should be concerned about.
  • 11:22 - 11:27
    We made everything possible including, regrettably, PHP,
  • 11:28 - 11:33
    and then intermediaries for innovation turned it into the horror that is Facebook.
  • 11:36 - 11:41
    This will not turn out, as we can already see from the stock market result,
  • 11:41 - 11:45
    to be a particularly favourable form of social innovation.
  • 11:45 - 11:48
    It's going to enrich a few people.
  • 11:48 - 11:50
    The government of Abu Dhabi,
  • 11:51 - 11:54
    a Russian thug with a billion dollars already,
  • 11:54 - 11:59
    a guy who can't wait to change his citizenship so he doesn't have to pay taxes to support the public schools,
  • 12:00 - 12:04
    and a few other relics of 20th century misbehavior.
  • 12:08 - 12:11
    But the reality of the story underneath is,
  • 12:12 - 12:17
    if we'd had a little bit more disintermediated innovation,
  • 12:18 - 12:21
    if we had made running your own web-server very easy,
  • 12:22 - 12:27
    if we had explained to people from the very beginning how important the logs are,
  • 12:28 - 12:31
    and why you shouldn't let other people keep them for you,
  • 12:33 - 12:36
    we would be in a rather different state right now.
  • 12:37 - 12:40
    The next Facebook should never happen.
  • 12:41 - 12:48
    It's intermediated innovation serving the needs of financiers, not serving the needs of people.
  • 12:49 - 12:52
    Which is not say that social networking shouldn't happen,
  • 12:52 - 12:56
    it shouldn't happen with a man in the middle attack built into it.
  • 12:56 - 13:02
    Everybody in this room knows that, the question is how do we teach everybody else.
  • 13:04 - 13:09
    But as important as I consider everybody else to be right now, I want to talk about the policy-makers:
  • 13:09 - 13:12
    how do we explain to them?
  • 13:13 - 13:17
    And here we begin to divide the conversation into two important parts.
  • 13:18 - 13:23
    One, what do we know about how to achieve innovation under austerity?
  • 13:24 - 13:29
    Two, what prevents governments from agreeing with us about that?
  • 13:30 - 13:36
    So let me present first my first draft of the positive case for innovation under austerity,
  • 13:36 - 13:39
    it's called "We Made The Cloud".
  • 13:41 - 13:43
    Everybody understands this in this room too.
  • 13:44 - 13:50
    The very point about what's happening to information technology in the world right now,
  • 13:50 - 13:55
    has to do with scaling up our late 20th century work.
  • 13:56 - 14:06
    We created the idea that we could share operating systems and all the rest of the commoditizable stack on top of them.
  • 14:07 - 14:12
    We did this using the curiosity of young people.
  • 14:13 - 14:16
    That was the fuel, not venture capital.
  • 14:17 - 14:24
    We had been at it for 15 years, and our stuff was already running everywhere,
  • 14:24 - 14:33
    before venture capital or even industrial capital raised by IT giants came towards us.
  • 14:34 - 14:37
    It came towards us not because innovation needed to happen,
  • 14:38 - 14:40
    but because innovation had already happened,
  • 14:40 - 14:43
    and they needed to monetize it.
  • 14:43 - 14:48
    That was an extremely positive outcome, I have nothing bad to say about that.
  • 14:48 - 14:56
    But the nature of that outcome, indeed the history as we lived it and as other can now study it,
  • 14:56 - 15:00
    will show how innovation under austerity occurred.
  • 15:02 - 15:07
    It's all very well to say that it happened because we harnessed the curiosity of young people,
  • 15:07 - 15:09
    that's historically correct.
  • 15:10 - 15:12
    But there's more than that to say.
  • 15:12 - 15:18
    What we need to say is that that curiosity of young people could be harnessed
  • 15:18 - 15:25
    because all of the computing devices in ordinary day to day use were hackable.
  • 15:26 - 15:31
    And so young people could actually hack on what everybody used.
  • 15:33 - 15:37
    That made it possible for innovation to occur,
  • 15:37 - 15:44
    where it can occur, without friction, which is at the bottom of the pyramid of capital.
  • 15:46 - 15:53
    This is happening now elsewhere in the world as it happened in the United States in the 1980s.
  • 15:53 - 15:58
    Hundreds of thousands of young people around the world hacking on laptops.
  • 16:00 - 16:02
    Hacking on servers.
  • 16:03 - 16:10
    Hacking on general purpose hardware available to allow them to scratch their individual itches,
  • 16:11 - 16:16
    technical, social, career, and just plain ludic itches.
  • 16:17 - 16:20
    "I wanna do this it would be neat."
  • 16:21 - 16:27
    Which is the primary source of the innovation which drove all
  • 16:28 - 16:36
    of the world's great economic expansion in the last 10 years.All of it.
  • 16:36 - 16:39
    Trillions of dollars of electronic commerce.
  • 16:40 - 16:45
    Those of you old enough to remember when fighting Public Key Encryption tooth and nail,
  • 16:46 - 16:48
    was the United States government's policy
  • 16:49 - 16:52
    will remember how hard they fought,
  • 16:52 - 16:59
    to prohibit 3.8 trillion dollars worth of electronic commerce from coming into existence in the world.
  • 17:00 - 17:07
    We were (supposedly) proponents of nuclear terrorism and pedophilia in the early 1990s,
  • 17:07 - 17:11
    and all the money that they earned
  • 17:11 - 17:17
    in campaign donations and private equity profits and all the rest of it,
  • 17:17 - 17:21
    is owing to the globalization of commerce we made possible,
  • 17:21 - 17:27
    with the technology they wanted to send our clients to jail for making.
  • 17:28 - 17:34
    That demonstrates neatly I think, to the next generation of policy-makers
  • 17:34 - 17:38
    how thoroughly their adherence to the received wisdom
  • 17:38 - 17:44
    is likely to contribute to the death spiral they now fear they're going to get into.
  • 17:44 - 17:51
    And it should embolden us to point out once again that the way innovation really happens
  • 17:52 - 17:56
    is that you provide young people with opportunities to create
  • 17:56 - 18:03
    on an infrastructure which allows them to hack the real world, and share the results.
  • 18:05 - 18:10
    When Richard Stallman wrote the call at the university in Suffolk??? for the universal encyclopedia,
  • 18:11 - 18:15
    when he and Jimmy Wales and I were all much younger than we are now,
  • 18:15 - 18:17
    it was (considered) a frivolous idea.
  • 18:18 - 18:24
    It has now transformed the life of every literate person in the world.
  • 18:26 - 18:27
    And it will continue to do so.
  • 18:29 - 18:34
    The nature of the innovation established by Creative Commons,
  • 18:34 - 18:36
    by the Free Software Movement,
  • 18:37 - 18:38
    by Free Culture,
  • 18:39 - 18:42
    which is reflected in the Web in the Wikipedia,
  • 18:42 - 18:46
    in all the Free Software operating systems now running everything,
  • 18:48 - 18:54
    even the insides of all those locked-down vampiric Apple things I see around the room.
  • 18:55 - 19:01
    All of that innovation comes from the simple process of letting the kids play and getting out of the way.
  • 19:03 - 19:10
    Which, as you are aware, we are working as hard as we can to prevent now completely.
  • 19:11 - 19:17
    Increasingly, all around the world the actual computing artifacts of daily life
  • 19:17 - 19:22
    for human individual beings are being made so you can't hack them.
  • 19:23 - 19:30
    The computer science laboratory in every twelve year old's pocket is being locked-down.
  • 19:31 - 19:38
    When we went through the anti-lockdown phase of the GPL 3 negotiations in the middle of last decade,
  • 19:39 - 19:45
    it was somehow believed that the primary purpose for which Mr. Stallman and I were
  • 19:46 - 19:54
    engaged in pressing everybody against lock-down had something to do with bootlegging movies.
  • 19:55 - 19:59
    And we kept saying, this is not the Free Movie Foundation.
  • 20:00 - 20:01
    We don't care about that.
  • 20:02 - 20:07
    We care about protecting people's right to hack what they own.
  • 20:08 - 20:16
    And the reason we care about it is, that if you prevent people from hacking on what they own themselves,
  • 20:16 - 20:22
    you will destroy the engine of innovation from which everybody is profiting.
  • 20:24 - 20:26
    That's still true.
  • 20:27 - 20:34
    And it is more important now precisely because very few people thought we were right then,
  • 20:35 - 20:39
    and didn't exert themselves to support that point of view,
  • 20:40 - 20:49
    and now you have Microsoft saying we won't allow third-party browsers on ARM-based Windows RT devices.
  • 20:49 - 20:51
    And you have the ghost of Mr. Jobs
  • 20:51 - 20:58
    trying to figure out how to prevent even a free tool chain from existing in relation to iOS,
  • 20:59 - 21:04
    and you have a world in which increasingly the goal of the network operators
  • 21:04 - 21:12
    is to attach every young human being to a proprietary network platform with closed terminal equipment
  • 21:12 - 21:18
    that she can't learn from, can't study, can't understand, can't whet her teeth on,
  • 21:18 - 21:26
    can't do anything with except send text messages that cost a million times more than they ought to.
  • 21:29 - 21:35
    And most of the so-called innovation in the world, in our sector,
  • 21:35 - 21:42
    now goes into creating IT for network operators that improves no technology for users.
  • 21:43 - 21:47
    Telecomms innovation in the world has basically ceased.
  • 21:50 - 22:00
    And it will not revive so long as it is impossible to harness the forms of innovation that really work under austerity.
  • 22:02 - 22:06
    This has a second-order consequence of enormous importance.
  • 22:06 - 22:11
    Innovation under austerity occurs in the first-order
  • 22:11 - 22:20
    because the curiosity of young people is harnessed to the improvement of the actual circumstances of daily life.
