Why Freedom of Thought Requires Free Media and Why Free Media Require Free Technology
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0:15 - 0:21Good morning, it's a pleasure to be here and an honor to be at re: publica.
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0:21 - 0:34For the last thousand years, we, our mothers, and our fathers, have been struggling for freedom of thought.
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0:34 - 0:49We have sustained many horrible losses and some imense vicroties and we are now at a very serious time.
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0:49 - 0:59From the adoption of printing by Europeans in the 15th century, we began to be concerned primarially
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0:59 - 1:03with access to printed material.
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1:03 - 1:10The right to read and the right to publish were the central subjects of our struggle for freedom of
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1:10 - 1:16thought for most of the last half milenium.
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1:16 - 1:32The basic concern was for the right to read in private and to think and speak and act on the basis of
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1:32 - 1:33a free and uncensored will.
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1:33 - 1:47The primary antogonist for freedom of thought in the beginning of our struggle was the universal Catholic
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1:47 - 1:54church, an institution directed at the control of thought in the European world.
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1:54 - 2:06Based around weekly surveillance of the conduct and thoughts of every human being.
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2:06 - 2:14Based around the censorship of all reading material, and, in the end, based upon the ability to predict
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2:14 - 2:21and to punish unorthodox thought.
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2:21 - 2:30The tools available for thought control in early modern Europe were poor, even by 20th century standards
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2:30 - 2:32But they worked.
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2:32 - 2:41And for hundreds of years, the struggle primarially centered around that increasingly important first
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2:41 - 2:49mass-manufactured article in western culture: the book.
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2:49 - 3:00Whether you could print them, possess them, traffic in them, read them, teach from them without the permission
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3:00 - 3:10or control of an entity empowered to punish thought.
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3:10 - 3:21By the end of the 17th century, censorship of written material in Euopre had begun to break down.
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3:21 - 3:31First in the Netherlands, then in the UK, then afterwards in waves throughout the European world.
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3:31 - 3:43And the book became an article of subversive commerce and began eating away at the control of thought.
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3:43 - 3:53By the late 18th century, that struggle for the freedom of reading had begun to attack the substance
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3:53 - 4:08of Christianity itself.
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4:08 - 4:17And the European world trembled on the brink of the first great revolution of the mind. It spoke of " Liberté, égalité, fraternité"
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4:17 - 4:18but actually it meant freedom to think differently.
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4:18 - 4:26The Ancien Régime began to struggle against thinking and we moved into the next phase of the struggle
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4:26 - 4:36for freedom of thought, which presumed the possibility of unothorodox thinking and revolutionary acting.
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4:36 - 4:44And for 200 years we struggled with the consequences of those changes.
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4:44 - 4:47that was then and this is now.
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4:47 - 4:57Now we begin a new phase in the history of the human race. We are building a single nervous system which
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4:57 - 5:01will embrace every human mind.
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5:01 - 5:12We are less than two generations now from the moment at which every human being will be connected to a single
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5:12 - 5:23network in which all thoughts, plans, dreams, and actions will flow as nervious impulses in the network.
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5:23 - 5:30And the fate of freedom of thought, indeed the fate of human freedom all together, everything that we
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5:30 - 5:39have fought for for a thousand years will depend upon the neuroanatomy of that network.
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5:39 - 5:50Ours are the last generation of human brains that will be formed without contact with the net.
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5:50 - 5:58From here on out every human brain, by two generations form now, every single human brain will be formed
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5:58 - 6:03from early life in direct connection to the network.
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6:03 - 6:16Humanity will become a super-organism in which each of us is but a neuron in the brain and we are describing
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6:16 - 6:24now, now, all of us now, this generation, unique in the history of the human race, in this generation
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6:24 - 6:29we will decide how that network is organized.
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6:29 - 6:33Unfortunately, we are beginning badly.
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6:33 - 6:40Here's the problem: we grew up to be consumers of media. That's what they taught us, we are consumers
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6:40 - 6:41of media. That's what they taught us.
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6:41 - 6:50Now media is consuming us.
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6:50 - 6:59The things we read watch us read them. The things we listen to listen to us listen to them.
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6:59 - 7:08We are tracked, we are monitored, we are predicted by the media we use.
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7:08 - 7:18The process of the building of the network institutionalizes basic principles of information flow.
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7:18 - 7:25It determines whether there is such a thing as anonymous reading.
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7:25 - 7:32And it is determining against anonymous reading.
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7:32 - 7:4220 years ago I began working as a lawyer for a man called Philip Zimmerman who had created a form of
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7:42 - 7:47public key encryption for mass use called "Pretty Good Privacy".
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7:47 - 7:53The effort to create Pretty Good Privacy was the effort to retain the possibility of secrets in the late
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7:53 - 8:0020th century. Phil was trying to prevent government from reading everything.
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8:00 - 8:07And, as a result, he was at least threatened with prosecution by the United States government for sharing
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8:07 - 8:13military secrets, which is what we called public key encryption back then.
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8:13 - 8:18We said you shouldn't do this, there will be trillions of dollars of electronic commerce if everybody
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8:18 - 8:22has strong encryption. Nobody was interested.
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8:22 - 8:31But what was important about Pretty Good Privacy, about the strugle for freedom that public key encryption
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8:31 - 8:39in civil society represented, what was crucial, became clear when we began to win.
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8:39 - 8:48In 1995 there was a debate at Harvard Law School. Four of us discussing the future of public key encryption
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8:48 - 8:51and it's control.
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8:51 - 8:59I was on the side, I suppose, of freedom. It is where I try to be. With me at that debate was a man called
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8:59 - 9:06Daniel Weitzner who now works in the White House making internet policy for the Obame Administration.
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9:06 - 9:14On the other side was the, then deputy, Attorney General of the United States and a lawyer in private
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9:14 - 9:21practice named Stuart Baker, who had been chief council to the National Security Agency, our listeners,
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9:21 - 9:30and who was then in private life helping businesses to deal with the listeners. He then became latter
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9:30 - 9:36on the deputy for policy planning in the Department of Homeland Security in the United States, and has
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9:36 - 9:43had much to do with what happened in our network after 2001. At any rate, the four of us spent two pleasant
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9:43 - 9:51hours debating the right to encrypt and at the end there was a little dinner party in the Harvard faculty
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9:51 - 9:56club and at the end, after all the food had been taken away and just the port and the walnuts were left
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9:56 - 10:03on the table, Stuart said "Alright, among us, now that we are all in private, just us girls, I'll let
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10:03 - 10:11our hair down" he didn't have much hair even then, but he let it down. "We're not going to prosecute
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10:11 - 10:20your client, Mr. Zimmerman" he said, "public key encryption will become available. We fought a long losing
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10:20 - 10:29battle against it but it was just a delaying tactic." And then he looked around the room and he said
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10:29 - 10:35"But nobody cares about anonymity, do they?"
