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Three years ago,
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I started building a decentralized web
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because I was worried about
the future of our internet.
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The current internet we are using
is about gatekeepers.
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If you want to reach something on the web,
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then you need to go
through multiple middlemen.
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First, a domain name reserver,
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then a server hosting company,
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which usually points you to a third party
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to a web hosting service.
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And this happens every time you want
to reach a website on the web.
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But these gatekeepers ??
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and also makes the censorship
and the surveillance easier.
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And the situation is getting worse.
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Everything is moving to the cloud,
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where the data is hosted
by giant corporations.
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This move creates much,
much more powerful middlemen.
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Now, move to the cloud makes sense
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because this way it's easier and cheaper
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for the developers
and the service operators.
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They don't have to worry about
maintaining the physical servers.
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I can't blame them, but I found
this trend to be very dangerous,
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because this way, these giant corporations
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have unlimited control over
the hosting services.
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And it's very easy to abuse this power.
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For example, last year, a CEO of a company
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that acts as a gatekeeper
for nine million websites
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decided, after some public pressure,
that one of the sites it manages,
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a far right page, should be blocked.
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He then sent an internal email
to his coworkers.
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"This was an arbitrary decision.
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I woke up this morning in a bad mood
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and decided to kick them
off the Internet."
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Even he admits,
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"No one should have this power."
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As a response, one of
the employees asked him,
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"Is this the day the Internet dies?"
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I don't think we are actually
killing the internet,
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but I do think that we are in the middle
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of a kind of irresponsible
centralization process
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that makes our internet more fragile.
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The decentralized, people-to-people web
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solves this problem by removing
the central points,
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the web-hosting services.
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It empowers the users
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to have host sites they want to preserve.
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On this network, the sites get downloaded
directly from other visitors.
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This means, if you have a site
with 100 visitors, then it's hosted
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100 computers around the world.
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Basically, this is a people-powered
version of the internet.
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The security of the network
is provided by public-key cryptography.
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This makes sure that no one
can modify the sites
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but only the real owner.
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Think of it like instead of getting
electricity from big power plants,
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you put solar panels on top of your house,
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and if your neighbor down the street
needs some extra energy,
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then they can just download
some from your house.
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So by using the decentralized web,
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we can help to keep content
accessible for other visitors.
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And by that, it means
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that we can also fight against things
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that we feel are unjust,
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like censorship.
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In China, the internet
is tightly controlled.
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They can't criticize the government,
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organize a protest,
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and it's also forbidden to post
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a kind of emoticon to remember the victims
of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
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With decentralizer, it's not
the government that decides
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what gets seen and what doesn't.
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It's the people,
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which makes the web more democratic.
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But at the same time,
it's hard to use this network
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to do something that is clearly illegal
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everywhere in the world,
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as the users probably don't want
to endanger themselves
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hosting these kinds
of problematic content.
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Another increasing threat
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to internet freedom
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is overregulation.
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I have the impression
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that our delegates
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who vote on the internet regulation laws
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are not fully aware of their decisions.
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For example, the European Parliament
has a new law on the table,
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a new copyright protection law,
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that has a part called Article 13.
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If it passes, it would require
every big website
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to implement a filter
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that automatically blocks content
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based on rules controlled
by big corporations.
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The original idea is to protect
copyrighted materials,
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but it would endanger many other things
we do on the internet:
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blogging, criticizing, discussing,
linking and sharing.
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Google and YouTube
already have similar systems
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and they are receiving 100,000
takedown requests every hour.
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Of course, they can't process
this amount of data by hand,
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so they are using machine learning
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to decide if it's really
a copyright violation or not.
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But these filters do make mistakes.
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They're removing everything
from documentation of human rights abuses,
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lectures about copyrights,
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and search results that point to criticism
of this new Article 13.
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Beside of that, they are also
removing many other things.
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And sometimes, these filters
aren't just removing the specific content,
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but it could also lead
to loss of your linked accounts:
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your email address,
your documents, your photos,
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or your unfinished book,
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which happened with
the writer Dennis Cooper.
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It's not hard to see how
a system like this could be abused
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by politicians and corporate competitors.
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This Article 13, the extension of this
automated filters to the whole internet,
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got strong opposition from Wikipedia,
Github, Mozilla, and many others,
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including the original founders
of the internet and the World Wide Web,
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Vint Cerf and Tim Berners-Lee.
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But despite this strong opposition,
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on the last European Parliament vote,
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two thirds of the representatives
supported this law.
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The final vote will be early 2019.
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The result is important,
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but whatever happens,
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I'm pretty sure it will be followed
by many other similar proposals
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around the world.
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These kinds of regulations
would be very hard to enforce
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through a decentralized web,
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as there is no hosting companies.
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The websites are served
by the visitors themselves.
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I started to build
this network three years ago.
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Since then, I've spent thousands,
tens of thousands of hours
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on the development.
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Why?
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Why would anyone spend thousands of hours
on something anyone can freely copy,
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rename, or even sell?
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Well, in my case,
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one of the reasons was
to do something meaningful.
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During my daily regular job
as a web developer,
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I didn't have the feeling that I'm working
on something that has a chance
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to be a bigger than me.
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Simply, I just wanted to make
my short presence in this world
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to be meaningful.
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Last year, the Great Firewall of China
started blocking this network I created.
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This move officially made me the enemy
of the government-supported
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internet censorship.
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Since then, it's been really
a game of cat and mouse.
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They make new rules in the firewall,
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and I try to react to it as fast as I can
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so the users can keep host content
and create websites that otherwise
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would be censored by
the centralized Chinese internet.
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My other motivation
to create this network was worry.
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I fear that the future of our internet
is out of our control.
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The increasing centralization
and the proposed laws
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are threatening our freedom of speech
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and, by that, our democracy.
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So for me, building a decentralized web
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means creating a safe harbor,
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a space where the rules are not written
by big corporations and political parties,
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but by the people.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)