  • 22:20 - 22:25
    The second-order consequence is (that) populations becomes more educated.
  • 22:29 - 22:34
    Disintermediation is beginning to come to higher education in the United States,
  • 22:34 - 22:37
    which means it is beginning to come to higher education around the world.
  • 22:38 - 22:40
    We currently have two models.
  • 22:41 - 22:49
    Coursera, is essentially the googlization of higher education, spun-off from Stanford as a for-profit entity,
  • 22:49 - 22:54
    using closed software and proprietary educational resources.
  • 22:55 - 23:02
    MITx, which has now edX through the formation of the coalition with Harvard University,
  • 23:02 - 23:05
    is essentially the free world answer.
  • 23:06 - 23:10
    Similar online scalable curriculum for higher education
  • 23:10 - 23:14
    delivered over Free Software using free education resources.
  • 23:14 - 23:19
    We have an enormous stake in the outcome of that competition.
  • 23:20 - 23:25
    And it behooves all of us to put as much of our energy as we can
  • 23:26 - 23:34
    behind the solutions which depend upon free courseware everybody can use, modify and redistribute,
  • 23:34 - 23:39
    and educational materials based on the same political economy.
  • 23:41 - 23:45
    Every society currently trying to reclaim innovation
  • 23:46 - 23:53
    for the purpose of restarting economic growth under conditions of austerity needs more education,
  • 23:54 - 23:57
    deliverable more widely at lower cost,
  • 23:57 - 24:04
    which shapes young minds more effectively to create new value in their societies.
  • 24:06 - 24:13
    This will not be accomplished without precisely the forms of social learning we pioneered.
  • 24:15 - 24:21
    We said from the beginning that Free Software is the world's most advanced technical educational system.
  • 24:22 - 24:30
    It allows anybody anywhere on earth, to get to the state of art in anything computers can be made to do,
  • 24:30 - 24:38
    by reading what is fully available and by experimenting with it, and sharing the consequences freely.
  • 24:39 - 24:41
    True computer science.
  • 24:42 - 24:50
    Experimentation, hypothesis formation, more experimentation, more knowledge for the human race.
  • 24:51 - 24:55
    We needed to expand that into other areas of culture,
  • 24:55 - 25:02
    and great heroes like Jimmy Wales and Larry Lessig laid out infrastructure for that to occur,
  • 25:02 - 25:08
    we now need to get governments to understand how to push it further.
  • 25:10 - 25:16
    The Information Society Directorate of the European Commission issued a report 18 months ago,
  • 25:16 - 25:23
    in which they said that they could scan 1/6th of all the books in European libraries
  • 25:23 - 25:26
    for the cost of 100 km of roadway.
  • 25:28 - 25:33
    That meant, and it is still true, that for the cost of 600 km of road,
  • 25:34 - 25:38
    in an economy that builds thousands of kilometers of roadway every year,
  • 25:38 - 25:45
    every book in all European libraries could be available to the entire human race, it should be done.
  • 25:45 - 25:50
    [shout of "Copyright" from audience]
  • 25:50 - 25:58
    Remember that most of those books are in the public domain, before you shout copyright at me.
  • 26:00 - 26:07
    Remember that the bulk of what constitutes human learning was not made recently,
  • 26:07 - 26:11
    before you shout the copyright at me.
  • 26:13 - 26:24
    We should move to a world in which all knowledge previously available before this lifetime is universally available.
  • 26:24 - 26:30
    If we don't, we will stunt the innovation which permits further growth.
  • 26:31 - 26:34
    That's a social requirement.
  • 26:34 - 26:38
    The copyright bargain is not immutable.
  • 26:38 - 26:41
    It is merely convenient.
  • 26:42 - 26:47
    We do not have to commit suicide culturally or intellectually
  • 26:47 - 26:53
    in order to maintain a bargain which does not even relevantly apply
  • 26:53 - 26:58
    to almost all of important human knowledge in most fields.
  • 26:59 - 27:02
    Plato is not owned by anybody.
  • 27:05 - 27:13
    So here we are, asking ourselves what the educational systems of the 21st century will be like,
  • 27:14 - 27:19
    and how they will socially distribute knowledge across the human race.
  • 27:20 - 27:21
    I have a question for you.
  • 27:21 - 27:27
    How many of the Einsteins who ever lived were allowed to learn physics?
  • 27:28 - 27:29
    A couple.
  • 27:30 - 27:35
    How many of the Shakespeares who ever lived, lived and died without learning to read and write?
  • 27:36 - 27:37
    Almost all of them.
  • 27:38 - 27:42
    With 7 billion people in the world right now, 3 billion of them are children;
  • 27:42 - 27:45
    how many Einsteins do you want to throw away today?
  • 27:47 - 27:50
    The universalization of access to knowledge,
  • 27:50 - 27:57
    is the single-most important force available for increasing innovation and human welfare on the planet.
  • 27:57 - 28:04
    Nobody should be afraid to advocate for it because somebody might shout "copyright".
  • 28:07 - 28:11
    So we are now looking at the second-order consequence
  • 28:11 - 28:16
    of an understanding of how to conduct innovation under austerity.
  • 28:16 - 28:21
    Expand access to the materials that create the ability to learn,
  • 28:22 - 28:31
    adapt technology to permit the scientists below age 20 to conduct their experiments and share their results,
  • 28:31 - 28:38
    permit the continuing growth of the information technology universe we created,
  • 28:40 - 28:43
    by sharing, over the last quarter century,
  • 28:44 - 28:52
    and we'd begin to experience something like the higher rates of innovation available,
  • 28:53 - 28:59
    despite massive decreases in social investment occurring because of austerity.
  • 29:02 - 29:08
    We also afford young people an opportunity to take their economic and professional destinies
  • 29:08 - 29:10
    more into their own hands,
  • 29:10 - 29:17
    an absolute requirement if we are to have social and political stability in the next generation.
  • 29:18 - 29:20
    Nobody should be fooled
  • 29:20 - 29:28
    about the prospects for social growth in societies where 50 percent of the people under 30 are unemployed.
  • 29:30 - 29:36
    This is not going to be resolved by giving them assembly line car-building jobs.
  • 29:36 - 29:38
    Everybody sees that.
  • 29:39 - 29:45
    Governments are collectively throwing up their hands about what to do about the situation.
  • 29:45 - 29:52
    Hence, the rapidity with which, in systems of proportional representation,
  • 29:52 - 29:55
    young people are giving up on established political parties.
  • 29:57 - 30:03
    When the Pirates can take 8.3% of the vote in Schleswig-Holstein,
  • 30:05 - 30:11
    it is already clear that young people realize that established political policy-making
  • 30:11 - 30:16
    is not going to be directed at their future economic welfare.
  • 30:17 - 30:25
    And we need to listen, democratically, to the large number of young people around the world who insist
  • 30:25 - 30:29
    that internet freedom and an end to snooping and control
  • 30:29 - 30:35
    is necessary to their welfare and ability to create and live.
  • 30:37 - 30:43
    Disintermediation means there will be more service providers throughout the economy
  • 30:43 - 30:46
    with whom we are directly in touch.
  • 30:46 - 30:54
    That means more jobs outside hierarchies and fewer jobs inside hierarchies.
  • 30:54 - 30:59
    Young people around the world whether they are my law students about to get a law license,
  • 30:59 - 31:03
    or computer engineers about to begin their practices,
  • 31:03 - 31:07
    or artists, or musicians, or photographers,
  • 31:07 - 31:16
    need more freedom in the net, and more tools with which to create innovative service delivery platforms for themselves.
  • 31:17 - 31:23
    A challenge to which their elders would not have risen successfully in 1955,
  • 31:24 - 31:32
    but we are new generation of human beings working under new circumstances, and those rules have changed.
  • 31:32 - 31:39
    They know the rules have changed. The indignados in every square in Spain know the rules have changed.
  • 31:41 - 31:43
    It's their governments that don't know.
  • 31:46 - 31:53
    Which brings us I will admit to back to this question of anonymity, or rather, personal autonomy.
  • 31:54 - 31:58
    One of the really problematic elements in teaching young people,
  • 31:58 - 32:02
    at least the young people I teach, about privacy,
  • 32:03 - 32:08
    is that we use the word privacy to mean several quite distinct things.
  • 32:09 - 32:12
    Privacy means secrecy, sometimes.
  • 32:12 - 32:20
    That is to say, the content of a message is obscured to all but it's maker and intended recipient.
  • 32:21 - 32:23
    Privacy means anonymity, sometimes.
  • 32:24 - 32:32
    That means messages are not obscured, but the points generating and receiving those messages are obscured.
  • 32:33 - 32:39
    And there is a third aspect of privacy which in my classroom I call autonomy.
  • 32:40 - 32:45
    It is the opportunity to live a life in which the decisions that you make
  • 32:45 - 32:52
    are unaffected by others' access to secret or anonymous communications.
  • 32:55 - 33:01
    There is a reason that cities have always been engines of economic growth.
  • 33:02 - 33:05
    It isn't because bankers live there.
  • 33:06 - 33:11
    Bankers live there because cities are engines of economic growth.
  • 33:12 - 33:17
    The reason cities have been engines of economic growth since Sumer,
  • 33:18 - 33:22
    is that young people move to them, to make new ways of being.
  • 33:23 - 33:31
    Taking advantage of the fact that the city is where you escape the surveillance of the village,
  • 33:31 - 33:34
    and the social control of the farm.
  • 33:35 - 33:40
    "How you gonna keep them down on the farm after they've seen Paris?"
  • 33:40 - 33:47
    was a fair question in 1919 and it had a lot do with the way the 20th century worked in the United States.
