Navigating the Age of Democratized Media conference keynote
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0:01 - 0:04Thank you Tom, it's a great pleasure to be here
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0:04 - 0:07I'm very glad to have the opportunity to talk
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0:07 - 0:10about the questions that concern me most
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0:10 - 0:14in a context which allows us to talk a little bit
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0:14 - 0:17about journalism and a little bit about ignorance
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0:17 - 0:21and a little bit about abuse of power
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0:21 - 0:25The problem presented by The Press
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0:25 - 0:28that is to say by the machinery of communication
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0:28 - 0:32since we began industrializing communication
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0:32 - 0:34and fighting ignorance in Europe,
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0:34 - 0:36in the 15th Century
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0:36 - 0:38The problem posed by the Press
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0:38 - 0:44is its almost impossible affiliation with power
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0:44 - 0:47the Press and power are difficult to keep apart
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0:47 - 0:49more difficult to keep apart than peanut butter
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0:49 - 0:50and jelly, more difficult to keep apart
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0:50 - 0:53than night and day.
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0:53 - 0:56The Press and power fell into one another's
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0:56 - 0:57embrace from the very beginning
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0:57 - 1:00because from the very beginning it was clear
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1:00 - 1:02that the alternative to an embrace between
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1:02 - 1:04the Press and power
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1:04 - 1:07is constant Revolution fueled by people's desire
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1:07 - 1:10to know and to free themselves
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1:10 - 1:12to act in their own best interests
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1:12 - 1:16regardless of power's best interests
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1:16 - 1:19Our adoption of the Press in the European world
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1:19 - 1:21brought on the collapse of the unity
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1:21 - 1:23of Christendom and the end of the system
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1:23 - 1:25for the control of the mind
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1:25 - 1:27that was the universal Catholic Church
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1:27 - 1:30in that great intellectual, political,
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1:30 - 1:34moral revolution we called the Reformation
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1:34 - 1:37The response to the Reformation was the
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1:37 - 1:40lesson in all European societies, Protestant
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1:40 - 1:43and Catholic both that the Press could not
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1:43 - 1:44be allowed to be free.
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1:44 - 1:47and the result was censorship almost
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1:47 - 1:49everywhere for hundreds of years
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1:49 - 1:52In those few places in Europe -- in Holland
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1:52 - 1:54and in the United Kingdom -- actually in England
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1:54 - 2:00after 1650, and then again after 1695 --
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2:00 - 2:03in those few places where the Press was free
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2:03 - 2:06to print without control, the result was the
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2:06 - 2:08intellectual, political, and moral revolution
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2:08 - 2:10we call the Enlightenment and the
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2:10 - 2:12French Revolution, that is
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2:12 - 2:16a further demonstration that allowing people
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2:16 - 2:19to know, to learn, to educate one another
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2:19 - 2:22and to share will bring about
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2:22 - 2:26deconcentration of Power and threat to every
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2:26 - 2:30"ancien regime"
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2:30 - 2:32But in the age of capitalist industrial media
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2:32 - 2:35out of which we are now passing
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2:35 - 2:38the marriage between the Press and power was
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2:38 - 2:41once again a matter of magnetic attraction
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2:41 - 2:45the Press, that is the industrial production and
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2:45 - 2:49distribution of organized information --
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2:49 - 2:52the Press became the handmaiden of the
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2:52 - 2:54ownership class.
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2:54 - 2:56Freedom of the Press
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2:56 - 2:57the great American press critic
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2:57 - 2:59A. J. Liebling wrote
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2:59 - 3:02"Freedom of the Press belongs to him who owns one"
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3:02 - 3:04and throught the 20th Century
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3:04 - 3:06both with respect to the Press
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3:06 - 3:09and to its close kissing cousin, Broadcast
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3:09 - 3:14that was most affirmatively true
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3:14 - 3:16We are now passing out of the age
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3:16 - 3:17of the Press
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3:17 - 3:20as we are passing out of the very idea
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3:20 - 3:23that there is a machine that transforms
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3:23 - 3:25information from the local and the temporary
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3:25 - 3:29to the permanent and the ever-present.