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10:35 - 10:40And a cold chill went up my spine and I thought alright, Stuart, now I know, you're going to spend the
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10:40 - 10:47next 20 years trying to eliminate anonymity in human society and I'm going to try and stop you and we'll
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10:47 - 10:49see how it goes.
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10:49 - 10:53And it is going badly.
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10:53 - 10:59We didn't build the net with anonymity built in. That was a mistake.
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10:59 - 11:02Now we're paying for it.
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11:02 - 11:08Our network assumes that you can be tracked everywhere.
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11:08 - 11:15And we've taken the web and we've made Facebook out of it.
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11:15 - 11:20We put one man in the middle of everything.
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11:20 - 11:27We live our social lives, our private lives, in the web and we share everything with our friends, and
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11:27 - 11:38also with our super-friend, the one who reports to anybody who makes him, who pays him, who helps him
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11:38 - 11:45or who gives him the 100 billion dollar he desires.
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11:45 - 11:53We are creating a media that consume us, and media loves it.
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11:53 - 12:03The primary purpose of 21 first commerce is to predict how we can be made to buy.
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12:03 - 12:09And the thing that people most want us to buy is debt.
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12:09 - 12:20So we are going into debt. We're getting heavier, heavier with debt, heavier with doubt, heavier with
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12:20 - 12:27all we need we didn't know we needed until they told us we were thinking about it.
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12:27 - 12:33Because they own the search box and we put our dreams in it.
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12:33 - 12:40Everything we want, everything we hope, everything we'd like, everything we wish we knew about is in
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12:40 - 12:45the search box, and they own it.
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12:45 - 12:49We are reported everywhere, all the time.
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12:49 - 12:56In the 20th century you had to build Lubyanka, you had to torture people, you had to threaten people,
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12:56 - 13:06you had to press people to inform on their friends. I don't need to talk about that in Berlin.
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13:06 - 13:09In the 21st century, why bother?
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13:09 - 13:15You just build social networking and everybody informs on everybody else for you.
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13:15 - 13:21Why waste time and money having buildings full of little men who check who is in which photographs?
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13:21 - 13:28Just tell everybody to tag their friends and bing, you're done.
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13:28 - 13:32Oh, did I use that word, "bing?" You're done.
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13:32 - 13:40There's a search box, and they own it, and we put our dreams in it, and they eat them.
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13:40 - 13:44And they tell us who we are right back.
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13:44 - 13:47"If you like that, you'll love this"
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13:47 - 13:51And we do.
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13:51 - 13:56They figure us out, the machines do.
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13:56 - 14:00Every time you make a link, you're teaching the machine.
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14:00 - 14:06Every time you make a link about someone else, you're teaching the machine about someone else.
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14:06 - 14:11We need to build that network, we need to make that brain.
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14:11 - 14:19This is humanity's highest purpose, we're fuilfiling it. But we musn't do it wrong.
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14:19 - 14:25Once upon a time the technological mistakes were mistakes, we made them.
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14:25 - 14:34They were the unintended consequences of our thoughtful behavior. That's not the way it is right now.
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14:34 - 14:38The things that are going on are not mistakes, they're designs.
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14:38 - 14:50They have purpose, and the purpose is to make the human population readable.
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14:50 - 14:54I was talking to a senior government official in the United States a few weeks ago;
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14:54 - 14:59our government has been misbehaving.
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14:59 - 15:09We had rules, we made them after 9/11, they said "we will keep databases about people, and some of those people will be innocent.
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15:09 - 15:15they won't be suspected of anything." The rules we made in 2001 said
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15:15 - 15:23"We will keep information about people not suspected of anything for a maxium of 180 days,
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15:23 - 15:27they we will discard it."
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15:27 - 15:37In March, in the middle of the night, on a Wednesday, after everything shut down, when it was raining,
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15:37 - 15:42the Department of Justice and the director of National Intelligence in the United States said "Oh, we're
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15:42 - 15:52changing those rules. This small change: we used to say we would keep information on people not suspected
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15:52 - 16:00of anything for only 180 days maximum, we're changing that a little bit to five years."
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16:00 - 16:02Which is infinity.
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16:02 - 16:08I joked with the lawyers I work with in NY, they only wrote five years in the press release because they couldn't get the
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16:08 - 16:12sideways 8 into the font for the press release.
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16:12 - 16:16Otherwise they'd have just said "infinity," which is what they mean.
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16:16 - 16:22So I was having a conversation with a senior government official I have known all these many years who
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16:22 - 16:31works in the White House and I said "You're changing American society" he said, "Well we realized that
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16:31 - 16:38we need a robust social graph of the United States."
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16:38 - 16:42I said "You need a robust social graph of the United States?"
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16:42 - 16:43"Yes" he said.
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16:43 - 16:50I said "You mean the United States government is, from now on, going to keep a list of everybody every
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16:50 - 16:59American knows. Do you think by any chance that should require a law?"
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16:59 - 17:02And he just laughed.
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17:02 - 17:09Because they did it in a press release in the middle of the night, on Wednesday when it was raining.
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17:09 - 17:18We're going to live in a world, unless we do something quickly, in which our media consume us and spit
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17:18 - 17:22in the government's cup.
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17:22 - 17:29There will never have been any place like it before.
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17:29 - 17:36And if we let it happen, there will never ever be any place different from it again.
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17:36 - 17:47Humanity will all have been wired together and media will consume us and spit in the government's cup.
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17:47 - 17:51And the state will own our minds.
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17:51 - 18:00The soon-to-be-ex president of France campaigned, as you will recall last month on the proposition that
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18:00 - 18:09there should be criminal penalties for repeat visiting of jhiadi websites.That was a threat to
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18:09 - 18:15criminalize reading in France.
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18:15 - 18:28Well, he will be soon the ex-president of France, but that doesn't mean that that will be an ex-idea in France at all.
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18:28 - 18:34The criminalization of reading is well advanced.
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18:34 - 18:41In the United States, in what we call terrorism prosecutions, we now routinely see evidence of people's
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18:41 - 18:48Google searches submitted as proof of their conspiratorial behavior.
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18:48 - 18:57The act of seeking knowledge has become an overt act in conspiricy prosecutions.
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18:57 - 19:04We are criminalizing thinking, reading, and research.
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19:04 - 19:10We are doing this in so called free societies. We are doing this in a place with the 1st Amendment.
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19:10 - 19:20We are doing this despite everything our history teaches us because we are forgetting even as we learn.
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19:20 - 19:24We don't have much time.
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19:24 - 19:35The generation that grew up outside the net is the last generation that can fix it without force.
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19:35 - 19:45Governments all over the world are falling in love with the idea of datamining their populations.
