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The Post-American Internet (permalink)
On December 28th, I delivered a speech entitled "A
post-American, enshittification-resistant internet" for 39C3,
the 39th Chaos Communications Congress in Hamburg, Germany. This is
the transcript of that speech.
Many of you know that I'm an activist with the Electronic
Frontier Foundation – EFF. I'm about to start my 25th year
there. I know that I'm hardly unbiased, but as far as I'm
concerned, there's no group anywhere on Earth that does the work of
defending our digital rights better than EFF.
I'm an activist there, and for the past quarter-century, I've
been embroiled in something I call "The War on General Purpose
Computing."
If you were at 28C3, 14 years ago, you may have heard me give a
talk with that title. Those are the trenches I've been in since my
very first day on the job at EFF, when I flew to Los Angeles to
crash the inaugural meeting of something called the "Broadcast
Protection Discussion Group," an unholy alliance of tech companies,
media companies, broadcasters and cable operators.
They'd gathered because this lavishly corrupt American
congressman, Billy Tauzin, had promised them a new regulation
– a rule banning the manufacture and sale of digital
computers, unless they had been backdoored to specifications set by
that group, specifications for technical measures to block
computers from performing operations that were dispreferred by
these companies' shareholders.
That rule was called "the Broadcast Flag," and it actually
passed through the American telecoms regulator, the Federal
Communications Commission. So we sued the FCC in federal court, and
overturned the rule.
We won that skirmish, but friends, I have bad news, news that
will not surprise you. Despite wins like that one, we have been
losing the war on the general purpose computer for the past 25
years.
Which is why I've come to Hamburg today. Because, after decades
of throwing myself against a locked door, the door that leads to a
new, good internet, one that delivers both the technological
self-determination of the old, good internet, and the ease of use
of Web 2.0 that let our normie friends join the party, that door
has been unlocked.
Today, it is open a crack. It's open a crack!
And here's the weirdest part: Donald Trump is the guy who's
unlocked that door.
Oh, he didn't do it on purpose! But, thanks to Trump's
incontinent belligerence, we are on the cusp of a "Post-American
Internet," a new digital nervous system for the 21st century. An
internet that we can build without worrying about America's demands
and priorities.
Now, don't get me wrong, I'm not happy about Trump or
his policies. But as my friend Joey DaVilla likes to say "When life
gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla." The only thing worse than
experiencing all the terror that Trump has unleashed on America and
the world would be going through all that and not salvaging
anything out of the wreckage.
That's what I want to talk to you about today: the post-American
Internet we can wrest from Trump's chaos.
A post-American Internet that is possible because Trump has
mobilized new coalition partners to join the fight on our side. In
politics, coalitions are everything. Any time you see a
group of people suddenly succeeding at a goal they have been
failing to achieve, it's a sure bet that they've found some
coalition partners, new allies who don't want all the same
thing as the original forces, but want enough of the same
things to fight on their side.
That's where Trump came from: a coalition of billionaires, white
nationalists, Christian bigots, authoritarians, conspiratorialists,
imperialists, and self-described "libertarians" who've got such a
scorching case of low-tax brain worms that they'd vote for
Mussolini if he'd promise to lower their taxes by a nickel.
And what's got me so excited is that we've got a new
coalition in the War on General Purpose Computers: a coalition that
includes the digital rights activists who've been on the lines for
decades, but also people who want to turn America's Big
Tech trillions into billions for their own economy, and
national security hawks who are quite rightly worried about digital
sovereignty.
My thesis here is that this is an unstoppable
coalition. Which is good news! For the first time in decades,
victory is in our grasp.
#
So let me explain: 14 years ago, I stood in front of this group
and explained the "War on General Purpose Computing." That was my
snappy name for this fight, but the boring name that they use in
legislatures for it is "anticircumvention,"
Under anticircumvention law, it's a crime to alter the
functioning of a digital product or service, unless the
manufacturer approves of your modification, and – crucially
– this is true whether or not your modification
violates any other law.