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3:29 - 3:31We are instead beginning to live inside
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3:31 - 3:33a digital nervous system which links
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3:33 - 3:36every human being on the planet
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3:36 - 3:38to every other human being on the planet
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3:38 - 3:40actually or potentially
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3:40 - 3:43without any intermediaries
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3:43 - 3:46By the end of the next generation
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3:46 - 3:49whatever horrors or victories have happened
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3:49 - 3:49in the meantime
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3:49 - 3:52by the end of the next generation
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3:52 - 3:53we will live in that world
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3:53 - 3:57of pervasive human social interconnection
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3:57 - 3:58which is what we really mean
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3:58 - 4:02when we talk about "the Internet"
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4:02 - 4:06Every fax machine -- well, the few remaining --
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4:06 - 4:09every scanner, every printer, every telephone
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4:09 - 4:11every camera, every video camera
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4:11 - 4:13did I say telephone..telephone..telephone..
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4:13 - 4:16telephone?
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4:16 - 4:19Every object with electrical power behind it
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4:19 - 4:21will be an information-gathering and
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4:21 - 4:23distribution system controlled
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4:23 - 4:25by some human being, somewhere,
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4:25 - 4:28at one end or at the other.
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4:28 - 4:29If it is controlled at the end where the
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4:29 - 4:32human beings are, where they struggle
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4:32 - 4:35where they seek to sell their vegetables
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4:35 - 4:38where they are affronted by a policeman
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4:38 - 4:41refusing to allow them to sell their vegetables
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4:41 - 4:43where they act in the street to deal with the
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4:43 - 4:46aftermath of a vegetable seller prevented
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4:46 - 4:48from selling his vegetables by a
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4:48 - 4:50officious policeman
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4:50 - 4:53everywhere we will have knowledge
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4:53 - 4:55being produced by people
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4:55 - 4:57to free themselves.
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4:57 - 5:01Consider this: In Indian right now
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5:01 - 5:04the poorest of the poor have mobile phones
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5:04 - 5:07and on that mobile phone -- each person's
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5:07 - 5:11mobile phone -- every book, every piece of music
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5:11 - 5:13every piece of video, every map, every
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5:13 - 5:16scientific experiment, every kind of
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5:16 - 5:19information that is useful and beautiful
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5:19 - 5:22could be made available to every single person
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5:22 - 5:26were it not for the rules against sharing
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5:26 - 5:29All we have left in that great nervous system
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5:29 - 5:32of humanity -- all that we have left that makes
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5:32 - 5:35ignorance compulsory are the rules against
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5:35 - 5:36sharing
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5:36 - 5:39When the rules against sharing are gone
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5:39 - 5:41-- and they will go --
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5:41 - 5:43ignorance will, for the first time
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5:43 - 5:45in the history of the human race,
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5:45 - 5:49be entirely preventable everywhere
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5:49 - 5:51You are watching around the world right now
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5:51 - 5:53as young people demonstrate that they
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5:53 - 5:56are willing to stand in front of bullets
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5:56 - 5:57for Liberty.
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5:57 - 5:59Later in this Century you will watch as
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5:59 - 6:02young people around the world demonstrate
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6:02 - 6:03that they are willing to stand in front
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6:03 - 6:07of bullets in order to have the freedom to learn.
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6:07 - 6:10When that happens, the human race will go through
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6:10 - 6:14the most important revolution since 1789,
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6:14 - 6:17and an "ancien regime" which deserves to perish
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6:17 - 6:20will perish throughout the world
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6:20 - 6:24here today we are discussing a few, simple,
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6:24 - 6:28precursor parts to that enormous revolution.