  • 33:49 - 33:55
    The city is the historical system for the production of anonymity
  • 33:55 - 34:00
    and the ability to experiment autonomously in ways of living.
  • 34:01 - 34:03
    We are closing it.
  • 34:07 - 34:08
    Some years ago,
  • 34:09 - 34:16
    to wit, at the beginning of 1995 we were having a debate at the Harvard Law School about Public Key Encryption.
  • 34:17 - 34:18
    Two on two.
  • 34:18 - 34:23
    On one side Jamie Gorelick, then the Deputy Attorney General of the United States,
  • 34:23 - 34:25
    and Stewart Baker, then as now
  • 34:25 - 34:31
    at Steptoe & Johnson when he isn't in the United States government making horrendous social policy.
  • 34:32 - 34:36
    On the other side, Danny Weitzner, now in the White House, and me.
  • 34:37 - 34:42
    And we spent the afternoon talking back and forth about whether we should have to escrow our
  • 34:42 - 34:45
    keys with the United States government,
  • 34:45 - 34:48
    whether the clipper chip was going to work and many other very interesting subjects
  • 34:48 - 34:51
    now as obsolete as Babylonia.
  • 34:52 - 34:56
    And after it was all over, we walked across the Harvard campus for dinner at the Harvard Faculty Club
  • 34:56 - 34:59
    and on the way across the campus Jamie Gorelick said to me:
  • 34:59 - 35:04
    "Eben, on the basis of nothing more than your public statements this afternoon
  • 35:04 - 35:08
    I have enough to order the interception of your telephone conversations."
  • 35:08 - 35:10
    In 1995 that was a joke.
  • 35:11 - 35:17
    It was a joke in bad taste when told to a citizen by an official of the United States Justice Department,
  • 35:17 - 35:18
    but it was a joke,
  • 35:18 - 35:22
    and we all laughed because everybody knew you couldn't do that.
  • 35:23 - 35:25
    So we ate our dinner,
  • 35:26 - 35:31
    and the table got cleared and all the plates went away, and the port and walnuts got scattered around, and
  • 35:31 - 35:35
    Stewart Baker looked up and said "alright, we'll let our hair down",
  • 35:35 - 35:36
    and he had none then and he has none now,
  • 35:36 - 35:38
    but "we'll let our hair down" Stewart said,
  • 35:39 - 35:42
    "we're not going to prosecute your client Mr Zimmerman.
  • 35:43 - 35:47
    We've spent decades in a holding action against Public Key Encryption
  • 35:47 - 35:52
    it's worked pretty well but it's almost over now, we're gonna let it happen."
  • 35:53 - 35:55
    And then he looked around the table and he said,
  • 35:56 - 35:58
    "but nobody here cares about anonymity do they?"
  • 35:59 - 36:02
    And a cold chill went up my spine.
  • 36:02 - 36:05
    And I thought, "OK, Stewart, I understand how it is.
  • 36:05 - 36:09
    You're going to let there be Public Key Encryption because the bankers are going to need it.
  • 36:10 - 36:15
    And you're going to spend the next 20 years trying to stop people from being anonymous ever again,
  • 36:15 - 36:17
    and I'm going to spend those 20 years trying to stop you."
  • 36:19 - 36:24
    So far I must say from my friend Mr. Baker has been doing better than I had hoped,
  • 36:24 - 36:27
    and I have been doing even worse than I had feared.
  • 36:28 - 36:31
    Partly because of the thug in a hoodie, and partly for other reasons.
  • 36:33 - 36:37
    We are on the verge of the elimination of the human right to be alone.
  • 36:38 - 36:42
    We are on the verge of the elimination of the human right to do your own thinking,
  • 36:42 - 36:45
    in your own place, in your own way without anybody knowing.
  • 36:48 - 36:50
    Somebody in this room just proved a couple of minutes ago
  • 36:50 - 36:56
    that if he shops at a particular web-store using one browser, he gets a different price than on the other.
  • 36:57 - 37:00
    Because one of the browsers is linked to his browsing history.
  • 37:01 - 37:07
    Prices, offers, commodities, opportunities,
  • 37:08 - 37:13
    are now being based upon the data mining of everything.
  • 37:15 - 37:20
    A senior government official in this government said to me after the United States changed its rules
  • 37:20 - 37:25
    about how long they keep information on everybody about whom nothing is suspected
  • 37:25 - 37:27
    - you all do know about that right?
  • 37:28 - 37:32
    Rainy Wednesday on the 21st of March, long after the close of business,
  • 37:33 - 37:37
    Department of Justice and the DNI, that's the Director of National Intelligence,
  • 37:37 - 37:42
    put out a joint press release announcing minor changes in the Ashcroft rules,
  • 37:43 - 37:49
    including a minor change that says that all personally identifiable information in government databases
  • 37:49 - 37:57
    at the National Center for Counter-Terrorism that are based around people of whom nothing is suspected,
  • 37:58 - 38:03
    will no longer be retained as under the Ashcroft rules for a maximum of 180 days,
  • 38:04 - 38:09
    the maximum has now been changed to 5 years, which is infinity.
  • 38:10 - 38:12
    In fact I told my students in my classroom,
  • 38:12 - 38:17
    the only reason they said 5 years was they couldn't get the sideways eight into the font [Laughs]
  • 38:17 - 38:20
    for the press release,so they used an approximation.
  • 38:22 - 38:26
    So I was talking to a senior official of this government about that outcome
  • 38:26 - 38:33
    and he said well you know we've come to realize that we need a robust social graph of the United States.
  • 38:34 - 38:38
    That's how we're going to connect new information to old information.
  • 38:39 - 38:43
    I said let's just talk about the constitutional implications of this for a moment.
  • 38:44 - 38:48
    You're talking about taking us from the society we have always known,
  • 38:49 - 38:52
    which we quaintly refer to as a free society,
  • 38:52 - 38:58
    to a society in which the United States government keeps a list of everybody every American knows.
  • 38:59 - 39:02
    So if you're going to take us from what we used to call a free society
  • 39:02 - 39:10
    to a society in which the US government keeps a list of everybody every American knows,
  • 39:10 - 39:13
    what should be the constitutional procedure for doing this?
  • 39:13 - 39:16
    Should we have, for example, a law?
  • 39:18 - 39:19
    He just laughed.
  • 39:20 - 39:22
    Because of course they didn't need a law.
  • 39:22 - 39:27
    They did it with a press release on a rainy Wednesday night after everybody went home,
  • 39:27 - 39:28
    and you live there now.
  • 39:31 - 39:37
    Whether it is possible to have innovation under conditions of complete despotism
  • 39:38 - 39:40
    is an interesting question.
  • 39:41 - 39:46
    Right-wing Americans or maybe even center-right Americans,
  • 39:46 - 39:52
    have long insisted that one of the problems with 20th century totalitarianism,
  • 39:52 - 39:55
    from which they legitimately distinguish themselves,
  • 39:55 - 40:01
    was that it eliminated the possibility of what they call free markets and innovation.
  • 40:01 - 40:03
    We're about to test whether they were right.
  • 40:06 - 40:13
    The network, as it stands now, is an extraordinary platform for enhanced social control.
  • 40:14 - 40:19
    Very rapidly, and with no apparent remorse,
  • 40:20 - 40:27
    the two largest governments on earth, that of the United States of America and the People's Republic of China
  • 40:27 - 40:31
    have adopted essentially identical points of view.
  • 40:31 - 40:34
    [Clapping]
  • 40:34 - 40:39
    A robust social graph connecting government to everybody
  • 40:39 - 40:47
    and the exhaustive data mining of society is both governments fundamental policy
  • 40:47 - 40:55
    with respect to their different forms of what they both refer to, or think of, as stability maintenance.
  • 40:57 - 41:02
    It is true of course that they have different theories of how to maintain stability for whom and why,
  • 41:02 - 41:09
    but the technology of stability maintenance is becoming essentially identical.
  • 41:10 - 41:14
    We need, we, who understand what is happening, need,
  • 41:14 - 41:16
    to be very vocal about that.
  • 41:19 - 41:22
    But it isn't just our civil liberties that are at stake,
  • 41:22 - 41:26
    I shouldn't need to say that, that should be enough, but of course it isn't.
  • 41:28 - 41:37
    We need to make clear that the other part of what that costs us is the very vitality and vibrancy
  • 41:37 - 41:40
    of invention culture and discourse,
  • 41:40 - 41:45
    that wide open robust and uninhibited public debate
  • 41:45 - 41:49
    that the Supreme Court so loved in New York Times against Sullivan.
  • 41:50 - 41:57
    And that freedom to tinker, to invent, to be different, to be non-conformist
  • 41:57 - 42:03
    for which people have always moved to the cities that gave them anonymity,
  • 42:03 - 42:08
    and a chance to experiment with who they are, and what they can do.
  • 42:09 - 42:18
    This more than anything else, is what sustains social vitality and economic growth in the 21st century.
  • 42:20 - 42:24
    Of course we need anonymity for other reasons.
  • 42:25 - 42:30
    Of course we are persuing something that might be appropriately described
  • 42:30 - 42:33
    as protection for the integrity of the human soul.
  • 42:36 - 42:38
    But that's not government's concern.
  • 42:39 - 42:45
    It is precisely the glory of the way we understand civil society that that is not government's concern.
  • 42:46 - 42:54
    It is precisely our commitment to the idea of the individual's development at her own pace,
  • 42:54 - 42:56
    and in her own way,
  • 42:56 - 43:02
    that has been the centerpiece of what we understood to be our society's fundamental commitment
  • 43:02 - 43:07
    that means that the protection for the integrity of the human soul is our business,
  • 43:07 - 43:09
    not the government's business.