Anticircumvention law originates in the USA: Section 1201 of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 establishes a felony
punishable by a five year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine for a
first offense for bypassing an "access control" for a copyrighted
work.
So practically speaking, if you design a device or service with
even the flimsiest of systems to prevent modification of its
application code or firmware, it's a felony – a jailable
felony – to modify that code or firmware. It's also a felony
to disclose information about how to bypass that access
control, which means that pen-testers who even describe
how they access a device or system face criminal liability.
Under anticircumvention law any manufacturer can trivially turn
their product into a no-go zone, criminalizing the act of
investigating its defects, criminalizing the act of reporting on
its defects, and criminalizing the act of remediating its
defects.
This is a law that Jay Freeman rightly calls "Felony Contempt of
Business Model." Anticircumvention became the law of the land in
1998 when Bill Clinton signed the DMCA. But before you start
snickering at those stupid Americans, know this: every
other country in the world has passed a law just like
this in the years since. Here in the EU, it came in through
Article 6 of the 2001 EU Copyright Directive.
Now, it makes a certain twisted sense for the US to enact a law
like this, after all, they are the world's tech powerhouse, home to
the biggest, most powerful tech companies in the world. By making
it illegal to modify digital products without the manufacturer's
permission, America enhances the rent-extracting power of the most
valuable companies on US stock exchanges.
But why would Europe pass a law like this? Europe is a
massive tech importer. By extending legal protection to
tech companies that want to steal their users' data and money, the
EU was facilitating a one-way transfer of value from Europe to
America. So why would Europe do this?
Well, let me tell you about the circumstances under which
other countries came to enact their anticircumvention laws
and maybe you'll spot a pattern that will answer this question.
Australia got its anticircumvention law through the US-Australia
Free Trade Agreement, which obliges Australia to enact
anticircumvention law.
Canada and Mexico got it through the US-Mexico-Canada Free Trade
Agreement, which obliges Canada and Mexico to enact
anticircumvention laws.
Andean nations like Chile got their anticircumvention laws
through bilateral US free trade agreements, which oblige them to
enact anticircumvention laws.
And the Central American nations got their anticircumvention
laws through CAFTA – The Central American Free Trade
Agreement with the USA – which obliges them to enact
anticircumvention laws, too.
I assume you've spotted the pattern by now: the US trade
representative has forced every one of its trading partners to
adopt anticircumvention law, to facilitate the extraction of their
own people's data and money by American firms. But of course, that
only raises a further question: Why would every other country in
the world agree to let America steal its own people's money and
data, and block its domestic tech sector from making interoperable
products that would prevent this theft?
Here's an anecdote that unravels this riddle: many years ago, in
the years before Viktor Orban rose to power, I used to
guest-lecture at a summer PhD program in political science at
Budapest's Central European University. And one summer, after I'd
lectured to my students about anticircumvention law, one of them
approached me.
They had been the information minister of a Central American
nation during the CAFTA negotiations, and one day, they'd received
a phone-call from their trade negotiator, calling from the CAFTA
bargaining table. The negotiator said, "You know how you told me
not to give the Americans anticircumvention under any
circumstances? Well, they're saying that they won't take our coffee
unless we give them anticircumvention. And I'm sorry, but we just
can't lose the US coffee market. Our economy would collapse. So
we're going to give them anticircumvention. I'm really sorry."
That's it. That's why every government in the world allowed US
Big Tech companies to declare open season on their people's private
data and ready cash.
The alternative was tariffs. Well, I don't know if you've heard,
but we've got tariffs now!
I mean, if someone threatens to burn your house down unless you
follow their orders, and then they burn your house down anyway, you
don't have to keep following their orders. So…Happy
Liberation Day?
So far, every country in the world has had one of two responses
to the Trump tariffs. The first one is: "Give Trump everything he
asks for (except Greenland) and hope he stops being mad at you."
This has been an absolute failure. Give Trump an inch, he'll take a
mile. He'll take fucking Greenland. Capitulation is a
failure.
But so is the other tactic: retaliatory tariffs. That's what
we've done in Canada (like all the best Americans, I'm Canadian).