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19:45 - 19:53I used to think that we were going to be fighting the Chinese Communit party in the third decade
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19:53 - 19:56of the 21st century.
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19:56 - 20:03I didn't anticipate that we were going to be fighting the United States government and the government
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20:03 - 20:08of the People's Republic of China.
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20:08 - 20:17And when Ms. Cruise is here on Friday, perhaps you'll ask her whether we're going to be fighting her too.
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20:17 - 20:21Governments are falling in love with datamining because it really really works.
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20:21 - 20:26It's good. It's good for good things as well as evil things.
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20:26 - 20:32It's good for helping government understand how to deliver services; it is good for government to understand
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20:32 - 20:42what the problems are going to be; it is good for politicians to understand how voters are going to think.
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20:42 - 20:48But it creates the possibility of kinds of social control that were previously very difficult, very
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20:48 - 20:56expensive, and very cumbersome, in very simple and efficient ways.
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20:56 - 21:03It is no longer necessary to maintain enormous networks of informants, as I have pointed out.
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21:03 - 21:12Stazi gets a bargin now, if it comes back, because Zuckerberg does its work for it.
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21:12 - 21:20But it is more than just the ease of surveillance it is more than just the permanence of data,
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21:20 - 21:25it's the relentless of living after the end of forgetting.
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21:25 - 21:30Nothing ever goes away any more.
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21:30 - 21:38What isn't understood today will be understood tomorrow. The encrypted traffic you use today in relative
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21:38 - 21:44security is simply waiting until there is enough of it for the crypto analysis to work.
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21:44 - 21:48For the breakers to succeed in breaking it.
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21:48 - 21:56We're going to have to re-do all our security all the time forever because no encrypted packet is ever
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21:56 - 21:59lost again.
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21:59 - 22:08Nothing is unconnected infinitely, only finitely. Every piece of information can be retained and everything
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22:08 - 22:12eventually gets linked to something else.
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22:12 - 22:19That's the rationale for the government official who says we need a robust social graph of the social
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22:19 - 22:20graph of the United States.
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22:20 - 22:22Why do you need it?
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22:22 - 22:30So the dots you don't connect today, you can connect tomorrow, or next year, or the year after next.
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22:30 - 22:39Nothing is ever lost, nothing ever goes away, nothing is forgotten any more.
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22:39 - 22:49So the primary form of collection that should concern us most is media that spy on us while we use them.
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22:49 - 22:57Books that watch us read them; music that listens to us listen to it; search boxes that report what we
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22:57 - 23:04are searching for to whoever is searching for us and doesn't know us yet.
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23:04 - 23:10There is a lot of talk about data coming out of Facebook.
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23:10 - 23:16Is it coming to me? Is it coming to him? Is it coming to them?
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23:16 - 23:21They want you to think that the threat is data coming out.
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23:21 - 23:27You should know that the threat is code going in.
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23:27 - 23:34For the last 15 years what has been happening in enterprise computing
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23:34 - 23:43is the addition of that layer of analytics on top of the data warehouse that mostly goes, in enterprise computing,
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23:43 - 23:46by the name of "business intelligence."
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23:46 - 23:54What it means is you've been building these vast data warehouses in your company for a decade or two now,
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23:54 - 24:01you have all the information about your own operations, your suppliers, your competitors, your customers,
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24:01 - 24:09now you want to make that data start to do tricks by adding it to all the open source data
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24:09 - 24:15out there in the world and using it to tell you the answers to questions you didn't know you had.
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24:15 - 24:18That's business intelligence.
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24:18 - 24:23The real threat of Facebook is the BI layer on top of the Facebook warehouse.
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24:23 - 24:27The Facebook data warehouse contains the behavior,
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24:27 - 24:31not just the thinking but also the behavior,
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24:31 - 24:36of somewhere nearing a billion people.
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24:36 - 24:43The business Intelligence layer on top of it, which is just all that code they get to run
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24:43 - 24:47covered by the terms of service that say they can run any code they want
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24:47 - 24:51for "improvement of the experience."
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24:51 - 24:59The business intelligence layer on top of Facebook is where every intelligence service in the world wants to go.
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24:59 - 25:07Imagine that you're a tiny little secret police organization in some not very important country.
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25:07 - 25:14Let's put ourselves in their position, let's call them, I don't know what, you know Kyrgyzstan.
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25:14 - 25:21You're secret police, you're in the people business. Secret policing is people business.
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25:21 - 25:29You have classes of people that you want. You want agents, you want sources, you have adversaries,
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25:29 - 25:33and you have "infulenciables," that is people that you can torture who are related to adversaries:
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25:33 - 25:39wives, husbands, fathers, daughters, you know, those people.
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25:39 - 25:46So you're looking for classes of people. You don't know their names but you know what they're like.
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25:46 - 25:51You know who is recruitable for you as an agent, you know who are likely sources.
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25:51 - 25:56You can give the social characteristics of your adversaries.
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25:56 - 26:00And once you know your adversaries you can find the infulencables.
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26:00 - 26:04So what you want to do is run code inside Facebook.
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26:04 - 26:07It will help you find the people that you want.
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26:07 - 26:14It will show you the people whose behavior and whose social circles tell you that they are what you want
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26:14 - 26:22by way of agents, sources, what the adversaries are and who you can torture to get to them.
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26:22 - 26:27So you don't want data out of Facebook, the minute you take data out of Facebook it is dead.
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26:27 - 26:32You want to put code into Facebook, and run it there and get the results.
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26:32 - 26:35You want to cooperate.
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26:35 - 26:39Facebook wants to be a media company.
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26:39 - 26:41It wants to own the web.
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26:41 - 26:45It wants you to punch "like" buttons.
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26:45 - 26:51"Like" buttons are terrific even if you don't punch them because they're web bugs,
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26:51 - 26:57because they show Facebook every other webpage that you touch that has a "like" button on it,
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26:57 - 27:00whether you punch it or you don't, they still get a record.
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27:00 - 27:09The record is you read a page which had a "like" button on it and either you said yes or you said no,
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27:09 - 27:16and either way you made data, you taught the machine.
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27:16 - 27:25So media want to know you better than you know yourself and we shouldn't let anybody do that.
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27:25 - 27:28We fought for a thousand years for the internal space,
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27:28 - 27:36the space where we read, think, reflect, and become unorthodox,
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27:36 - 27:39inside our own minds.
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27:39 - 27:44That's the space that everybody wants to take away.
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27:44 - 27:47Tell us your dreams.
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27:47 - 27:49Tell us your thoughts.
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27:49 - 27:51Tell us what you hope.
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27:51 - 27:52Tell us what you fear.
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27:52 - 28:01This is not weekly oricular confession, this is confession 24 by 7.
