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- title: Against Decentralization
- url: http://pudo.org/blog/2015/11/04/against-decentralization.html
- hash_url: 50ba5b70350c8d38b7e435ca8452d22d
-
- <p>In the free software/open web community, the notion that the web should be
- decentralized is more than a shared ideal, it is a piece of dogma.</p>
-
- <p>It is key to all the characteristics of the web that we are most proud of:
- diversity, innovation, the competition of ideas rather than bank accounts.
- There are plenty of great reasons to strive for decentralization. Zittrain's
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Future_of_the_Internet">The Future of the Internet</a> and van Schewick's <a href="http://netarchitecture.org/">Internet Architecture and Innovation</a> make brilliant arguments in this regard.</p>
-
- <p>But it's obviously also a troubled model, and the majority of the web is moving
- towards more centralized services. Facebook, Google, Apple, Amazon or even
- GitHub and Slack. Most open web advocates stand in opposition to this. They opt
- to build small, open source alternative <a href="https://sandstorm.io/">solutions that anyone can run on their
- own server</a>.</p>
-
- <p>If you squint really hard, these things kinda, sorta look like the
- real thing. But, fundamentally, this is the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ersatz_good">Ersatz web</a> for the nerdy elite. Even worse, it puts open web developers - in a very
- literal sense - in a conservative, rather than in a progressive position.</p>
-
- <p>Ad-based data centralization models and cloud services might not be the most
- sustainable thing on the planet, but for the moment they simply beat the shit
- out of the open web. Our formulaic response is to claim that this is just a
- "UX problem". This argument is in total, blissful disregard of the economics
- involved.</p>
-
- <p>Making decentralization the only strategy for the open web is a big bet, with
- little evidence in it's favor. What are the alternatives?</p>
-
- <p>Figuring out how to get better at making open centralized services is one.
- Pushing for innovative government regulation of monopolistic platforms is
- another.</p>
-
- <p>Germany <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARD_(broadcaster)">invests 7.6bn Euro a year</a>
- into publicly financed news and entertainment media; to make sure that voters
- are well-informed and have access to diverse sources of information. While
- there's already the odd iPhone app and web site coming out of this, it's time
- to fundamentally renegotiate this system for the digital age. Using this money,
- we can create public spaces on the web - free software, open knowledge, digital
- public goods.</p>
-
- <p>Even a percentage of this fund (and <a href="https://www.mysociety.org/2014/10/16/its-time-to-talk-about-digital-public-service-corporations/">it's UK sibling</a>) would provide enough
- resource for Europe to get out of the unhealthy pattern of trying to emulate
- Silicon Valley. Instead, we can create an alternative model. One in which
- the web is more than a way to connect ads and eyeballs.</p>
-
- <p>The main benefit of decentralization over such alternatives is that it
- minimizes the extent to which we have to engage with real-world politics and
- the economics of operating large-scale web services. We are deeply infatuated
- with the notion of solving political problems through technology.</p>
-
- <p>The poster child of this, of course, is Bitcoin and the blockchain. While ideas
- like smart contracts are genuinely innovative and interesting, the naive dream
- of digital currencies remains that they will catapult us into libertarian
- nirvana, a world in which all politics is protocol.</p>
-
- <p>Many smart political choices are embedded in the core of internet architecture.
- But there's an equal number of risks - network effects, data silos - that
- technology just wasn't able to avoid. We shouldn't be stuck re-fighting those
- lost battles, but instead commit to using political process to address them.</p>
-
- <p>This means working with government. You know, the thing our buddy Barlow said
- didn't exist in cyberspace but that somehow still got full take on our web
- traffic. It's no longer cool to engage with government only when they're about
- to screw things up - net censorship, surveillance, copyright policy - and to
- pretend that all political issues on the web can be solved given enough
- distributed hash tables.</p>
-
- <p>So, what's the alternative to decentralization? Laws. Public service websites.
- Creating commons infrastructure. But let's just not pretend any more that the
- future of the web is all about better UX for our IRC clients.</p>
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