Our top move has been to levy tariffs on the stuff we import from
America, making the things we buy more expensive. That's a
weird way to punish America! It's like punching yourself in the
face as hard as you can, and hoping the downstairs neighbor says
"Ouch!"
And it's indiscriminate. Why whack some poor farmer
from a state that begins and ends with a vowel with tariffs on his
soybeans. That guy never did anything bad to Canada.
But there's a third possible response to tariffs, one that's
just sitting there, begging to be tried: what about repealing
anticircumvention law?
If you're a technologist or an investor based in a country
that's repealed its anticircumvention law, you can go into business
making disenshittificatory products that plug into America's
defective tech exports, allowing the people who own and use those
products to use them in ways that are good for them, even if those
uses make the company's shareholders mad.
Think of John Deere tractors: when a farmer's John Deere tractor
breaks down, they are expected to repair it, swapping in new parts
and assemblies to replace whatever's malfing. But the tractor won't
recognize that new part and will not start working again, not until
the farmer spends a couple hundred bucks on a service callout from
an official John Deere tractor repair rep, whose only job is to
type an unlock code into the tractor's console, to initialize the
part and pair it with the tractor's main computing unit.
Modding a tractor to bypass this activation step violates
anticircumvention law, meaning farmers all over the world are stuck
with this ripoff garbage, because their own government
will lock up anyone who makes a tractor mod that disables the
parts-pairing check in this American product.
So what if Canada repealed Bill C-11, the Copyright
Modernization Act of 2012 (that's our anticircumvention law)? Well,
then a company like Honeybee, which makes tractor front-ends and
attachments, could hire some smart University of Waterloo computer
science grads, and put 'em to work jailbreaking the John Deere
tractor's firmware, and offer it to everyone in the world. They
could sell the crack to anyone with an internet connection and a
payment method, including that poor American farmer whose soybeans
we're currently tariffing.
It's hard to convey how much money is on the table here. Take
just one example: Apple's App Store. Apple forces all app
vendors into using its payment processor, and charges them a 30
percent commission on every euro spent inside of an app.
30 percent! That's such a profitable business that
Apple makes $100 billion per year on it. If the EU repeals
Article 6 of the Copyright Directive, some smart geeks in Finland
could reverse-engineer Apple's bootloaders and make a hardware
dongle that jailbreaks phones so that they can use alternative app
stores, and sell the dongle – along with the infrastructure
to operate an app store – to anyone in the world who wants to
go into business competing with Apple for users and app
vendors.
Those competitors could offer a 90% discount to every crafter on
Etsy, every performer on Patreon, every online news outlet, every
game dev, every media store. Offer them a 90% discount on payments,
and still make $10b/year.
Maybe Finland will never see another Nokia, but Nokia's a tough
business to be in. You've got to make hardware, which is expensive
and risky. But if the EU legalizes jailbreaking, then
Apple would have to incur all the expense and risk of
making and fielding hardware, while those Finnish geeks could cream
off the $100b Apple sucks out of the global economy in an act of a
disgusting, rip-off rent-seeking.
As Jeff Bezos said to the publishers: "Your margin is my
opportunity." With these guys, it's always "disruption for thee,
but not for me." When they do it to us, that's progress. When we do
it to them, it's piracy, and every pirate wants to be an
admiral.
Well, screw that. Move fast and break Tim Cook's things. Move
fast and break kings!
It's funny: I spent 25 years getting my ass kicked by the US
Trade Representative (in my defense, it wasn't a fair fight). I
developed a kind of grudging admiration for the skill with which
the USTR bound the entire world to a system of trade that conferred
parochial advantages to America and its tech firms, giving them
free rein to loot the world's data and economies. So it's been
pretty amazing to watch Trump swiftly and decisively dismantle the
global system of trade and destroy the case for the world
continuing to arrange its affairs to protect the interests of
America's capital class.
I mean, it's not a path I would have chosen. I'd have preferred
no Trump at all to this breakthrough. But I'll take this massive
own-goal if Trump insists. I mean, I'm not saying I've become an
accelerationist, but at this point, I'm not exactly not an
accelerationist.