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28:01 - 28:03The mobile robot that you carry around with you,
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28:03 - 28:07the one that knows where you are all the times and listens to all your conversations.
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28:07 - 28:12The one that you hope isn't reporting in at headquarters but it is only hope?
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28:12 - 28:20The one that runs all that software you can't read, can't study, can't see, can't modify, and can't understand?
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28:20 - 28:21That one.
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28:21 - 28:27That one is taking your confession all the time.
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28:27 - 28:31When you hold it up to your face from now on it is going to know your heartbeat.
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28:31 - 28:34That's an Android app right now.
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28:34 - 28:40Micro changes in the color of your face reveal your heartrate.
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28:40 - 28:45That's a little lie detector you're carrying around with you.
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28:45 - 28:53Pretty soon I'll be able to sit in a classroom and watch the blood pressure of my students go up and down.
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28:53 - 29:01In a law school classroom in the United States, that is really important information.
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29:01 - 29:03But it is not just me of course, it's everybody right?
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29:03 - 29:07Because it's just data and people will have access to it.
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29:07 - 29:12The inside of your head becomes the outside of your face, becomes the inside of your smart phone,
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29:12 - 29:22becomes the inside of the network, becomes the front of the file at headquarters.
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29:22 - 29:28So we need free media or we lose freedom of thought. It's that simple.
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29:28 - 29:30What is free media mean?
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29:30 - 29:34Media that you can read, that you can think about, that you can add to,
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29:34 - 29:40that you can participate in without being monitored.
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29:40 - 29:47Without being surveiled, without being reported in on. That's free media.
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29:47 - 29:57If we don't have it, we lose freedom of thought, possibly forever.
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29:57 - 30:07Having free media means having a network that behaves according to the needs of the people at the edge,
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30:07 - 30:15not according to the needs of the servers in the middle.
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30:15 - 30:22Making free media requires a network of peers, not a network of masters and servants,
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30:22 - 30:34not a network of clients and servers, not a network where network operators control all the packets they move.
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30:34 - 30:41This is not simple, but it is still possible.
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30:41 - 30:47We require free technology.
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30:47 - 30:56The last time I gave a political speech in Berlin it was in 2004. It was called "Die Gedanken sind frei."
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30:56 - 31:04I said we need three things: free software, free hardware, free bandwidth. Now we need them more.
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31:04 - 31:09It is eight years later; we've made some mistakes; we're in more trouble.
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31:09 - 31:14We haven't come forward, we've gone back.
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31:14 - 31:20We need free software, that means software you can copy, modify, and re-distribute.
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31:20 - 31:32We need that because we need the software that runs the network to be modifiable by the people the network embraces.
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31:32 - 31:39The death of Mr. Jobs is a positive event. I am sorry to break it to you like that.
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31:39 - 31:43He was a great artist and a moral monster
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31:43 - 31:53and he brought us closer to the end of freedom every single time he put something out because he hated sharing.
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31:53 - 31:56It wasn't his fault, he was an artist.
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31:56 - 32:03He hated sharing because he believed he invented everything, even though he didn't.
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32:03 - 32:07Inside those fine little boxes with the lit up apples on them I see all around the room,
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32:07 - 32:14is a bunch of free software, tailored to give him control.
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32:14 - 32:18Nothing illegal, nothing wrong, he obeyed the licenses.
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32:18 - 32:23He screwed us every time he could and he took everything we gave him,
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32:23 - 32:29and he made beautiful stuff that controlled its users.
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32:29 - 32:36Once upon a time there was a man here who built stuff in Berlin, for Alberst Spare(sp),
-
32:36 - 32:41his name was Philip Johnson and he was a wonderful artist and a moral monster.
-
32:41 - 32:49And he said he went to work building buildings for the Nazis because they had all the best graphics.
-
32:49 - 32:53And he meant it, because he was an artist.
-
32:53 - 32:57As Mr. Jobs was an artist.
-
32:57 - 33:01But artistry is no guaranty of morality.
-
33:01 - 33:05We need free software.
-
33:05 - 33:12The tablets that you use that Mr. Jobs designed are made to control you.
-
33:12 - 33:19You can't change the software. It's hard even to do ordinary programming.
-
33:19 - 33:27It doesn't really matter, they're just tablets, we just use them, we're just consuming the glories of what they give us.
-
33:27 - 33:32But they're consumming you too.
-
33:32 - 33:39We live, as the science fiction we read when we were children suggested we would, among robots not.
-
33:39 - 33:46We live commensally with robots. But they don't have hands and feet, we're their hands and feet.
-
33:46 - 33:52We carry the robots around with us; they know everywhere we go, they see everything we see;
-
33:52 - 33:59everything we say they listen to and there is no first law of robotics.
-
33:59 - 34:05They hurt us every day and there is no progamming to prevent it.
-
34:05 - 34:08So we need free software.
-
34:08 - 34:17Unless we control the software in the network, the network will, in the end, control us.
-
34:17 - 34:18We need free hardware.
-
34:18 - 34:27What that means is that when we buy an electronic something, it should be ours, not someone else's.
-
34:27 - 34:32We should be free to change it, to use it our way,
-
34:32 - 34:37to assure that it is not working for anyone other than ourselves.
-
34:37 - 34:42Of course most of us will never change anything.
-
34:42 - 34:49But the fact that we can change it will keep us safe.
-
34:49 - 34:56Of course we will never be the people that they most want to surveil.
-
34:56 - 35:05The man who will not be president of France, for sure, but who thought he would, now says that he was
-
35:05 - 35:12trapped and his political career was destroyed, not because he raped a hotel housekeeper,
-
35:12 - 35:17but because he was setup by spying inside his smart phone.
-
35:17 - 35:21Maybe he's telling the truth and maybe he isn't.
-
35:21 - 35:24But he's not wrong about the smart phone.
-
35:24 - 35:29Maybe it happened, maybe it didn't, but it will.
-
35:29 - 35:32We carry dangerous stuff around with us everywhere we go.
-
35:32 - 35:35It doesn't work for us, it works for someone else.
-
35:35 - 35:40We put up with it, we have to stop.
-
35:40 - 35:42We need free bandwidth.
-
35:42 - 35:47That means we need network operators who are common carriers,
-
35:47 - 35:50whose only job is to move the packet from A to B.
-
35:50 - 35:56They're meerly pipes, they're not allowed to get involved.
-
35:56 - 35:59It used to be that when you shipped a thing from point A to point B,
-
35:59 - 36:05if the guy in the middle opened it up and looked inside it, he was committing a crime.
-
36:05 - 36:07Not any more.
-
36:07 - 36:11In the United States, the House of Representatives voted last week
-
36:11 - 36:18that the network operators in the United States should be completely immunized against lawsuits
-
36:18 - 36:28for cooperating with illegal government spying so long as they do it "in good faith."