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6:28 - 6:30The dis-intermediation of the systems of
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6:30 - 6:33controlled information production and
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6:33 - 6:36distribution which have been with us since the
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6:36 - 6:39morning after Gutenberg.
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6:39 - 6:41But this is the day after the morning
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6:41 - 6:44after Gutenberg.
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6:44 - 6:46This is the moment when the disparities
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6:46 - 6:49of power and the disparaties of access
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6:49 - 6:52begin to give way
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6:52 - 6:54and on the other side, at this moment,
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6:54 - 6:57are almost all the governments
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6:57 - 6:59and almost all the Press
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6:59 - 7:02and almost all the incumbents who do not
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7:02 - 7:09want the World to change.
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7:09 - 7:10I was having dinner with a government
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7:10 - 7:13official in Washington, D.C. earlier this week
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7:13 - 7:16and I said to him "You know, about half the
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7:16 - 7:19television networks in Europe seem to be chasing
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7:19 - 7:22me for an interview to discuss the
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7:22 - 7:24hypocrisy of American government
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7:24 - 7:27Internet freedom policy,"
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7:27 - 7:30I said "and if half the television networks in
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7:30 - 7:32Europe want to talk to me about the hypocrisy
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7:32 - 7:34of American Internet freedom policy, that
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7:34 - 7:35suggests to me that the State Department
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7:35 - 7:37has a problem.
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7:37 - 7:39He said "Yes, they know they have a problem,
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7:39 - 7:40and they want to do something about it."
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7:40 - 7:42And they should,
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7:42 - 7:44but every government on Earth
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7:44 - 7:46has difficulty talking about Internet freedom
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7:46 - 7:49straight, because every government on Earth
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7:49 - 7:51is part of a structure of power which stands to
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7:51 - 7:53lose in one way or another from free information
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7:53 - 7:58flows, just as the great economic institutions
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7:58 - 8:01dominating our time, the great surveillance
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8:01 - 8:04institutions which offer you the chance to search
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8:04 - 8:07as long as you share everything you search,
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8:07 - 8:10and free email, as long as you let them read it,
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8:10 - 8:12and free telephone calls, as long as they can
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8:12 - 8:15listen in -- just for the purposes of advertsing,
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8:15 - 8:16mind you.
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8:16 - 8:18Please, bring half a million people here
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8:18 - 8:20and live your social life inside my surveillance
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8:20 - 8:25system. I'll take good care of you.
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8:25 - 8:27Of course, unless you're in the street protesting
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8:27 - 8:30against dictatorship, in which case what we will
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8:30 - 8:32tell you is: our great social networking service
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8:32 - 8:35is rigidly neutral between dictators and
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8:35 - 8:37people in the street fighting them...
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8:37 - 8:42not our concern here at whatchamacallit
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8:42 - 8:47This is a transitional stage, you understand?
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8:47 - 8:50I've told you where we're going. Now the question
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8:50 - 8:51is how are we going to get there?
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8:51 - 8:55Here's how we're going to get there:
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8:55 - 8:59the World's going to fill up with cheap, small,
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8:59 - 9:02low-powered devices that are going to replace
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9:02 - 9:05most of the computers you're accustomed to.
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9:05 - 9:09All those big ones on desktops and in closets,
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9:09 - 9:13and in rooms full of servers somewhere, replaced by things
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9:13 - 9:16not much larger than a cell phone charger, and
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9:16 - 9:19very, very, very much more capable
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9:19 - 9:21than the first computer you ever owned,
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9:21 - 9:23whichever one it was
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9:23 - 9:24or maybe even the computer you're
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9:24 - 9:26using now.
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9:26 - 9:28Those devices are going to cost next to nothing
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9:28 - 9:32and they're going to be everywhere, and
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9:32 - 9:35we're going to make software that runs in them
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9:35 - 9:38all of them, that a 12 year old can install
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9:38 - 9:41and a 6 year old can use
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9:41 - 9:43which will allow people to communicate freely
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9:43 - 9:47everywhere, all the time, net of state control
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9:47 - 9:49net of profitmaker control,
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9:49 - 9:53net of control, they will be Freedom Boxes.