Now, you might have heard that governments around the world have
been trying to get Apple to open its App Store, and they've totally
failed at this. When the EU hit Apple with an enforcement order
under the Digital Markets Act, Apple responded by offering to allow
third party app stores, but it would only allow those stores to
sell apps that Apple had approved of.
And while those stores could use their own payment
processors, Apple would charge them so much in junk fees that it
would be more expensive to process a payment using your
own system, and if Apple believed that a user's phone had been
outside of the EU for 21 days, they'd remotely delete all that
user's data and apps.
When the EU explained that this would not satisfy the
regulation, Apple threatened to pull out of the EU. Then, once
everyone had finished laughing, Apple filed more than a dozen
bullshit objections to the order hoping to tie this up in court for
a decade, the way Google and Meta did for the GDPR.
It's not clear that the EU can force Apple to write code that
opens up the iOS platform for alternative app stores and payment
methods, but there is one thing that the EU can absolutely do with
100% reliability, any time they want: the EU can decide not to let
Apple use Europe's courts to shut down European companies that
defend European merchants, performers, makers, news outlets, game
devs and creative workers, from Apple's ripoff, by jailbreaking
phones.
All the EU has to do is repeal Article 6 of the Copyright
Directive, and, in so doing, strip Apple of the privilege of
mobilizing the European justice system to shore up Apple's hundred
billion dollar annual tax on the world's digital economy. The EU
company that figures out how to reliably jailbreak iPhones will
have customers all over the world, including in the USA, where
Apple doesn't just use its veto over which apps you can run on your
phone to suck 30% out of every dollar you spend, but where Apple
also uses its control over the platform to strip out apps that
protect Apple's customers from Trump's fascist takeover.
Back in October, Apple kicked the "ICE Block" app out of the App
Store. That's an app that warns the user if there's a snatch squad
of masked ICE thugs nearby looking to grab you off the street and
send you to an offshore gulag. Apple internally classified ICE
kidnappers as a "protected class," and then declared the ICE Block
infringed on the rights of these poor, beset ICE goons.
And speaking of ICE thugs, there are plenty of qualified
technologists who have fled the US this year, one step ahead of an
ICE platoon looking to put them and their children into a camp.
Those skilled hackers are now living all over the world, joined by
investors who'd like to back a business whose success will be
determined by how awesome its products are, and not how many $TRUMP
coins they buy.
Apple's margin could be their opportunity.
Legalizing jailbreaking, raiding the highest margin lines of
business of the most profitable companies in America is a
much better response to the Trump tariffs than retaliatory
tariffs.
For one thing, this is a targeted response: go after
Big Tech's margins and you're mounting a frontal assault on the
businesses whose CEOs each paid a million bucks to sit behind Trump
on the inauguration dais.
Raiding Big Tech's margins is not an attack on the American
people, nor on the small American businesses that are ripped off by
Big Tech. It's a raid on the companies that screw everyday
Americans and everyone else in the world. It's a way to
make everyone in the world richer at the expense of these ripoff
companies.
It beats the shit out of blowing hundreds of billions of dollars
building AI data-centers in the hopes that someday, a sector that's
lost nearly a trillion dollars shipping defective chatbots will
figure out a use for GPUs that doesn't start hemorrhaging money the
minute they plug them in.
So here are our new allies in the war on general-purpose
computation: businesses and technologists who want to make billions
of dollars raiding Big Tech's margins, and policymakers who want
their country to be the disenshittification nation – the
country that doesn't merely protect its people's money and privacy
by buying jailbreaks from other countries, but rather, the country
that makes billions of dollars selling that privacy and
pocketbook-defending tech to the rest of the world.
That's a powerful alliance, but those are not the only allies
Trump has pushed into our camp. There's another powerful ally
waiting in the wings.
Remember last June, when the International Criminal Court in the
Hague issued an arrest warrant for the génocidaire Benjamin
Netanyahu, and Trump denounced the ICC, and then the ICC lost its
Outlook access, its email archives, its working files, its address
books, its calendars?