  • 43:11 - 43:15
    But government must attend to the material welfare of its citizens
  • 43:15 - 43:20
    and it must attend to the long run good of the society they manage.
  • 43:20 - 43:24
    And we must be clear to government that there is no tension
  • 43:25 - 43:30
    between the maintenance of civil liberty in the form of the right to be let alone,
  • 43:31 - 43:37
    there is no distinction between the civil liberty policy of assuring the right to be let alone,
  • 43:37 - 43:42
    and the economic policy of securing innovation under austerity.
  • 43:42 - 43:44
    They require the same thing.
  • 43:45 - 43:47
    We need Free Software,
  • 43:47 - 43:49
    we need Free Hardware we can hack on,
  • 43:50 - 43:56
    we need Free Spectrum we can use to communicate with one another,without let or hindrance.
  • 43:57 - 44:04
    We need to be able to educate and provide access to educational material to everyone on earth
  • 44:04 - 44:08
    without regard to the ability to pay.
  • 44:08 - 44:17
    We need to provide a pathway to an independent economic and intellectual life, for every young person.
  • 44:19 - 44:22
    The technology we need, we have.
  • 44:23 - 44:29
    I have spent some time and many people in this room, including Isaac have spent more time now,
  • 44:29 - 44:40
    trying to make use of cheap, power efficient compact server computers, the size of AC chargers for mobile phones,
  • 44:41 - 44:48
    which with the right software we can use to populate the net with robots that respect privacy,
  • 44:49 - 44:55
    instead of the robots that disrespect privacy which we now carry in almost every pocket.
  • 44:57 - 45:06
    We need to retrofit the first law of robotics into this society within the next few minutes or we're cooked.
  • 45:07 - 45:10
    We can do that. That's civil innovation.
  • 45:12 - 45:19
    We can help to continue the long lifetime of general purpose computers everybody can hack on.
  • 45:20 - 45:24
    By using them, by needing them, by spreading them around.
  • 45:25 - 45:32
    We can use our own force as consumers and technologists to deprecate
  • 45:32 - 45:36
    closed networks and locked-down objects,
  • 45:37 - 45:44
    but without clear guidance in public policy we will remain a tiny minority,
  • 45:46 - 45:49
    8.3% let's say.
  • 45:50 - 45:59
    Which will not be sufficient to lift us out of the slough into which the bankers have driven us.
  • 46:01 - 46:04
    Innovation under austerity is our battle-cry.
  • 46:05 - 46:11
    Not a battle-cry for the things we most care about, but the ones the other people most care about.
  • 46:11 - 46:15
    Our entrée to social policy for the next five years,
  • 46:15 - 46:21
    and our last chance to do in government
  • 46:21 - 46:26
    what we have not been able to do by attempting to preserve our mere liberties.
  • 46:27 - 46:34
    Which have been shamefully abused by our friends in government as well as by our adversaries.
  • 46:34 - 46:39
    We have been taken to the cleaners with respect to our rights,
  • 46:39 - 46:43
    and we have been taken to the cleaners with respect to everybody's money.
  • 46:43 - 46:48
    I wish that I could say that the easiest thing to do was going to be to get our freedoms back,
  • 46:49 - 46:49
    it isn't.
  • 46:50 - 46:56
    Nobody will run in the election this year on the basis of the restoration of our civil liberties.
  • 46:57 - 47:01
    But they will all talk about austerity and growth.
  • 47:01 - 47:05
    And we must bring our message where they are.
  • 47:06 - 47:08
    That's my first draft.
  • 47:09 - 47:13
    Inadequate in every way, but at least a place to start.
  • 47:14 - 47:16
    And if we have no place to start,
  • 47:18 - 47:18
    we will lose.
  • 47:19 - 47:22
    And our loss will be long.
  • 47:22 - 47:24
    And the night will be very dark.
  • 47:25 - 47:26
    Thank you very much.
  • 47:26 - 47:57
    [Applause]
  • 47:57 - 48:00
    Thank you that's very kind of you, now let's talk about it.
  • 48:01 - 48:02
    [Laughter]
  • 48:29 - 48:30
    [Oh, yeah I'll I,m sorry]
  • 48:30 - 48:34
    [Some Murmuring]
  • 48:36 - 48:37
    [Ok Thank you]
  • 48:44 - 48:45
    Ahh we should begin,
  • 48:45 - 48:46
    yeah.
  • 48:48 - 48:51
    Not yet... Aha, that on.
  • 48:51 - 48:55
    [Doc Searls]I'd like to begin this because, I hope I speak for a lot of the people here.
  • 48:56 - 49:01
    That was not just one of the best speeches that I have ever heard,
  • 49:01 - 49:03
    it's one of the most important.
  • 49:04 - 49:08
    And it won't be unless we follow up on it,
  • 49:09 - 49:10
    we act on it.
  • 49:10 - 49:14
    I felt like... actually Elliot that sitted next to be to says he felt like
  • 49:14 - 49:18
    this is an I Have a Dream speech and I think that's what it is.
  • 49:18 - 49:21
    But I think Eben ended it with the nightmare.
  • 49:22 - 49:26
    And if you weren't moved by the speech your frog is boiled.
  • 49:27 - 49:30
    And I think our frogs have been boiling for a long time.
  • 49:30 - 49:37
    I along with everybody else we aquiesce to prevailing conditions, whatever those happen to be.
  • 49:37 - 49:43
    And they have gradually worsened over time, and in ways that we don't fully understand,
  • 49:43 - 49:46
    and our lives are busy so we go about what we have to do.
  • 49:47 - 49:49
    So, what I want to do is
  • 49:49 - 49:55
    test this audience with participating with the Free Everything Movement
  • 49:55 - 49:59
    that Eben has laid out for us, now.
  • 49:59 - 50:05
    So, I don't see that just as a Q&A session but as all of use freely contributing
  • 50:05 - 50:11
    to the framework that Eben has laid out, and that we've been part of for a long time.
  • 50:11 - 50:14
    I love the way he included us in this. This is --
  • 50:14 - 50:16
    there is natural selection here.
  • 50:16 - 50:18
    This is a select group.
  • 50:19 - 50:22
    David has done an amazing job of pulling in the right people together.
  • 50:22 - 50:25
    The name of this event begins with Freedom,
  • 50:25 - 50:28
    and I think that needs to be our end as well.
  • 50:28 - 50:32
    So... and I have nothing more to add to such a fabulous talk.
  • 50:33 - 50:35
    [Isaac Wilder] Eben I would like to ask you a question.
  • 50:37 - 50:42
    I see a tension between Freedom and Conveinience.
  • 50:43 - 50:50
    And I wonder how you see that tension playing out?
  • 50:51 - 51:02
    I think you urged us to focus on innovation but I wonder if....
  • 51:03 - 51:13
    and I think that does -- that's compelling to this audience, perhaps the policy makers,
  • 51:14 - 51:19
    but, to the average user, convenience is an issue.
  • 51:20 - 51:21
    [Eben Moglen] Yeah, it's true,
  • 51:22 - 51:30
    which is not only the relation between technology and society, it's true about lots of other things as well.
  • 51:32 - 51:41
    The constitutional theorist Bruce Ackerman wrote a lengthy multi-volume history of the Constitution in the US,
  • 51:41 - 51:48
    on the basic premise that most of the time, most people don't want to engage in
  • 51:48 - 51:51
    deep thinking about politics and society.
  • 51:51 - 51:57
    It only happens very occasionally, and the Founders of the American Republic, Bruce said,
  • 51:57 - 52:03
    tried in the Federalist structure to take advantage of those occasional moments,
  • 52:03 - 52:06
    when people want to pay attention.
  • 52:06 - 52:13
    But here again, and I focus on this because the demographics are so important,
  • 52:13 - 52:18
    that sense, of convenience being more important than other values,
  • 52:18 - 52:22
    moment by moment is more true of grown-ups than it is for children.
  • 52:23 - 52:26
    I go all around the world, I talk to goverments about all sorts of things
  • 52:26 - 52:30
    connected with technology of 21st century society,
  • 52:30 - 52:35
    and I hear from people, from presidents to ministers, to local planning commitees,
  • 52:35 - 52:40
    all sorts of stories about the terrible social problems their cultures and communities face.
  • 52:40 - 52:45
    And I find my self often saying "Yes, you're right. This is a really really horrible problem.
  • 52:45 - 52:49
    It's extraordinary difficult and it requiress immense amounts of energy to deal with.
  • 52:49 - 52:54
    You need the strongest social force possible to deal with this.
  • 52:54 - 52:59
    And the strongest social force ever, available, anywhere is the curiosity of children.
  • 52:59 - 53:01
    You need to harness it."
  • 53:01 - 53:06
    We have actually both lessons. The thing you call a tension, right?
  • 53:06 - 53:08
    It's a tension indeed.
  • 53:08 - 53:15
    Because it is true that grown ups in their busy lives find themselves willing to do anything that works,
  • 53:15 - 53:18
    and if you hand them a box with an F-Button on it they'll push it,
  • 53:18 - 53:23
    whether it costs them or not, and whether it connects them a great big
  • 53:23 - 53:26
    man-in-the-middle-attack on their social lives or not,
  • 53:26 - 53:29
    or whether their friends are ratting them out of the weekends to their employers,
  • 53:29 - 53:31
    they pay very little attention.
  • 53:31 - 53:33
    It's now.
  • 53:33 - 53:36
    But you give a thing to an 8-year-old and it's not like that anymore.
  • 53:37 - 53:38
    He's got plenty of time.
  • 53:38 - 53:42
    You give a 12-year-old a thing like that and she's ready to take it apart.
  • 53:42 - 53:45
    She's not thinking about convenience, she's thinking about learning.
  • 53:45 - 53:47
    She's doing science.
  • 53:47 - 53:49
    She's playing around.