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9:53 - 9:55They will make Freedom.
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9:55 - 9:57We don't have to make the boxes -- the boxes
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9:57 - 9:58are going to fill the world. We just need to make
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9:58 - 10:01software. And the good news is that we don't
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10:01 - 10:05need to make software, we make it already.
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10:05 - 10:07Everybody in this room with an Android phone is
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10:07 - 10:09using it. Everybody in this room who has
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10:09 - 10:12touched Facebook today, they were using it
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10:12 - 10:13on the other side.
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10:13 - 10:15Everybody who used a bank or a supermarket
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10:15 - 10:18or an insurance company or a train station
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10:18 - 10:21in the last week interacted with our software.
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10:21 - 10:24It's everywhere. We made it to be everywhere
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10:24 - 10:25It's Free.
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10:25 - 10:26That means we can copy it, modify it,
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10:26 - 10:28and redistribute it freely.
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10:28 - 10:30It also means that it works for people,
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10:30 - 10:31not for companies.
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10:31 - 10:34All of this is already done. This is the result
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10:34 - 10:36of 25 years of effort on our part.
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10:36 - 10:40Now, right now, in the street, right now,
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10:40 - 10:42we begin to show why it protects Freedom
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10:42 - 10:44and why people need it.
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10:44 - 10:49And we begin to prepare to deliver it to them.
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10:49 - 10:51A. J. Liebling, that press critic I was
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10:51 - 10:52speaking of before, wrote once
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10:52 - 10:55"The American press reminds me of a
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10:55 - 11:0112 billion dollar superheated, absolutely
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11:01 - 11:02state of the art fish cannery relying for all
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11:02 - 11:05its fish on 6 guys in leaky rowboats."
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11:05 - 11:07The point being, of course, that the great
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11:07 - 11:09monolithic industrial press of the 20th
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11:09 - 11:13Century did everything well except reporting,
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11:13 - 11:15which it did poorly, because reporting
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11:15 - 11:17was the free lunch in the saloon, and any time
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11:17 - 11:22the saloonkeeper could cut back on it, he did.
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11:22 - 11:23I don't need to tell you that that process has
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11:23 - 11:30accelerated since A. J. Liebling died in 1975.
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11:30 - 11:32So we live now in a world where we're
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11:32 - 11:35about to fill a gap in reporting.
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11:35 - 11:37You know what fills the gap in reporting -- it was
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11:37 - 11:41referred to in the moments we've already had together
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11:41 - 11:45it's all those phones, all those video cameras, all those tweets.
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11:45 - 11:47In other words, we have already democratized
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11:47 - 11:50the system of reporting.
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11:50 - 11:52What is scary for the establishment
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11:52 - 11:55about Wikileaks is that Wikileaks is to
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11:55 - 11:58newsgathering what Craig's List is to
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11:58 - 12:02classified advertising.
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12:02 - 12:05It changes the economy of leaking
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12:05 - 12:07I hate to be correcting anybody on any point
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12:07 - 12:09but I should point out that Wikileaks
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12:09 - 12:12has not released 250,000 State Department
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12:12 - 12:15cables. It has 250,000 State Department cables
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12:15 - 12:20and has released about 2,000 of them.
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12:20 - 12:22Which is about the number of diplomatic
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12:22 - 12:24cables showed to diplomatic correspondents around the world
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12:25 - 12:29working for major newspapers every single day.
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12:29 - 12:31But nobody says that's treason, because that's
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12:31 - 12:34the official commerce in leaking, from which
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12:34 - 12:37government officials and press lords and
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12:37 - 12:40owners around the World derive benefit
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12:40 - 12:41every single day
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12:41 - 12:44Economic power, political power
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12:44 - 12:48and the power to keep people ignorant.