Microsoft says they didn't brick the ICC – that it's a
coincidence. But when it comes to a he-said/Clippy-said between the
justices of the ICC and the convicted monopolists of Microsoft, I
know who I believe.
This is exactly the kind of infrastructural risk that we were
warned of if we let Chinese companies like Huawei supply our
critical telecoms equipment. Virtually every government ministry,
every major corporation, every small business and every household
in the world have locked themselves into a US-based, cloud-based
service.
The handful of US Big Tech companies that supply the world's
administrative tools are all vulnerable to pressure from the Trump
admin, and that means that Trump can brick an entire
nation.
The attack on the ICC was an act of cyberwarfare, like the
Russian hackers who shut down Ukrainian power-generation
facilities, except that Microsoft doesn't have to hack
Outlook to brick the ICC – they own Outlook.
Under the US CLOUD Act of 2018, the US government can compel any
US-based company to disclose any of its users' data
– including foreign governments – and this is true no
matter where that data is stored. Last July, Anton Carniaux,
Director of Public and Legal Affairs at Microsoft France, told a
French government inquiry that he "couldn't guarantee" that
Microsoft wouldn't hand sensitive French data over to the US
government, even if that data was stored in a European
data-center.
And under the CLOUD Act, the US government can slap gag orders
on the companies that it forces to cough up that data, so there'd
be no way to even know if this happened, or whether it's already
happened.
It doesn't stop at administrative tools, either: remember back
in 2022, when Putin's thugs looted millions of dollars' worth of
John Deere tractors from Ukraine and those tractors showed up in
Chechnya? The John Deere company pushed an over-the-air kill signal
to those tractors and bricked 'em.
John Deere is every bit as politically vulnerable to the Trump
admin as Microsoft is, and they can brick most of the tractors in
the world, and the tractors they can't brick are probably
made by Massey Ferguson, the number-two company in the ag-tech
cartel, which is also an American company and just as vulnerable to
political attacks from the US government.
Now, none of this will be news to global leaders. Even before
Trump and Microsoft bricked the ICC they were trying to figure out
a path to "digital sovereignty." But the Trump administration's
outrageous conduct and rhetoric over past 11 months has turned
"digital sovereignty" from a nice-to-have into a must-have.
So finally, we're seeing some movement, like "Eurostack," a
project to clone the functionality of US Big Tech silos in
free/open source software, and to build EU-based data-centers that
this code can run on.
But Eurostack is heading for a crisis. It's great to build open,
locally hosted, auditable, trustworthy services that replicate the
useful features of Big Tech, but you also need to build the
adversarial interoperability tools that allow for mass exporting of
millions of documents, the sensitive data-structures and edit
histories.
We need scrapers and headless browsers to accomplish the
adversarial interoperability that will guarantee ongoing
connectivity to institutions that are still hosted on US
cloud-based services, because US companies are not going
to facilitate the mass exodus of international customers from their
platform.
Just think of how Apple responded to the relatively minor demand
to open up the iOS App Store, and now imagine the thermonuclear
foot-dragging, tantrum-throwing and malicious compliance they'll
come up with when faced with the departure of a plurality of the
businesses and governments in a 27-nation bloc of 500,000,000
affluent consumers.
Any serious attempt at digital sovereignty needs migration tools
that work without the cooperation of the Big Tech
companies. Otherwise, this is like building housing for East
Germans and locating it in West Berlin. It doesn't matter
how great the housing is, your intended audience is going to really
struggle to move in unless you tear down the wall.
Step one of tearing down that wall is killing anticircumvention
law, so that we can run virtual devices that can be scripted, break
bootloaders to swap out firmware and generally seize the means of
computation.
So this is the third bloc in the disenshittification army: not
just digital rights hippies like me; not just entrepreneurs and
economic development wonks rubbing their hands together at the
thought of transforming American trillions into European billions;
but also the national security hawks who are 100% justified in
their extreme concern about their country's reliance on American
platforms that have been shown to be totally
unreliable.
This is how we'll get a post-American internet: with an
unstoppable coalition of activists, entrepreneurs and natsec
hawks.