-
36:28 - 36:33And capitalism means never having to say you're sorry; you're always doing it in good faith.
-
36:33 - 36:38In good faith all we wanted to do was make money, your honor, let us out.
-
36:38 - 36:40Ok, you're gone.
-
36:40 - 36:43We must have free bandwidth.
-
36:43 - 36:49We still own the electromagnetic spectrum; it still belongs to all of us.
-
36:49 - 36:55It doesn't belong to anyone else. Government is a trustee, not an owner.
-
36:55 - 37:01We have to have spectrum we control, equal for everybody.
-
37:01 - 37:10Nobody's allowed to listen to anybody else, no inspecting, no checking, no record keeping.
-
37:10 - 37:13Those have to be the rules.
-
37:13 - 37:19Those have to be the rules in the same way that censorship had to go.
-
37:19 - 37:24If we don't have rules for free communication, we are re-introducing censorship,
-
37:24 - 37:28whether we know it or not.
-
37:28 - 37:31So we have very little choice now,
-
37:31 - 37:40our space has gotten smaller, our opportunity for change has gotten less.
-
37:40 - 37:48We have to have free software. We have to have free hardware. We have to have free bandwidth.
-
37:48 - 37:53Only from them can we make free media.
-
37:53 - 37:57But we have to work on media too, directly.
-
37:57 - 38:02Not intermitently, not off-hand.
-
38:02 - 38:11We need to demand of media organizations that they obey primary ethics, a first law of media robotics:
-
38:11 - 38:13do no harm.
-
38:13 - 38:20The first rule is: "do not surveil the reader."
-
38:20 - 38:24We can't live in a world where every book reports every reader.
-
38:24 - 38:31If we are, we're living in libraries operated by the KGB.
-
38:31 - 38:35Well, amazon.com
-
38:35 - 38:40Or the KGB, or both, you'll never know.
-
38:40 - 38:47The book, that wonderful printed article, that first commodity of mass capitalism,
-
38:47 - 38:49the book is dying.
-
38:49 - 38:52It's a shame, but it's dying.
-
38:52 - 38:59And the replacement is a box which either surveils the reader or it doesn't.
-
38:59 - 39:02You will remember that amazon.com decided
-
39:02 - 39:09that a book by George Orwell could not be distributed in the United States for copyright reasons.
-
39:09 - 39:14They went and errased it out of all the little amazon book reading devices
-
39:14 - 39:18where customers had "purchased" copies of Animal Farm.
-
39:18 - 39:25Oh, you may have bought it but that doesn't mean that you're allowed to read it.
-
39:25 - 39:28That's censorship.
-
39:28 - 39:31That's book burning.
-
39:31 - 39:37That's what we all lived through in the 20th century.
-
39:37 - 39:41We burned people, places, and art.
-
39:41 - 39:42We fought.
-
39:42 - 39:50We killed tens of millions of people to bring an end to a world in which the state would burn books.
-
39:50 - 39:53And then we watched as it was done again and again.
-
39:53 - 39:58And now we are preparing to allow it to be done without matches.
-
39:58 - 40:02Everywhere, any time.
-
40:02 - 40:09We must have media ethics, and we have the power to enforce those ethics
-
40:09 - 40:12because we're still the people who pay the freight.
-
40:12 - 40:18We should not deal with people who sell surveiled books.
-
40:18 - 40:25We should not deal with people who sell surveiled music.
-
40:25 - 40:34We should not deal with movie companies that sell surveiled movies.
-
40:34 - 40:39We are going to have to say that, even as we work on the technology,
-
40:39 - 40:48because otherwise capitalism will move as fast as possible to make our efforts at freedom irrelevant
-
40:48 - 40:55and there are children growing up who will never know what freedom means.
-
40:55 - 40:58So we have to make a point about it.
-
40:58 - 41:01It will cost us a little bit.
-
41:01 - 41:03Not much, but a little bit.
-
41:03 - 41:11We will have to forgoe and make a few sacrifices in our lives to enforce ethics on media.
-
41:11 - 41:14But that's our role.
-
41:14 - 41:17Along with making free technology, that's our role.
-
41:17 - 41:23We are the last generation capable of understanding directly what the changes are
-
41:23 - 41:28because we have lived on both sides of them and we know.
-
41:28 - 41:31So we have a responsibility.
-
41:31 - 41:36You understand that.
-
41:36 - 41:39It's always a surprise to me, though it is deeply true,
-
41:39 - 41:44that of all the cities in the world I travel to, Berlin in the freeist.
-
41:44 - 41:48You cannot wear a hat in the Hong Kong airport any more,
-
41:48 - 41:52I found out last month trying to wear my hat in the Hong Kong airport.
-
41:52 - 41:58You're not allowed, it disrupts the facial recognition.
-
41:58 - 42:03There will be a new airport here. Will it be so heavily surveiled
-
42:03 - 42:09that you won't be allowed to wear a hat because it disrupts the facial recognition?
-
42:09 - 42:13We have a responsibility. We know.
-
42:13 - 42:16That's how Berlin became the freeist city that I go to.
-
42:16 - 42:20Because we know. Because we have a responsibility.
-
42:20 - 42:27Because we remember, because we've been on both sides of the wall.
-
42:27 - 42:30That must not be lost now.
-
42:30 - 42:35If we forget, no other forgetting will ever happen.
-
42:35 - 42:37Everything will be remembered.
-
42:37 - 42:42Everything you read, all through life, everything you listened to,
-
42:42 - 42:46everything you watched, everything you searched for.
-
42:46 - 42:54Surely we can pass along to the next generation a world freeier than that.
-
42:54 - 42:56Surely we must.
-
42:56 - 42:59What if we don't?
-
42:59 - 43:08What will they say when they realize that we lived at the end of a thousand years
-
43:08 - 43:12of struggling for freedom of thought, at the end.
-
43:12 - 43:19When we had almost everything we gave it away.
-
43:19 - 43:24For convenience. For social networking.
-
43:24 - 43:28Because Mr. Zuckerberg asked us to.
-
43:28 - 43:33Because we couldn't find a better way to talk to our friends.
-
43:33 - 43:41Because we loved the beautiful pretty things that felt so warm in the hand.
-
43:41 - 43:47Because we didn't really care about the future of freedom of thought.
-
43:47 - 43:50Because we considered that to be someone else's business.
-
43:50 - 43:52Because we thought it was over.
-
43:52 - 43:56Because we believed we were free.
-
43:56 - 43:59Because we didn't think there was any struggling left to do.
-
43:59 - 44:01That's why we gave it all away.
-
44:01 - 44:04Is that what we're going to tell them?
-
44:04 - 44:07Is that what we're going to tell them?
-
44:07 - 44:13Free thought requires free media.
-
44:13 - 44:19Free media requires free technology.