  • 53:49 - 53:54
    And I have seen in more places in the world that I can think to name,
  • 53:54 - 53:59
    that force of those children, fooling around with computers and doing amazing things.
  • 54:00 - 54:02
    You see it everywhere you'd go.
  • 54:02 - 54:05
    So I believe the tension is there.
  • 54:05 - 54:10
    I believe usability is a crucial problem in building tools for privacy in Freedom.
  • 54:10 - 54:15
    FreedomBox, the stack of software we need to make for all those little objects in the world,
  • 54:15 - 54:21
    you know this even better than I do, it's partly about function, but it's mostly about integration and usability.
  • 54:21 - 54:25
    We've done all the hard work. My laptop, your laptop, we're pretty safe.
  • 54:25 - 54:30
    The problem is how do we make this work for real people with real, busy, daily lives.
  • 54:30 - 54:33
    So the tension's there but the answer's there too.
  • 54:33 - 54:35
    We need to empower children.
  • 54:35 - 54:40
    And part of what is wrong with the technology is the extent to which they are becoming not inventors but consumers.
  • 54:41 - 54:44
    If that process is completed, we really are sunk.
  • 54:46 - 54:49
    [Doc Searls] Why don't we go back and forth with both sides over here, first .
  • 54:49 - 54:51
    [Michael Nelson] Mike Nelson of Georgetown University.
  • 54:52 - 54:54
    I have at least 15 different questions that I'd like to ask you,
  • 54:55 - 54:58
    starting with encryptions as I was
    [Eben Moglen]I remember...
  • 54:58 - 55:01
    [Michael Nelson] Stuart Baker's best friend, from the White House.
    [Eben Moglen] Yeah Yeah
  • 55:01 - 55:05
    It made things very hard for me, Mike, I'm really glad it's not true anymore. It's isn't true anymore, right?
  • 55:06 - 55:07
    [Laughter]
  • 55:07 - 55:09
    [Michael Nelson] I would like to urge you to run for Congress,
  • 55:09 - 55:13
    preferably by moving to Palm Springs and running against Mary Bono Mack,
  • 55:15 - 55:18
    [Eben Moglen] [laughs] I don't think they would like me in Palm Springs, much.
  • 55:18 - 55:21
    [Doc Searls] But the thing I hope you'll do after that speech,
  • 55:21 - 55:27
    which I agree is sort of like the I Have a Dream speech, is to actually engage your critics.
  • 55:27 - 55:32
    I mean the speech is great, and the YouTube video would be seen by thousands of people,
  • 55:32 - 55:34
    mostly your friends and supporters.
  • 55:34 - 55:36
    I think you need to engage your critics.
  • 55:36 - 55:42
    And we need something like the federalists papers, where we have the two big questions debated from both sides,
  • 55:42 - 55:46
    and we get both parties -- both viewpoints expressed.
  • 55:46 - 55:50
    But I would like to ask one quick, very specific question.
  • 55:50 - 55:52
    Because I really think the first part of your speech
  • 55:52 - 55:59
    about general purpose computing and user-centric computing is really where we have to start.
  • 55:59 - 56:02
    And I would like to have your assessment , and anyone else's assessment,
  • 56:02 - 56:08
    as to why Nicholas Negroponte in the One Laptop Per Child which was based on the same principles...
  • 56:09 - 56:15
    empowering the children, building open source, creating things from the ground up, why that didn't happen?
  • 56:15 - 56:19
    Even though tens of millions of dollars were invested and lots of people bought it.
  • 56:20 - 56:25
    Why didn't that... what was missing there? And how can we not have the same problem this time around?
  • 56:25 - 56:28
    [Eben Moglen] Yeah, well, Nick has been my best friend too sometimes, um,
  • 56:29 - 56:31
    which makes it a little hard to answer the question.
  • 56:32 - 56:36
    Hardware is difficult, right? And software is easy.
  • 56:36 - 56:39
    That's why the FreedomBox isn't a box, it's just some software,
  • 56:39 - 56:44
    because we can make it better, quicker, cheaper and we don't have to bite off all the problems.
  • 56:46 - 56:49
    Two things happened as a consequence of One Laptop Per Child.
  • 56:49 - 56:53
    The IT industry around the world realized that there was a thing that was better
  • 56:53 - 56:57
    to make the laptops with a higher profit margin and they started making them.
  • 56:57 - 57:02
    So Nick in fact proved my point on that side pretty well., no failure there.
  • 57:02 - 57:05
    He conducted innovation with tiny amounts of money,
  • 57:05 - 57:11
    which capitalism in its biggest globules wasn't going to get to because it was too risk averse to try.
  • 57:12 - 57:17
    So, in one sense it panned out, it's just that it panned out as more products for consumers.
  • 57:17 - 57:24
    The second thing is that Nick tried to do something really really important with mesh networking,
  • 57:24 - 57:28
    and it was as another friend of ours very close to the thing said:
  • 57:28 - 57:30
    it was a wonderful failed experiment..
  • 57:30 - 57:31
    It didn't work.
  • 57:31 - 57:37
    It worked great in the lab but it didn't work real well in Montevideo and it worked even less well in Peru,
  • 57:37 - 57:39
    and after a while everybody went back to:
  • 57:39 - 57:42
    Well, let's have a classroom server and use Wi-Fi.
  • 57:42 - 57:50
    And this -- and this is the part of the thing that I was really trying to talk about in the big broad general way, right?
  • 57:50 - 57:51
    We need mesh.
  • 57:52 - 57:58
    We need a way of doing communication which is not based around operater-centric architecture.
  • 57:58 - 58:01
    Is the FCC going to do that for us? No.
  • 58:01 - 58:06
    You want to engage my critics. They were bought decades ago, right?
  • 58:06 - 58:13
    So now we are in a situation in which if there is one man in this room, Dwayne Hendricks,
  • 58:13 - 58:17
    there is one man in this room who might help us to figure out what we're gonna do about this.
  • 58:17 - 58:22
    We must have build-it-yourself networking that really works.
  • 58:22 - 58:25
    Nick was a visionary and he tried.
  • 58:25 - 58:30
    And if it had been ready then, we would be living in a different world now.
  • 58:30 - 58:31
    But it wasn't.
  • 58:31 - 58:36
    I think that's technical failure of an honorable and important kind.
  • 58:36 - 58:42
    I think he conducted a vast innovative experiment and succeeded beyond his wildest dreams,
  • 58:42 - 58:46
    but the other guys ran away with the profits as usual,
  • 58:46 - 58:49
    and the one peace we really really needed
  • 58:49 - 58:55
    which was communications technology that deprives the centralized network operator of power,
  • 58:55 - 58:56
    we weren't ready for .
  • 58:56 - 59:00
    Now we have more closed network than open network,
  • 59:00 - 59:06
    more people using proprietary closed forms of somewhat like the Internet,
  • 59:06 - 59:08
    than the Internet itself,
  • 59:08 - 59:11
    and we've lost big in that process.
  • 59:12 - 59:14
    Now it's a harder thing to deal with.
  • 59:14 - 59:15
    I don't....
  • 59:16 - 59:19
    I have the feeling, as in some any other ways in life,
  • 59:19 - 59:21
    that I've been guided by my friend Lary Lessig,
  • 59:22 - 59:25
    running for Congress is what I'm not going to do.
  • 59:25 - 59:25
    [Laughter]
  • 59:25 - 59:30
    Do you have another suggestion about how to engage critics, Mike?
  • 59:30 - 59:34
    I would love to take one. But that's not one that I wanna take.
  • 59:34 - 59:37
    [Michael Nelson] No, the Federalists papers analogy was a serious one.
    [Eben Moglen]Allright.
  • 59:37 - 59:42
    [Michael Nelson] It means something every week. With a critic who will point out your fallacies so you could point out their fallacies.
  • 59:42 - 59:46
    [Eben Moglen] Alright. Let's do it. Let's find the ones who want to engage.
  • 59:46 - 59:52
    [Doc Searls] We have 27 minutes left, so try to make it quick. It's not much time.
  • 59:52 - 59:56
    [Audience member] My question would be, what do you mean by this wallwart that could serve as a server?
  • 59:56 - 60:00
    And how close are we to the hardware? Why do you want to have it?
  • 60:00 - 60:05
    Let me preface the question by saying that, in order to do the Onion router,
  • 60:06 - 60:10
    you need to be able to have your own server.
  • 60:10 - 60:14
    In order to do anonymization you need to have your own server ability.
  • 60:14 - 60:21
    In order to build an network of our own within the network that is increasingly out of our control,
  • 60:21 - 60:26
    we need to be able to upload and download from our own servers.
  • 60:26 - 60:32
    I often wonder if the amount of energy being put into
  • 60:32 - 60:40
    prevention of file sharing out of all proportion to the economic value of any copyright infridgement that's going on,
  • 60:40 - 60:47
    is a sign that those in power understand that they must stop our ability to be our own nodes.
  • 60:47 - 60:50
    Is that resonant with you? Thank you.
  • 60:50 - 60:52
    [Eben Moglen] Why don't you talk about this
  • 60:52 - 60:56
    [Isaac Wilder] So, there are two things in play here.
  • 60:56 - 60:59
    There's logical peer to peer, overlay networks,
  • 60:59 - 61:04
    and there is what we call material peer to peer, physical material networks.
  • 61:05 - 61:09
    And there is a complex interplay between those forces.
  • 61:09 - 61:17
    So the FreedomBox tends to be a tool that participates in that logical network,
  • 61:17 - 61:20
    no matter what its connection to Internet is,
  • 61:21 - 61:25
    and can serve as a seed of a material physical network.
  • 61:26 - 61:30
    Now your question was, how close are we? What needs to be done?