This has been a long time coming. Since the post-war settlement,
the world has treated the US as a neutral platform, a trustworthy
and stable maintainer of critical systems for global interchange,
what the political scientists Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman call
the "Underground Empire." But over the past 15 years, the US has
systematically shattered global trust in its institutions, a
process that only accelerated under Trump.
Take transoceanic fiber optic cables: the way the transoceanic
fiber routes were planned, the majority of these cables make
landfall on the coasts of the USA where the interconnections are
handled. There's a good case for this hub-and-spoke network
topology, especially compared to establishing direct links between
every country. That's an Order(N^2) problem: directly linking each
of the planet Earth's 205 countries to every other country would
require 20,910 fiber links.
But putting all the world's telecoms eggs in America's basket
only works if the US doesn't take advantage of its centrality, and
while many people worried about what the US could do with the
head-ends of the world's global fiber infra, it wasn't until Mark
Klein's 2006 revelations about the NSA's nation-scale fiber optic
taps in AT&T's network, and Ed Snowden's 2013 documents showing
the global scale of this wiretapping, that the world had to
confront the undeniable reality that the US could not be trusted to
serve as the world's fiber hub.
It's not just fiber. The world does business in dollars. Most
countries maintain dollar accounts at the Fed in New York as their
major source of foreign reserves. But in 2005, American vulture
capitalists bought up billions of dollars worth of Argentinian
government bonds after the sovereign nation of Argentina had
declared bankruptcy.
They convinced a judge in New York to turn over the government
of Argentina's US assets to them to make good on loans that these
debt collectors had not issued, but had bought up at pennies on the
dollar. At that moment, every government in the world had to
confront the reality that they could not trust the US Federal
Reserve with their foreign reserves. But what else could they
use?
Without a clear answer, dollar dominance continued, but then,
under Biden, Putin-aligned oligarchs and Russian firms lost access
to the SWIFT system for dollar clearing. This is when goods –
like oil – are priced in dollars, so that buyers only need to
find someone who will trade their own currency for dollars, which
they can then swap for any commodity in the world.
Again, there's a sound case for dollar clearing: it's just not
practical to establish deep, liquid pairwise trading market for all
of the world's nearly 200 currencies, it's another O(N^2)
problem.
But it only works if the dollar is a neutral platform. Once the
dollar becomes an instrument of US foreign policy – whether
or not you agree with that policy – it's no longer a neutral
platform, and the world goes looking for an alternative.
No one knows what that alternative's going to be, just as no one
knows what configuration the world's fiber links will end up
taking. There's kilometers of fiber being stretched across the
ocean floor, and countries are trying out some pretty improbable
gambits as dollar alternatives, like Ethiopia revaluing its
sovereign debt in Chinese renminbi. Without a clear alternative to
America's enshittified platforms, the post-American century is off
to a rocky start.
But there's one post-American system that's easy to imagine. The
project to rip out all the cloud connected, backdoored,
untrustworthy black boxes that power our institutions, our medical
implants, our vehicles and our tractors; and replace it with
collectively maintained, open, free, trustworthy, auditable
code.
This project is the only one that benefits from
economies of scale, rather than being paralyzed by exponential
crises of scale. That's because any open, free tool adopted by any
public institution – like the Eurostack services – can
be audited, localized, pen-tested, debugged and improved by
institutions in every other country.
It's a commons, more like a science than a technology, in that
it is universal and international and collaborative. We don't have
dueling western and Chinese principles of structural engineering.
Rather, we have universal principles for making sure buildings
don't fall down, adapted to local circumstances.
We wouldn't tolerate secrecy in the calculations used to keep
our buildings upright, and we shouldn't tolerate opacity in the
software that keeps our tractors, hearing aids, ventilators,
pacemakers, trains, games consoles, phones, CCTVs, door locks, and
government ministries working.
The thing is, software is not an asset, it's a liability. The
capabilities that running software delivers – automation,
production, analysis and administration – those are
assets. But the software itself? That's a liability. Brittle,
fragile, forever breaking down as the software upstream of it,
downstream of it, and adjacent to it is updated or swapped out,
revealing defects and deficiencies in systems that may have
performed well for years.