-
44:19 - 44:30We require ethical treatment when we go to read, to write, to listen, and to watch.
-
44:30 - 44:38Those are the hallmarks of our politics. We need to keep those politics until we die.
-
44:38 - 44:43Because, if we don't, something else will die,
-
44:43 - 44:50something so precious that many many many of our fathers and mothers gave their lives for it.
-
44:50 - 44:56Something so precious that we understood it to define what it meant to be human.
-
44:56 - 45:01It will die if we don't keep those politics for the rest of our lives.
-
45:01 - 45:09And if we do, then all the things we struggled for, we'll get.
-
45:09 - 45:15Because everywhere on earth, everybody will be able to read freely.
-
45:15 - 45:22Because all the Einsteins in the street will be allowed to learn.
-
45:22 - 45:28Because all the Stravinskys will become composers.
-
45:28 - 45:32Because all the Saulks will become research physicians.
-
45:32 - 45:37Because humanity will be connected and every brain will be allowed to learn
-
45:37 - 45:43and no brain will be crushed for thinking wrong.
-
45:43 - 45:47We're at the moment where we get to pick.
-
45:47 - 45:52Whether we carry through that great revolution we've been making
-
45:52 - 45:57bit by bloody bit for a thousand years,
-
45:57 - 46:03or whether we give it away for convenience,
-
46:03 - 46:07for simplicity of talking to our friends, for speed in search,
-
46:07 - 46:13and other really important stuff.
-
46:13 - 46:20I said in 2004, when I was here, and I say now, we can win.
-
46:20 - 46:28We can be the generation of people who completed the work of building freedom of thought.
-
46:28 - 46:35I didn't say then, and I must say now, that we are also potentially the generation that can lose.
-
46:35 - 46:42We can slip back into an inquisition worse than any inquisition that ever existed.
-
46:42 - 46:50It may not use as much torture, it may not be as bloody, but it will be more effective.
-
46:50 - 46:53And we mustn't mustn't let that happen.
-
46:53 - 46:58Too many people fought for us. Too many people died for us.
-
46:58 - 47:02Too many people hoped and dreamed for what we can still make possible.
-
47:02 - 47:06We must not fail.
-
47:06 - 47:07Thank you very much.
-
47:07 - 48:00[Applause]
-
48:00 - 48:03Let's learn how to take questions here.
-
48:03 - 48:08It's not going to be simple but let's set a good example.
-
48:08 - 48:21[pause]
-
48:21 - 48:22[Questioner 1] Thank you.
-
48:22 - 48:26[Questioner 1] You put forward a very gruesome picture of the possible future.
-
48:26 - 48:29[Questioner 1] Could you name some organizations or groups
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48:29 - 48:36[Questioner 1] in the United States that put forward actions in your way,
-
48:36 - 48:41[Questioner 1] in your positive way of transforming society?
-
48:41 - 48:45Not only in the United States, but around the world we have organizations
-
48:45 - 48:48that are concerned with electronic civil liberties.
-
48:48 - 48:51The EFF, the Electronic Frontier Foundation in the United States.
-
48:51 - 48:54La Quadrature du Net in France
-
48:54 - 48:57Bits of Freedom in the Netherlands and so on.
-
48:57 - 49:02Electronic civil liberties agitation is extraordinarily important.
-
49:02 - 49:05Pressure on governments to obey rules that came down from
-
49:05 - 49:10the 18th century regarding protection of human dignity
-
49:10 - 49:15and the prevention of state surveillance are crucially important.
-
49:15 - 49:20Unfortunately, electronic civil liberties work against governments are not enough.
-
49:20 - 49:26The free software movement, the FSF, the Free Software Foundation in the United States,
-
49:26 - 49:29and the Free Software Foundation Europe, headquartered in Germany,
-
49:29 - 49:36are working in an important way to maintain that system of
-
49:36 - 49:42the anarchistic creation of software which has brought us so much technology we can control.
-
49:42 - 49:44That's crucially important.
-
49:44 - 49:48The Creative Commons movement, which is strongly entrenched,
-
49:48 - 49:53not only in the United States and Germany, but in more than 40 countries around the world
-
49:53 - 50:00is also extraordinarily important because Creative Commons gives to creative workers
-
50:00 - 50:06alternatives to the kind of massive over control in the copyright system
-
50:06 - 50:11which makes surveillance media profitable.
-
50:11 - 50:15The Wikipedia is an extraordinarily important human institution.
-
50:15 - 50:21and we need to continue to support the Wikimedia Foundation as deeply as we can.
-
50:21 - 50:26Of the 100 most visited websites in the United States,
-
50:26 - 50:29in a study conducted by the Wall Street Journal,
-
50:29 - 50:33of the 100 most visited websites in the United States,
-
50:33 - 50:37only one does not surveil its users.
-
50:37 - 50:41You can guess which one it is, it's Wikipedia.
-
50:41 - 50:48We have enormously important developments now going on throughout the world of higher education
-
50:48 - 50:54as universities begin to realize that the costs of higher education must come down.
-
50:54 - 50:58and that brains will grow in the web.
-
50:58 - 51:04The Universitat Oberta de Catalunya the walk is the most extrodinary
-
51:04 - 51:08online only university in the world right now.
-
51:08 - 51:14It will soon be competing with more extraordinary universities still.
-
51:14 - 51:19MITx, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's new program
-
51:19 - 51:24for web education will provide the highest quality technical education on earth
-
51:24 - 51:30for free to everybody everywhere all the time, building on existing MIT OpenCourseWare.
-
51:30 - 51:36Stanford is about to spin off a proprietary web learning structure
-
51:36 - 51:40which will be the Google of higher education if Stanford gets it lucky.
-
51:40 - 51:44We need to support free higher education on the web.
-
51:44 - 51:49Every European national ministry of Education should be working on it.
-
51:49 - 51:57There are many places to look for free software, free hardware, free bandwidth, and free media.
-
51:57 - 52:02There's no better place to look for free media right now on earth than this room.
-
52:02 - 52:06Everybody knows what they can do, they're doing it.
-
52:06 - 52:12We just have to make everybody else understand that if we stop, or if we fail,
-
52:12 - 52:16freedom of thought will be the causality and we will regret it forever.
-
52:18 - 52:22[Organizer] We've had three more questions in the meantime.
-
52:22 - 52:24[Organizer] The gentleman with the microphone over here will begin.
-
52:24 - 52:27[Organizer] And then one, two, I'm sure there are more of you in the back
-
52:27 - 52:29[Organizer] so raise your hands high.
-
52:29 - 52:32[Organizer] We'll take maybe your first please.
-
52:32 - 52:36[Questioner 2] Thank you very much, I just wanted to ask a short question.
-
52:36 - 52:42[Questioner 2] Can Facebook, can iPhone, and free media coexist on a long range?