  • 61:30 - 61:35
    As Eben said, the basic tools are there.
  • 61:35 - 61:37
    We know how to build overlay networks.
  • 61:37 - 61:45
    There's been incredible advances over the last decade in distributed computational systems.
  • 61:46 - 61:53
    So that's there. It really at this point is a matter of integrating those tools in a way that makes them usable.
  • 61:54 - 62:00
    And, as developers, that's something, we are not always great at.
  • 62:00 - 62:10
    But it's certainly tractable, and we are at the point where these pieces just need to be fit together.
  • 62:10 - 62:17
    The hardware is in production, and the software is in
  • 62:18 - 62:22
    not quite alpha stage, I guess you would say, but there are building blocks there.
  • 62:23 - 62:27
    [Eben Moglen]The world is gonna fill up over there in the next 6 or 7 years
  • 62:27 - 62:31
    with small, very inexpensive, very powerful servers,
  • 62:31 - 62:36
    which are based around ARM chips and fit in a thing that fits in your hand,
  • 62:36 - 62:42
    and uses small amounts of power that you could really run of a battery array.
  • 62:42 - 62:50
    The FreedomBox project, which we started talking about in early 2010 and got serious about in early 2011,
  • 62:51 - 62:56
    is basically a pro-privacy router stack based on Debian
  • 62:56 - 62:59
    that fits in servers like that.
  • 63:00 - 63:03
    James Vasile of the Open Internet Tools Project,
  • 63:03 - 63:06
    who used to work for me at Software Freedom Law Center, and who just left the room,
  • 63:06 - 63:09
    has one with him this morning he told me.
  • 63:10 - 63:14
    Isaac and hundreds of other, really good people around the world,
  • 63:14 - 63:18
    including Jacob Appelbaum of Tor, are working on FreedomBox.
  • 63:18 - 63:22
    The Tor project would be developing on FreedomBox stack in future.
  • 63:23 - 63:30
    Our goal is to put a small cheap object that replaces your wireless router
  • 63:30 - 63:36
    in as many places, homes, and businesses, and safe-deposit boxes in the world as we can get,
  • 63:37 - 63:40
    running software which makes secure peer to peer connections
  • 63:40 - 63:48
    between people whose identities have been assured in a civil society web of trust-like way,
  • 63:48 - 63:55
    and which can provide a soft migration away from centralized social networking tools
  • 63:55 - 63:59
    like Facebook and Flickr and so on,
  • 63:59 - 64:05
    towards systems which actually share only with the people you really mean to share with,
  • 64:05 - 64:10
    and which resist the effort of other people to see what's going on.
  • 64:10 - 64:18
    Some of that work is work we all use all the time based around Tunneling VPNs, and other simple stuff.
  • 64:18 - 64:21
    Some of this is the Onion routing infrastructure we are building.
  • 64:21 - 64:28
    Some of it is efforts to increase our meshablity by spreading a lot of stuff
  • 64:28 - 64:31
    which is both base station and client around the world.
  • 64:31 - 64:38
    Some of it is efforts to take advantage of skunkworks projects now inside the large IT vendors,
  • 64:38 - 64:45
    who also know that small ARM-based servers are gonna replace the heavy iron they've been selling,
  • 64:45 - 64:50
    but the real net of it, the bottom seed of it is --
  • 64:50 - 64:52
    Control your own server. Keep your own logs,
  • 64:52 - 65:00
    Do it in a a way which resists tampering from external parties who aren't working in your interest.
  • 65:00 - 65:05
    Create some robots who really do have the first law of robotics inside them,

    [Doc Searls] [chuckles]
  • 65:05 - 65:11
    [Eben Moglen] And put them at the portals between private networks and the open public net.
  • 65:11 - 65:18
    If we do that, we begin, as Isaac says, to interleave the virtual peer to peerage of the net
  • 65:18 - 65:23
    with some actual hundreds of thousands, then millions, then tens of millions,
  • 65:23 - 65:29
    ultimately billions of peers, that run in the interests of the people who own them.
  • 65:29 - 65:30
    [David Isenberg] Isaac and
  • 65:30 - 65:38
    [Terry Nelson] I would like to introduce my self. I'm Terry Nelson, no relation to Mike Nelson [unintelligible]
  • 65:39 - 65:44
    [David Isenberg]Guys, Isaac and Eben, do you know Tim Shepard?
  • 65:44 - 65:46
    [Isaac] We met last night.
  • 65:46 - 65:55
    Ok, good. The reason that I put these kinds of things together is that people like you can meet people like Tim.
  • 65:55 - 66:02
    Tim's MIT PhD thesis was on the practical,
  • 66:03 - 66:07
    the applied mathematics, and for that matter the physics
  • 66:07 - 66:14
    of Mesh Networking, and he is an early pioneer, this was 1990-what?.
  • 66:15 - 66:17
    [Tim Shepard] 1995
  • 66:17 - 66:23
    [David Isenberg] 95 ok. With David Clark at MIT. You guys really ought to talk.
  • 66:23 - 66:26
    [Eben Moglen] I still have location-based routing. I wish it could work.
  • 66:26 - 66:27
    [Small Laugh]
  • 66:28 - 66:32
    [Preston Ray] Hi Eben, my name is Preston Ray, I'm with the Open Technology Institute.
  • 66:32 - 66:37
    You mentioned towards the interview speech, about how the community people in this room, and the people,
  • 66:37 - 66:43
    the community we are part of, has the knowledge, understands the technology, grasps,
  • 66:43 - 66:46
    appreciates and evangelizes the philosophy that you are talking about,
  • 66:46 - 66:50
    to make free collaborative education to all,
  • 66:50 - 66:55
    to solve our world's problems of economic stagnation, innovation stagnation, austerity.
  • 66:56 - 67:01
    You know, we should recognize that we are also very much a community of privilege
  • 67:01 - 67:07
    in many ways, not only of our grasp of knowledge, and not only of our grasp, you know,
  • 67:07 - 67:12
    of the tools and everything that makes these things work, but the backgrounds we come from,
  • 67:12 - 67:17
    we are able to afford this conference, and many other privileges that I won't go into.
  • 67:17 - 67:22
    What do you feel our responsibility, a role is in,
  • 67:23 - 67:26
    bringing about the world you are talking about,
  • 67:26 - 67:32
    if we are indeed only 8,3% of the world we can't assume to represent the entire world,
  • 67:32 - 67:35
    but what is our role in that entire ...
  • 67:35 - 67:37
    [Eben Moglen] I doubt that we are 8.3% of the world.
  • 67:37 - 67:41
    What supprises we are 8.3% of Schleswig-Holstein [Laughs].
  • 67:41 - 67:45
    But let me say a little bit about.
  • 67:45 - 67:52
    I'm been engaged for several years now, with a community computing center located in a slum in Bangalore,
  • 67:52 - 67:59
    the original center was located in a cluster of people who have been living in that spot,
  • 67:59 - 68:04
    first as a untouchable people, now as merely poor people for very long time,
  • 68:04 - 68:07
    -2200 people with only one toilet-
  • 68:08 - 68:13
    Where some young communists working for the big IT firms in Bangalore,
  • 68:13 - 68:19
    fished out computer out of the garbage, put free software open, and opened a computer center in that slum.
  • 68:20 - 68:27
    And what came out was not so much people who wanted to learn how to use an office suite and get an office job.
  • 68:27 - 68:33
    It turned out they were painters using the GIMP to paint the pictures one pixel at a time,
  • 68:33 - 68:37
    and they were singers, and they were writers.
  • 68:37 - 68:45
    They were people whose communities had never had so much as the possibility of dreaming of any of those things,
  • 68:45 - 68:48
    but that didn't matter the kids, because they were kids.
  • 68:48 - 68:53
    They just did whatever and it was it has changed many people's lives.
  • 68:55 - 68:58
    My financial support for that activity has been rather minor,
  • 68:58 - 69:03
    because they'd not take more money that they can use in order to avoid corruption.
  • 69:04 - 69:09
    And my moral support has been, I'd say, grossly inadequate.
  • 69:10 - 69:15
    But nonetheless, working together, we've achieved some quite interesting things
  • 69:15 - 69:20
    which have changed dozens of lives and which have produced some teachers,
  • 69:20 - 69:24
    so they can go out and change a bunch of lives more.
  • 69:24 - 69:29
    I try to work really quite heavily in my classroom
  • 69:29 - 69:36
    to remind American Law Students who are genuinely sagging at an ease a little bit with all their debt,
  • 69:36 - 69:41
    to think of themselves as privileged in the way you say, and it's important to do.
  • 69:41 - 69:45
    But even more important maybe that recognizing our difference
  • 69:45 - 69:50
    from the other people in the world who have so much less is recognizing our similarity.
  • 69:51 - 69:57
    When given the opportunity, those Einsteins in the street are just like our Einsteins.
  • 69:57 - 70:03
    There are better than us. Smarter, stronger, more capable of ferreting out the mysteries of the universe.
  • 70:04 - 70:08
    We really need to begin at the stage of life that we are pretty equal. That is when we are children.
  • 70:08 - 70:12
    And we really need to make possible for those children
  • 70:12 - 70:18
    to experiment and learn and grow, regardless of their state of economic deprivation.
  • 70:18 - 70:22
    The beauty of the zero marginal cost revolution in human affairs,
  • 70:22 - 70:27
    is we can put all knowledge, all culture, all music, all art,
  • 70:27 - 70:31
    all everything that matters to the development of the human mind, everywhere, all the time.
  • 70:32 - 70:40
    In the Sudharshan Layout in Bangalore, 2200 people, one toilet, 1700 children and 914 mobile phones.