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12:48 - 12:50What is happening in the 'Net, now,
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12:50 - 12:54in those phones, in those Tor exit nodes,
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12:54 - 12:56and what will be happening in the World
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12:56 - 12:59multiplied by a hundred, shortly,
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12:59 - 13:01in all those Freedom Boxes is,
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13:01 - 13:05information being free for the benefit of those
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13:05 - 13:09who need.
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13:09 - 13:12Ask yourself what will happen when
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13:12 - 13:15everybody who needs can have
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13:15 - 13:18and everybody who can make, supplies.
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13:18 - 13:22What will happen in neighborhoods
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13:22 - 13:23What will happen in police stations
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13:23 - 13:25What will happen when there's a fire
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13:25 - 13:28Or an earthquake, what will happen when there's
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13:28 - 13:32a tyrant coming down.
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13:32 - 13:34Those same little boxes I'm talking about
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13:34 - 13:39will also be able to do wireless mesh networking
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13:39 - 13:41that is to say that if somebody turns out
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13:41 - 13:44the telecommunications network in a neighborhood
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13:44 - 13:48the neighborhood will keep functioning.
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13:48 - 13:52What Mr. Mubarak and the men around him
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13:52 - 13:54misunderstood. The reason that he's in
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13:54 - 13:58Sharm el-Sheikh, hoping to buy a single floor through apartment
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13:58 - 14:00in one of the towers being built in Mecca, no doubt
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14:01 - 14:02The reason that that happened is that
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14:02 - 14:05Mr. Mubarak and his advisers thought that
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14:05 - 14:08if you turn off the Internet, you turn off
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14:08 - 14:11the Internet generation.
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14:11 - 14:15That was wrong. Because, in fact, it isn't
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14:15 - 14:19a particular system of telecoms,
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14:19 - 14:22or a particular social networking structure,
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14:22 - 14:26a particular database of 'twats' ... or twuts..
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14:26 - 14:28or twoots, or whatever they call them
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14:29 - 14:35It's not the technology that makes it work
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14:35 - 14:38it's that human beings have figured out
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14:38 - 14:41something about society if they grow up
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14:41 - 14:43in the 'Net.
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14:43 - 14:45Most human beings, most of the time,
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14:45 - 14:48in most social contexts, believe that the
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14:48 - 14:51social network valuable to them is the people
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14:51 - 14:54they see every day, and the people with whom
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14:54 - 14:57they have strong emotional connections.
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14:57 - 15:00That's how most people, almost all the time,
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15:00 - 15:01think about the social world.
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15:01 - 15:04That's because we evolved for millions of years to think that way.
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15:04 - 15:09As parts of small groups of a few dozen
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15:09 - 15:13ground-dwelling primates.
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15:13 - 15:15Our neurology evolved for that
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15:15 - 15:19our social heuristics evolved for that
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15:19 - 15:22we think that the social network robust
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15:22 - 15:24enough to support us, is the people
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15:24 - 15:27we see around us and the people we care about
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15:27 - 15:30who care about us back.
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15:30 - 15:32But the generation of people growing up
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15:32 - 15:39inside the 'Net now knows, knows viscerally, knows all the time
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15:39 - 15:42as a matter of habit, is that the social network
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15:42 - 15:44that is robust enough to change the world
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15:44 - 15:47around you includes the thousands of people
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15:47 - 15:50you don't live near, and with whom you don't
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15:50 - 15:53have any direct emotional connection,
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15:53 - 15:55but are the people who believe what you
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15:55 - 16:00believe, and want to do something about it, too.
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16:00 - 16:02What we learned at the end of the 20th Century
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16:02 - 16:04first in Poland, and then in other places, is that
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16:04 - 16:08what makes revolution is solidarity.