-
52:42 - 52:44Probably not.
-
52:44 - 52:47But we don't have to worry too much.
-
52:47 - 52:53iPhone is just a product and Facebook is just a commercial version of a service.
-
52:53 - 52:56I said recently to a newspaper in New York that I thought Facebook
-
52:56 - 53:00would continue to exist for somewhere between 12 and 120 months.
-
53:00 - 53:02I still think that is correct.
-
53:02 - 53:06Federated social networking will become available.
-
53:06 - 53:11Federated social networking in a form which allows you to leave Facebook
-
53:11 - 53:15without leaving your friends, will become available.
-
53:15 - 53:20Better forms of communication without a man in the middle will become available.
-
53:20 - 53:22The question will be will people use them?
-
53:22 - 53:27FreedomBox is an attempt to produce a stack of software
-
53:27 - 53:31that will fit in a new generation of low power, low cost hardware servers
-
53:31 - 53:35the size of mobile phone chargers.
-
53:35 - 53:37And if we do that work right, we will be able to give
-
53:37 - 53:40billions of web servers to the net.
-
53:40 - 53:45Which will server the purpose of providing competting services
-
53:45 - 53:50that don't invade privacy and are compatible with existing services.
-
53:50 - 53:54But mobile phones get changed very frequently so iPhone goes away
-
53:54 - 53:56it's no big deal.
-
53:56 - 53:58and web services are much less unique
-
53:58 - 54:00than they appear right now.
-
54:00 - 54:04Facebook's a brand, it's not a thing that we need to worry about
-
54:04 - 54:05in any great particular.
-
54:05 - 54:08We just have to do it in as quickly as possible.
-
54:08 - 54:10Co-existence?
-
54:10 - 54:12Well all I have to say about that is that is
-
54:12 - 54:16they're not going to co-exist with freedom
-
54:16 - 54:18so I'm not sure why I should co-exist with them.
-
54:18 - 54:26[Applause]
-
54:26 - 54:28[Questioner 3]Hi, I'm Trey Gulalm(sp) from Bangladesh.
-
54:28 - 54:32[Questioner 3]Thank you for that wonderfully lucid, sintilating,
-
54:32 - 54:35[Questioner 3] and hugely informative presentation.
-
54:35 - 54:39[Questioner 3]I was involved in introducing email to Bangladesh
-
54:39 - 54:44[Questioner 3] in the early 90's and, at that time connectivity was very expensive
-
54:44 - 54:47[Questioner 3]we were spending $0.30 US cents per kilobyte
-
54:47 - 54:51[Questioner 3]so a megabyte of data would be $100, $300.
-
54:51 - 54:55[Questioner 3]It's changes from them but it is still very tightly constrained
-
54:55 - 54:59[Questioner 3]by the regulatory bodies. So we on the ground find it
-
54:59 - 55:01[Questioner 3]very difficult because the powers that be,
-
55:01 - 55:05[Questioner 3]the gate keepers have a vested interest in maintaining that.
-
55:05 - 55:10[Questioner 3]But in that gatekeeper nexus there is also a nexus
-
55:10 - 55:14[Questioner 3]between governments in my country and governments in yours,
-
55:14 - 55:19[Questioner 3]and right now the largest biometric data in the world
-
55:19 - 55:22[Questioner 3]is the census of Bangladesh
-
55:22 - 55:25[Questioner 3]and the company that's providing it is a company
-
55:25 - 55:28[Questioner 3]that's directly linked to the CIA.
-
55:28 - 55:30[Questioner 3]So what do we as pracatitioners do
-
55:30 - 55:33[Questioner 3]to overcome very very powerful entities?
-
55:33 - 55:39This is why I began by speaking about the United States Government's recent behaviors.
-
55:39 - 55:44My colleagues at the Software Freedom Law Center in India
-
55:44 - 55:49have been spending a lot of time this past month trying to get a motion
-
55:49 - 55:52through the upper house of the Indian Parliment
-
55:52 - 55:57to nullify Department of IT regulations on the censorship of the Indian net.
-
55:57 - 56:00And of course the good news is that the largest biometric database in the world
-
56:00 - 56:04will soon be the retinal scans that the Indian government
-
56:04 - 56:08are going to require if you want to have a propane gas cylinder,
-
56:08 - 56:11or anything else like energy for your home.
-
56:11 - 56:17And the difficulty that we've been having in talking to Indian government officials this month
-
56:17 - 56:22is that they say "Well if the Americans can do it, why can't we?"
-
56:22 - 56:25Which is, unfortunately true.
-
56:25 - 56:29The United States government has this winter lowered the bar around the world
-
56:29 - 56:35on internet freedom in the sense of datamining your society to the Chinese level.
-
56:35 - 56:37They've fundamentally agreed.
-
56:37 - 56:41They're going to datamine the hell out of their populations
-
56:41 - 56:45and they're going to encourage ever other state on earth to do the same.
-
56:45 - 56:49So I'm entirely with you about the definition of the problem.
-
56:49 - 56:55We are not now any longer living in a place, in a stage in our history
-
56:55 - 56:58where we can think in terms of a country at a time.
-
56:58 - 57:01Globalization has reached the point at which these questions
-
57:01 - 57:05of surveillance of society are now global questions
-
57:05 - 57:10and we have to work on them under the assumption that no government
-
57:10 - 57:15will decide to be more virtuous than the super powers.
-
57:15 - 57:18I don't know how we're going to deal with the Chinese Communist Party.
-
57:18 - 57:20I do not know.
-
57:20 - 57:22I know how we're going to deal with the American government.
-
57:22 - 57:26We're going to insist on our rights.
-
57:26 - 57:30We're going to do what it makes sense to do in the United States.
-
57:30 - 57:32We're going to litigate about it.
-
57:32 - 57:33We're going to push.
-
57:33 - 57:35We're going to shove.
-
57:35 - 57:39We're going to be everywhere, including in the street about it.
-
57:39 - 57:43And I suspect that's what's going to happen here too.
-
57:43 - 57:46Unless we move the biggest of the societies on earth,
-
57:46 - 57:50we will have no hope of convincing smaller governments
-
57:50 - 57:53that they have to let go of their controls.
-
57:53 - 57:55So far as bandwidth is concerned, of course,
-
57:55 - 57:58we're going to have to use unregulated bandwidth.
-
57:58 - 58:01That is, we're going to have to build around 802.11 and wifi
-
58:01 - 58:07and any other thing that the rules don't prevent us from using.
-
58:07 - 58:11And how is that going to reach the poorest of the poor?
-
58:11 - 58:14When the mobile phone system can be shaped to reach
-
58:14 - 58:17the poorest of the poor? I don't know.
-
58:17 - 58:21But I've got a little project with street children in Bangalore trying to figure it out.
