Remember back in the fifties when intellectuals (like Herbert Marcuse) were handwaving that lowered costs and increasing efficiencies from the automation of manufacturing would afford a nearly universal leisure society in a single generation? In what should have been a surprise move to no one, the destruction of organized labor by outsourcing first to the feudal remnants of the Confederacy and then to the global South made it possible instead for plutocrats to capture all the wealth generated by the stunning gains in efficiency made possible by automation and hence this development contributed to the present crisis of anti-democratic wealth concentration.
Remember back in the naughties when intellectuals (like Yochai Benkler) were handwaving that lowered costs from the digitization of publication and distribution infrastructure would afford rapid democratizing global development on the cheap? In what should be a surprise move to no one, it has instead afforded still greater wealth concentration through the duplication and replacement of existing enterprises and then the facilitation of monopolies among the ruins.
From RJ Escow's latest piece in Salon
Remember back in the naughties when intellectuals (like Yochai Benkler) were handwaving that lowered costs from the digitization of publication and distribution infrastructure would afford rapid democratizing global development on the cheap? In what should be a surprise move to no one, it has instead afforded still greater wealth concentration through the duplication and replacement of existing enterprises and then the facilitation of monopolies among the ruins.
From RJ Escow's latest piece in Salon
Our society runs on a digital myth, which says that the technology-based economy is different... not subject to the principles of mathematics and human nature that govern the rest of our lives. This myth tells us... we use services like Google and Facebook for “free.” ... Amazon is following a decades-long model for the tech industry. It begins with the rollout of cheap or “free” services -- typically based on the efforts of others -- offered at minimal cost in order to capture a monopoly share of the market. Once that monopoly is obtained, the tech vendor uses it to extract usurious and typically unanticipated costs...
That’s the story of Microsoft’s operating system... Bill Gates... acknowledges, he and his associates built MS/DOS by “taking Digital’s manual and writing my operating system.” IBM offered other operating systems with its new PCs... to mollify the Justice Department’s antitrust division... But the Gates/IBM product was offered for only $40, while users who wanted CP/M were required to pay $240. The die was cast. In his 1999 ruling against Microsoft, Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson [found that] ... Microsoft possesses monopoly power in the market for... operating systems... protect[s] its operating system monopoly, utilizing a full array of exclusionary practices... harmful to innovation and to consumers... How do you quantify the jobs, consumer savings or new revenues... lost because of innovations that never took place? ... Then there’s the human cost of product inefficiency... protected from competitors who might design a better product...
> From RJ Escow's latest piece in Salon. . .
ReplyDelete>
> Bill Gates... acknowledges, he and his associates built
> MS/DOS by “taking Digital’s manual and writing my
> operating system.”
Say what? Is that "Digital" as in "Digital Research"
or "Digital Equipment Corporation"?
In either case, it's not true. Microsoft **bought**
Tim Paterson's (Seattle Computer Corporation's) QDOS
("quick and dirty operating system" for the Intel 8086/8088),
which was in turn a reimplementation of Digital Research's
CP/M (for the Z-80/8080), which was in turn based on
Digital Equipment Corporation's RT-11 (for the PDP-11).
In any case, lots of "Digitals'" manuals, mostly pre-dating
Bill Gates' ownership of the OS.
> Silicon Valley represents a set of values that is amoral
> by commonly held standards. It’s rapidly taking control of
> the distribution systems for music, literature and arts.
> And it’s increasingly manipulating our access to information,
> even as it absorbs an ever-increasing share of our economy.
> Scoff at the word “monopoly” if you like. But if these
> developments don’t concern you, you’re not paying attention.
Wot, you don't like The Future? Tough tuna fish, Charlie!
To quote somebody in Jerry Pournelle's _Oath of Fealty_,
"Consider it evolution in action."
Or go study Ayn Rand, or something. ;->
The confusion no doubt results from my skimming -- I thought I'd captured the main points while still inviting folks to click the link to the whole piece. It may be that Eskow is simplifying the history a wee bit around the edges as well.
ReplyDeleteInteresting that just about all silicon valley execs are of the "Liberal" persuasion. Then again, money talks and ideology takes a walk regardless of your world view.
ReplyDeleteI don't agree with either of your observations. Neoliberlism as an advocacy either of elite-incumbent technocracy or of market fundamentalist pieties is a right-wing reactionary political position. Clintonian liberalism was about as liberal as Eisenhower Republicanism. I agree that money is corrupting, I agree that it has corrupted both political parties, but I disagree that this trumps ideology or that this makes the parties equivalent to one another. Such facile observations usually justify the usual consumer acquiescence to the status quo with the added insult of self-congratulatory pseudo-radical preening.
ReplyDelete> Tech "Disruption" Is Monopoly Money
ReplyDeleteFrom today's Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/26/books/review/james-risens-pay-any-price.html
---------------
$20 billion was sent to Iraq with little or no oversight and without
any clear direction on how it should be spent. Most of this money was
flown from East Rutherford, N.J., in bricks of $100 bills. Pallets of
cash were distributed at will. . .
====
Boy oh boy! That was right in my back yard. I'm surprised it didn't
warp the space-time continuum on Route 3.
"I feel a great disturbance in the force."
No, that's just $20 billion, in bricks of $100 bills, parked
in a warehouse over at Teterboro Airport.
;->