  • 70:40 - 70:46
    - Everyone of these mobile phone which is carried by the poorest of the poor in many societies,
  • 70:46 - 70:49
    and which it would be carried by everybody in the human race by 2050 -
  • 70:49 - 70:53
    Everyone of those devices can have every book, and every play,
  • 70:53 - 70:58
    and every piece of music, every equation, every experiment on it.
  • 70:58 - 71:00
    And every brain will grow.
  • 71:00 - 71:05
    Try that and we can worry less about deprivation and more about progress.
  • 71:07 - 71:11
    [Little Applause]
  • 71:12 - 71:18
    [Isaac Wilder] The will of humanity towards total connectedness is at manifest at this point.
  • 71:19 - 71:25
    And I said it before and I'll say it again, the fundamental dialectic of our struggle is this.
  • 71:26 - 71:30
    Will we be enslaved by our technology, or liberated by it?
  • 71:31 - 71:38
    As technologists, as those privileged enough to understand what exists now and what is coming,
  • 71:39 - 71:44
    I viewe our responsibility as to making it sure that is liberation technology
  • 71:44 - 71:46
    instead of enslavement technology?
  • 71:46 - 71:50
    And I think everyone in this room understands that but,
  • 71:52 - 71:54
    the priviledge does come with responsibility.
  • 71:54 - 71:57
    And it's to sound that alarm.
  • 72:00 - 72:01
    [Doc Searls] Very god. Over here.
  • 72:01 - 72:04
    [Nick Grossman] Hi, Nick Grossman from MIT Media Lab.
  • 72:04 - 72:10
    At first, I thought your thoughts about why cities are innovative and why interesting thing happen,
  • 72:10 - 72:16
    why people go there and how autonomy.... What autonomy is and why that matters.
  • 72:16 - 72:21
    Very compelling, super-relevant Internet, and I think it's a metaphor that will only gain in momentum.
  • 72:21 - 72:24
    So, I thank you for laying that out. And I also agree...
  • 72:24 - 72:29
    So getting back to how we convince our governments to go in this general direction.
  • 72:29 - 72:35
    I agree that innovation is a very powerful frame.My question is the...
  • 72:36 - 72:40
    the line between full truly open innovation , you are talking about it,
  • 72:40 - 72:42
    and sort of semi-open innovation as new-ons???.
  • 72:42 - 72:44
    I think everyone in this room gets it.
  • 72:44 - 72:45
    But it's easy to say:
  • 72:45 - 72:48
    Look at how many apps you can build on the facebook platform,
  • 72:48 - 72:52
    or look at how many, you know, how many things on the iPhone platform, and that's innovation.
  • 72:52 - 72:57
    And when you are talking to Ś whoever, you know that Ś there is a distinction there.
  • 72:57 - 73:05
    And so, what do you see is the best way illustrate that and try and walk the line between Ś
  • 73:06 - 73:12
    you know ... fully open and kind of open and is that Ś is possible to do that?
  • 73:12 - 73:15
    [Eben Moglen] Well you know we went down this road before.
  • 73:15 - 73:20
    Because as The Free Software Movement was gaining strength,
  • 73:20 - 73:26
    Microsoft was creating that enormous ecosystem of Windows Developers, of which it was justly proud.
  • 73:27 - 73:31
    They were justly proud because they gave them control of the API,
  • 73:31 - 73:34
    but the developers were justly proud of the software they wrote.
  • 73:34 - 73:37
    They were only two things Ś [Laugher]
  • 73:37 - 73:41
    One was it was totally dependent on the Microsoft Ecosystem,
  • 73:41 - 73:44
    which as ???Richard Claxer said was K-Mart software.
  • 73:44 - 73:49
    And the other was that they were hampered by the fact that they have to invent everything themselves.
  • 73:49 - 73:54
    In order to get in, you had to buy the SDK and then you were alone in your garage,
  • 73:54 - 73:56
    trying to make something great.
  • 73:56 - 74:02
    But the whole system have been biased in such a way that you couldn't share and you couldn't learn.
  • 74:02 - 74:09
    And so it didn't turn out to be as good as the C shell, that created a generation of computer scientists.
  • 74:09 - 74:15
    So they got us a bunch of Windows developers, they made a bunch of stuff and we went fine.
  • 74:15 - 74:19
    And now the Microsoft is closing the code museum and freezing them out.
  • 74:20 - 74:23
    That's the problem, isn't, it with proprietary innovation.
  • 74:23 - 74:27
    It runs according to the strength of the business model and then it fails.
  • 74:27 - 74:32
    The reason we beat Microsoft was (that) we were even less subject to evolutionary data,
  • 74:32 - 74:34
    and they were and they knew it.
  • 74:34 - 74:39
    That's what the strength was of the GPL, and I'm not so happy
  • 74:39 - 74:45
    if ??? decides that it doesn't need to keep some copyleft stuff at the middle of it.
  • 74:45 - 74:48
    Because it closes the end on innovation.
  • 74:48 - 74:50
    The important thing about innovation,
  • 74:50 - 74:55
    -and we say it when we are in places which I have the grandeur of MIT to say it in -
  • 74:55 - 74:59
    is, it's a long run business. Not a short run business.
  • 74:59 - 75:03
    Proprietary software development whether for the Windows Ecosystem
  • 75:03 - 75:07
    or the iOS Ecosystem is a game of base hits, not home runs.
  • 75:07 - 75:11
    You can put a neat app on a thing and it's neat and we really love it,
  • 75:11 - 75:14
    and why don't you share it with us so we can do better?
  • 75:14 - 75:16
    Oh, the SDK terms this,
  • 75:16 - 75:19
    and the App Store terms that and no sharing allowed
  • 75:19 - 75:22
    because Steve Jobs slept here once,
  • 75:22 - 75:27
    and nobody else can sleep in any bed he ever slept in, unless they have his permission and all that stuff.
  • 75:27 - 75:32
    It's OK, it's B+ innovation, but we can do better.
  • 75:32 - 75:37
    And the point of being at experts or inspirers of innovation
  • 75:37 - 75:42
    is to help those bright young people to do stuff that lasts for the long term.
  • 75:42 - 75:45
    And you can explain in that frame,
  • 75:45 - 75:48
    why the political economy of closed end innovation
  • 75:48 - 75:51
    isn't really where you want to put your good idea when you are 17.
  • 75:51 - 75:56
    If Jimmy Wales have gone to work for Encyclopedia Brittanica or Compton,
  • 75:56 - 76:03
    I'm sure they'd be paying him a decent salary , and that's become what innovation was supposed to be.
  • 76:03 - 76:04
    It gets you a job.
  • 76:05 - 76:08
    That's when we are really in trouble. Thomas Edison didn't want a job.
  • 76:08 - 76:11
    [comment in background]
  • 76:11 - 76:12
    Fair Enough.
  • 76:12 - 76:16
    I'm not going to speak in favor of Mr. Edison as an individual.
  • 76:16 - 76:17
    I'm no in speak...[Laugh]
  • 76:17 - 76:23
    I'm only going to speak in favor of the idea of innovation is for the long run, and that's what counts.
  • 76:23 - 76:30
    And if you go to a guy who sells you your life back in return for your idea, that's not long run.
  • 76:33 - 76:37
    [Doc Searls] So we had 10 minutes here, and we've got I think five people left, so John quick.
  • 76:38 - 76:41
    [Joe Plotkin] I'll be quick as I see Chris Savage and Harold. I want to hear their questions as well.
  • 76:41 - 76:47
    John Plotkin from NYC Wireless, once again, Eben, great talk, always I enjoy it here when you talk.
  • 76:47 - 76:49
    A couple unrelated points.
  • 76:49 - 76:54
    One, when we talked about convenience vs control,
  • 76:54 - 76:56
    you know, everybody is using the wireless microphone,
  • 76:56 - 77:02
    they come out of that is spectrum, everyone should be aware of in this room at least.
  • 77:02 - 77:08
    But more, I want to give you a chance to talk and end in more of an optimistic note.
  • 77:08 - 77:15
    I see that the Maker Movement and all the hardware hacking that's going on, as tremendously optimistic for the future.
  • 77:15 - 77:19
    I see... you are in a maker fair and you see kids,
  • 77:20 - 77:22
    doing exactly what you described, playing around.
  • 77:22 - 77:26
    How can we get your message sort of...
  • 77:27 - 77:29
    you don't want to mess with that fooling around,
  • 77:29 - 77:35
    but somehow direct it to understanding the larger ecosysstem that they eventually gonna live in,
  • 77:35 - 77:37
    with those innovations.
  • 77:37 - 77:38
    [Eben Moglen] I don't know. I'll learn from you.
  • 77:40 - 77:44
    [Doc Searls] Actually I would like to touch a??? point and a prior point.
  • 77:44 - 77:48
    I was remembering, when Eben was talking about, kids.
  • 77:48 - 77:56
    You know, what I did when I was a kid was I loved radio and I loved to ??? screwdrivers, and I was a Ham radio operator.
  • 77:56 - 78:02
    You know, there was no computing in 1961 that a kid could do, but I hacked on radios.
  • 78:02 - 78:08
    And I just wanna call Dwayne Hendrix to the mike for a second to talk about,
  • 78:08 - 78:13
    what we were talking about at the Hall about opportunities with amateur radio that still exist.
  • 78:17 - 78:20
    [Dwayne Hendrix] Thanks. Amateur radio has been around for about 100 years now.
  • 78:20 - 78:27
    And by treaty, it's in most countries on the planet.
  • 78:27 - 78:30
    I can take my amateur radio privileges from the US
  • 78:30 - 78:34
    and go to all those countries, and operate just like I was here.
  • 78:35 - 78:41
    Eben talked about (the) need to have free access to spectrum with no middle man, ok?
  • 78:41 - 78:45
    The amateur radio service is just that, ok?