-
58:21 - 58:22We have to.
-
58:22 - 58:24We have to work everywhere.
-
58:24 - 58:30If we don't, we're going to screw it up for humanity and we can't afford the risk.
-
58:30 - 58:32[Organizer]Thank you. The gentleman over here please.
-
58:32 - 58:35[Questioner 4]Yes, Professor Moglen,I also want to thank you.
-
58:35 - 58:40[Questioner 4]I can tell you that I from transformingfreedom.org in Vienna
-
58:40 - 58:45[Questioner 4]and some years ago I saw you talking on a web video
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58:45 - 58:49[Questioner 4]at FOSDEM, and there I saw you pointing out
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58:49 - 58:54[Questioner 4]the role of Zimmerman, Fredrick, and we tried to help him as well.
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58:54 - 58:59[Questioner 4]But listening to you today, I see that this is just too slow,
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58:59 - 59:04[Questioner 4]too little, and I'm a bit amazed at two things.
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59:04 - 59:09[Questioner 4]The first is the academic system, let's say the European one
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59:09 - 59:13[Questioner 4]was founded by Plato and was closed down by force
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59:13 - 59:16[Questioner 4]about a thousand years after.
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59:16 - 59:20[Questioner 4]The second start of the European University was
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59:20 - 59:23[Questioner 4]around the last few century and let's see if we get there,
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59:23 - 59:28[Questioner 4]to have it running as long as a thousand years.
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59:28 - 59:32[Questioner 4]So my question is why is it not deeply in the cell structure
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59:32 - 59:37[Questioner 4]of academia to help the cause that you have talked about today
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59:37 - 59:42[Questioner 4]and why don't we have philanthropists helping
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59:42 - 59:46[Questioner 4]our little projects, running for three or five
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59:46 - 59:49[Questioner 4]thousand euros here and there, much more let's say
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59:49 - 59:53[Questioner 4] efficiently, like maybe you would agree that Mr. Soros
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59:53 - 59:56[Questioner 4]tries to do?
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59:56 - 60:02Some years ago, at Columbia, we tried to interest Faculty
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60:02 - 60:07in the state of preservation of the libraries and I saw
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60:07 - 60:13more distinguished scholars at my own university than at any other time
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60:13 - 60:17in my 25 years there, engaged politically.
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60:17 - 60:22Their primary concern was the aging of the paper
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60:22 - 60:26on which were printed the 19th century German Docterate
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60:26 - 60:32that conserved more philological research than any other literature on earth
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60:32 - 60:33right?
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60:33 - 60:37But it was 19th century books that they needed to preserve.
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60:37 - 60:41The problem with academis life is that it is inherently conservative
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60:41 - 60:44because it preserves the wisdom of the old.
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60:44 - 60:46And that is a good thing to do
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60:46 - 60:48but the wisdom of the old is old,
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60:48 - 60:53and it doesn't necessarily embrace the issues of the moment perfectly.
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60:53 - 60:56I mentioned the walk because I think it is so important
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60:56 - 61:02to support the university as it maneuvers itself towards the net
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61:02 - 61:06and away from the forms of learning that have characterized
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61:06 - 61:10the matriculatry university of the past.
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61:10 - 61:16For the last thousand years mostly we moved scholars to books,
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61:16 - 61:19and the university grew up around that principle.
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61:19 - 61:22It grew up around the principle that books are hard to move
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61:22 - 61:23and people are easy.
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61:23 - 61:26So you bring everybody to it.
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61:26 - 61:29Now we live in a world in which it is much simplier
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61:29 - 61:31to move knowledge to people.
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61:31 - 61:37But the continuance of ignorance is the desire of businesses that sell knowledge.
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61:37 - 61:40What we really need is to being ourselves to help
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61:40 - 61:43to turn the university system into something else.
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61:43 - 61:46The something which allows everybody to learn
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61:46 - 61:50and which demands unsurveiled learning.
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61:50 - 61:52The commissioner for Information Society will be here;
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61:52 - 61:57she should speak to that.
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61:57 - 62:01That should be the great question of the European Commission.
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62:01 - 62:04They know, they printed a report 18 months ago,
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62:04 - 62:06that said for the cost of 100km of road you
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62:06 - 62:10can scan 1/6 of all the books in European libraries.
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62:10 - 62:15That means for the cost of 600km of road we could get 'em all.
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62:15 - 62:17We built a lot of roads in a lot of places,
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62:17 - 62:19including Greece, in the last 10 year,
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62:19 - 62:22and we could've scanned all the books in Europe at the same time,
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62:22 - 62:28and made them available to all humanity on an un-surveiled basis.
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62:28 - 62:32If Ms. Cruise wants to build a monument to herself,
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62:32 - 62:36it isn't going to be as a feif a day politician.
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62:36 - 62:39She's going to do it this way, and you're going to ask her.
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62:39 - 62:41I'm going to be on a plane on my way back across the Atlantic,
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62:41 - 62:44or I promise you I'd ask her myself.
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62:44 - 62:46Ask her for me.
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62:46 - 62:51Say "It's not our fault, Eben want's to know. If you want to hurt somebody, hurt him. You should be changing
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62:51 - 62:56the European University. You should be breaking it up into un-surveiled reading. You should be putting
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62:56 - 63:04Google books and Amazon out of business. That's some North American, Anglo-Saxon, elbow capitalism thing.
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63:04 - 63:07Why aren't we making knowledge free in Europe
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63:07 - 63:10and assuring that it's un-surveiled?"
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63:10 - 63:16That would be the biggest step possible and it is within their power.
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63:16 - 63:28[Organizer] Thank you so much. [Applause] Brilliant. thank you.
- Title:
- Why Freedom of Thought Requires Free Media and Why Free Media Require Free Technology
- Description:
-
Media that spy on and data-mine the public are capable of destroying humanity's most precious freedom: freedom of thought. Ensuring that media remain structured to support rather than suppress individual freedom and civic virtue requires us to achieve specific free technology and free culture goals. Our existing achievements in these directions are under assault from companies trying to bottleneck human communications or own our common culture, and states eager to control their subjects' minds. In this talk--one of a series beginning with "The dotCommunist Manifesto" and "Die Gedanken Sind Frei"--I offer some suggestions about how the Free World should meet the challenges of the next decade.
- Video Language:
- English
- Duration:
- 01:03:42
sflctranscribe edited English subtitles for Why Freedom of Thought Requires Free Media and Why Free Media Require Free Technology | ||
sflctranscribe edited English subtitles for Why Freedom of Thought Requires Free Media and Why Free Media Require Free Technology | ||
sflctranscribe edited English subtitles for Why Freedom of Thought Requires Free Media and Why Free Media Require Free Technology | ||
sflctranscribe added a translation |