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16:08 - 16:11The ability of people who do not live near
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16:11 - 16:14one another in social or geographic space
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16:14 - 16:17who do not have immediate personal bonds
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16:17 - 16:20binding them together, to percieve the ability
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16:20 - 16:23to self-organize for the sudden achievement
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16:23 - 16:25of deeply felt social ends
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16:25 - 16:30what the network does -- what life with the network does is to
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16:30 - 16:34teach humans that the cost of making solidarity
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16:34 - 16:36has gone way down.
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16:36 - 16:40That it is easier and faster to make solidarity
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16:40 - 16:42than it has ever been before, and if you take
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16:42 - 16:45a bunch of people who know that lesson, and
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16:45 - 16:48you turn the network off, they go right on making
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16:48 - 16:51solidarity the best way they know how.
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16:51 - 16:53They drop leaflets in the street, they make
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16:53 - 16:55carrier pigeons, they have phone trees.
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16:55 - 16:58They do whatever it is, because the real skill
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16:58 - 17:01being learned by humanity is the skill of
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17:01 - 17:04self-organization, and what we're seeing right
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17:04 - 17:06now, today, in the Maghreb, right now,
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17:06 - 17:09right today, right now, is that solidarity made
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17:09 - 17:11by self-organization is stronger than machine
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17:11 - 17:16gun bullets.
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17:16 - 17:18All over the world tyranny likes to say "the
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17:18 - 17:21alternative to me is chaos," and all around the
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17:21 - 17:25world everybody can see that isn't true.
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17:25 - 17:27So what we're going to do is we're going to make
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17:27 - 17:30cheap things, and we're going to fill them
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17:30 - 17:32with Free Software, and we're going to put them
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17:32 - 17:33in everybody's hands, and we're going to say
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17:33 - 17:37"Here. That makes solidarity. Use it. Be well.
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17:37 - 17:41Be Free"
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17:41 - 17:43It's going to work.
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17:43 - 17:46There isn't any reason to be on the side
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17:46 - 17:49of the Press, just as there isn't any reason
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17:49 - 17:53to be on the side of power. It's simple, now.
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17:53 - 17:57Power has moved to the edge of the network,
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17:57 - 17:58and it will continue to do that for a generation
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17:58 - 17:59to come.
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17:59 - 18:01It will make a grand revolution, and it will
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18:01 - 18:05change the fate of billions of human beings.
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18:05 - 18:08It will make ignorance obsolete, and when it
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18:08 - 18:10makes ignorance obsolete, it will change the
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18:10 - 18:14future of the human condition.
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18:14 - 18:15The Press isn't going to do that. Power isn't
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18:15 - 18:18going to do that.
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18:18 - 18:20People are going to do that.
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18:20 - 18:23The technology to empower people to do that
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18:23 - 18:26exists already. All it needs is a little bit
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18:26 - 18:28of refinement.
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18:29 - 18:34We're the guys who refine it. We don't seek
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18:34 - 18:35money. We don't seek power. We only want
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18:35 - 18:39to share.
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18:39 - 18:43Everyone wants to talk about Internet freedom,
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18:43 - 18:45except us.
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18:45 - 18:48We don't want to talk about Internet freedom,
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18:48 - 18:50we just want to do it.
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18:50 - 18:51Join us.
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18:51 -Thank you very much.
- Title:
- Navigating the Age of Democratized Media conference keynote
- Description:
-
Eben Moglen gives this keynote at the Feb 25, 2011 Morningside Post Conference on Digital Media, the theme of which was "Navigating the Age of Democratized Media".
Eben talks about the FreedomBox, a project to return control of digital communications to individuals
and take it away from the corporations that spy on people as a way of
life and the governments that use control over communications to stifle
political organization and dissent.This project serves as a particular example of his larger theme that the digital networking of each person to each other person through the internet will level the media landscape of the 21st century and make ignorance obsolete, something we could make a technical reality today if not for the "rules against sharing."
- Video Language:
- English
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omichalek edited English subtitles for Navigating the Age of Democratized Media conference keynote | |
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qubit edited English subtitles for Navigating the Age of Democratized Media conference keynote |