  • 78:45 - 78:47
    There is no FCC in the middle.
  • 78:48 - 78:54
    You can create wireless devices, you self certify them, ok?
  • 78:54 - 79:00
    And as I said, you can take them to other places on the planet and operate them without asking anybody.
  • 79:00 - 79:05
    In fact, with the licence class I have, I can put a
  • 79:05 - 79:10
    communications platform in orbit without asking permission of the FCC.
  • 79:10 - 79:12
    That is powerful.
  • 79:13 - 79:19
    So there is a lot of misapprehensions and misunderstandings about what amateur radio is about,
  • 79:19 - 79:23
    perpetrated by organizations like American Radio Relay League.
  • 79:24 - 79:28
    It's all about innovation under your own control.
  • 79:28 - 79:33
    Gives you complete access to spectrum, as long as you don't use it for commersial purposes.
  • 79:33 - 79:35
    So let me just leave you with one thought.
  • 79:36 - 79:42
    Ten years ago, I was working for a company called COM21 the founder of which was Paul Baran,
  • 79:42 - 79:45
    who is sort of known as the Grand Father of the Internet, right?
  • 79:45 - 79:53
    Paul basically said: Look what I've learned is that I look at all these people around building proprietary radios, ok?,
  • 79:54 - 79:55
    and they come and go.
  • 79:55 - 80:00
    If you gonna create a business look at mass produced radios.
  • 80:01 - 80:03
    And use those and more of them to your own needs.
  • 80:04 - 80:06
    There is two mass produced radios today.
  • 80:06 - 80:08
    WiFi and Cable modems.
  • 80:09 - 80:11
    With a little construct called a transverter,
  • 80:12 - 80:14
    -a transverter also known as a linear translator-
  • 80:14 - 80:18
    you could take the inputs and outputs of a cable modem or any wifi device
  • 80:18 - 80:21
    and put it anywhere in the radio spectrum.
  • 80:22 - 80:25
    And couple that with an amateur radio licence
  • 80:25 - 80:33
    and now you have cheap hardware that you can go anywhere and not ask permission of anybody, ok?
  • 80:33 - 80:40
    So, look into this. I mean, Amateur radio, basically output devices that
  • 80:41 - 80:43
    .... you don't have to have an amateur licence to use it.
  • 80:43 - 80:52
    I mean, under my amateur radio authority I can have as many transmitters operating in the US territory without...
  • 80:52 - 80:54
    and have people just like you use them,
  • 80:54 - 80:57
    all I have to do is to be able to turn on and off the device,ok?
  • 80:58 - 81:04
    When I was working at COM21 we littered the bay area with cable modems that have transverters
  • 81:04 - 81:07
    and have a wireless Internet network, ok?,
  • 81:08 - 81:12
    (and) that we had a lot of people use it, ok?,
  • 81:12 - 81:16
    so we didn't get any money for it, we didn't charge anybody for Internet access,
  • 81:16 - 81:19
    but we provided innovation of a different nature.
  • 81:20 - 81:20
    That's it.
  • 81:21 - 81:22
    [Doc Searls] Also thanks, thanks Dwayne.
  • 81:22 - 81:23
    [Applause]
  • 81:23 - 81:25
    [Doc Searls]Yeah. Go.
  • 81:26 - 81:28
    [Harold Phelp]Harold Phelp ??? with public knowledge.
  • 81:31 - 81:35
    First of all, I have to say that maybe I'm alone in this
  • 81:35 - 81:40
    but I tend to think of this more as the ???? speech rather than the I have a dream speech.[Laughs]
  • 81:42 - 81:50
    And in those small part, because I'll notice who kicked butt on the field of Ozonecorp ???.
  • 81:52 - 81:59
    But the one thing that I did want to raise and ask is if you have seen
  • 81:59 - 82:03
    Corry Doctorow's recent pissed on the failure of geek politics.
  • 82:04 - 82:05
    And this is a Ś
  • 82:08 - 82:15
    I'll confess to my own self interest as Washington Insider focused on the FCC,
  • 82:15 - 82:20
    but I just wanna to stress and ask folks like you who are out there
  • 82:20 - 82:27
    to encourage engagement in these processes,
  • 82:28 - 82:35
    and especially when the temptation to despair about getting productive results is so high.
  • 82:36 - 82:39
    But also point out the posiv aspect of this is Ś
  • 82:40 - 82:41
    -Dwayne actually focused this-
  • 82:42 - 82:47
    there are actually a lot of opportunities that are here and around us,
  • 82:47 - 82:52
    and I really think that there is a lot that could be done,
  • 82:53 - 83:03
    as has been done now already with a number of folks who in trying to organize a more focused agenda,
  • 83:04 - 83:11
    that would be a positive, legislative and regulatory agenda, rather than a defensive one.
  • 83:12 - 83:15
    And I just wanna put that out there,
  • 83:15 - 83:25
    as well as any interest in working with anybody who is interested in taking up arms here.
  • 83:30 - 83:37
    Hi, ???? .
  • 83:37 - 83:39
    Thanks for bringing up the Ham radio issue.
  • 83:39 - 83:42
    That's really very very interesting field right now,
  • 83:42 - 83:49
    especially since we got ten box STRs in the form of TVB-T receivers.
  • 83:50 - 83:52
    Just take them out and reprogram them. It's very interesting.
  • 83:53 - 83:56
    And one other thing for Eben Ś
  • 83:57 - 84:01
    when you were talking about OLPC, sort of I had a small dejavu.
  • 84:02 - 84:05
    I was there at that time, when they were doing their mesh research,
  • 84:06 - 84:11
    I was flying from Boston to Europe, and I was couple of time was telling them,
  • 84:11 - 84:14
    we got these huge networks there we got it already done,
  • 84:15 - 84:20
    and they were still working on the specific ???? implementation which just failed.
  • 84:20 - 84:24
    So I would like to deposit the thought that we should cooperate more closely,
  • 84:24 - 84:30
    because we have quite some experience, and it might save us 8 years of R&D. Thanks.
  • 84:32 - 84:36
    [Doc Searls]OK. We have 2 minutes and 33 seconds left and the musicians are here so here's Chris...
  • 84:37 - 84:38
    [Chris Savage]Chris Savage, Random Medicine.
  • 84:40 - 84:45
    I agree with Harold. This was not quite a I have a Dream Speech was more like Saint Christmas Day
  • 84:45 - 84:46
    [Little Laugh]
  • 84:46 - 84:51
    and I would like to ask you and the folks would ask themselves the following question.
  • 84:51 - 84:54
    Assuming that you've laid down the battlelines correctly,
  • 84:55 - 84:57
    what would Gandhi do?
  • 85:05 - 85:06
    [Doc Searls]Would Gandhi battle?
  • 85:07 - 85:11
    [Backround speech]
  • 85:11 - 85:15
    [Eben Moglen] Well, then I'm in total agree with you.
  • 85:16 - 85:19
    I'm uncomfortable with all the comparisons.
  • 85:19 - 85:23
    So let me put them aside and say that
  • 85:25 - 85:30
    my part of this work ugly??? enough is just making lawyers. Right?
  • 85:30 - 85:31
    [Laughs]
  • 85:31 - 85:34
    That's what I actually do for a living.
  • 85:34 - 85:39
    And before we all get grunt about it, what that really means is,
  • 85:39 - 85:45
    teaching young people who have enormous opportunities to change society,
  • 85:45 - 85:50
    that they shouldn't go and take jobs pushing corporate finance paper instead.
  • 85:50 - 85:59
    I'm not actually trying in my earnest suggestions to the contrary of what I'm standing,
  • 85:59 - 86:01
    I'm not trying to wield any power.
  • 86:02 - 86:03
    I do want to talk to people,
  • 86:03 - 86:08
    and I admit that bad happens when you talk to people in large groups for long periods of time,
  • 86:08 - 86:11
    which is actually not terribly productive,
  • 86:11 - 86:14
    but what I think we are trying to do,
  • 86:14 - 86:19
    and here you question about Mahatma Gandhi seems relevant to me,
  • 86:19 - 86:23
    I'm trying to make the people to believe that they are the solution to the problem.
  • 86:24 - 86:30
    I'm trying to get people to believe that it's in their hands, not in hands of some mysterious power far away.
  • 86:31 - 86:32
    We got to win this close up.
  • 86:33 - 86:36
    You must have to AsianCorp motiv then that's the one to have.
  • 86:37 - 86:40
    This is not going to be dealt with at a distance.
  • 86:40 - 86:45
    This is actually done in those muddy slipping and falling places where all this goes on.
  • 86:45 - 86:49
    If Harold thinks that we can do it at the FCC, that's great.
  • 86:49 - 86:53
    I'm not sure that I believe him, but he can, if I can.
  • 86:53 - 86:58
    What I'm really asking is for all of us to recognize,
  • 86:58 - 87:03
    we are gonna have to talk to language of political economy and government policy for a while.
  • 87:04 - 87:10
    We've talked the language of licencing and how to make Free Software, and that has run out.
  • 87:10 - 87:17
    So now the time has come to talk about how we save societies itches,by scratching them with freedom.
  • 87:18 - 87:20
    And if we can do that, then we'll win.
  • 87:21 - 87:22
    Thanks everybody.
  • 87:22 - 87:30
    [Applause]
Title:
F2C2012: Eben Moglen keynote - "Innovation under Austerity"
Description:

Eben Moglen keynote - "Innovation under Austerity" at F2C:Freedom to Connect 2012, Washington DC on May 22 2012.

Discussants: Doc Searls. Isaac Wilder

Audio: http://bit.ly/f2cmoglenaudio

http://freedom-to-connect.net/

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:27:46

English, British subtitles

Incomplete

Revisions