Shifting software to commons-based production is a way to reduce
the liability that software imposes on its makers and users,
balancing out that liability among many players.
Now, obviously, tech bosses are totally clueless when it comes
to this. They really do think that software is an asset. That's why
they're so fucking horny to have chatbots shit out software at
superhuman speeds. That's why they think it's good that
they've got a chatbot that "produces a thousand times more code
than a human programmer."
Producing code that isn't designed for legibility and
maintainability, that is optimized, rather, for speed of
production, is a way to incur tech debt at scale.
This is a neat encapsulation of the whole AI story: the chatbot
can't do your job, but an AI salesman can convince your boss to
fire you and replace you with a chatbot that can't do your
job.
Your boss is an easy mark for that chatbot hustler because your
boss hates you. In their secret hearts, bosses understand that if
they stopped coming to work, the business would run along just
fine, but if the workers stopped showing up, the company
would grind to a halt.
Bosses like to tell themselves that they're in the driver's
seat, but really, they fear that they're strapped into the back
seat playing with a Fisher Price steering wheel. For them, AI is a
way to wire the toy steering wheel directly into the company's
drive-train. It's the realization of the fantasy of a company
without workers.
When I was walking the picket line in Hollywood during the
writer's strike, a writer told me that you prompt an AI the same
way a studio boss gives shitty notes to a writer's room: "Make me
ET, but make it about a dog, and give it a love interest, and a
car-chase in the third act."
Say that to a writer's room and they will call you a fucking
idiot suit and tell you "Why don't you go back to your office
and make a spreadsheet, you nitwit. The grownups here are writing a
movie."
Meanwhile, if you give that prompt to a chatbot, it will
cheerfully shit out a script exactly to spec. The fact that this
script will be terrible and unusable is less important than the
prospect of a working life in which no one calls you a fucking
idiot suit.
AI dangles the promise of a writer's room without writers, a
movie without actors, a hospital without nurses, a coding shop
without coders.
When Mark Zuckerberg went on a podcast and announced that the
average American had three friends, but wanted 15 friends, and that
he could solve this by giving us chatbots instead of friends, we
all dunked on him as an out-of-touch billionaire Martian who didn't
understand the nature of friendship.
But the reality is that for Zuck, your friends are a problem.
Your friends' interactions with you determine how much time you
spend on his platforms, and thus how many revenue-generating ads he
can show you.
Your friends stubbornly refuse to organize their relationship
with you in a way that maximizes the return to his shareholders. So
Zuck is over there in Menlo Park, furiously fantasizing about
replacing your friends with chatbots, because that way, he can
finally realize the dream of a social media service without any
socializing.
Rich, powerful people are, at root, solipsists. The only way to
amass a billion dollars is to inflict misery and privation on whole
populations. The only way to look yourself in the mirror after
you've done that, is to convince yourself that those people don't
matter, that, in some important sense, they aren't
real.
Think of Elon Musk calling everyone who disagrees with him an
"NPC,” or all those "Effective Altruists," who claimed the
moral high ground by claiming to care about 53 trillion imaginary
artificial humans who will come into existence in 10,000 years at
the expense of extending moral consideration to people alive
today.
Or think of how Trump fired all the US government scientists,
and then announced the "Genesis" program, declaring that the US
would begin generating annual "moonshot"-scale
breakthroughs, with a chatbot. It's science without scientists.
Chatbots can't really do science, but from Trump's perspective,
they're still better than scientists, because a chatbot won't ever
tell him not to stare at an eclipse, or not to inject bleach. A
chatbot won't ever tell him that trans people exist, or that the
climate emergency is real.
Powerful people are suckers for AI, because AI fuels the fantasy
of a world without people: just a boss and a computer, and no
ego-shattering confrontations with people who know how to
do things telling you "no."
AI is a way to produce tech debt at scale, to replace skilled
writers with defective spicy autocomplete systems, to lose money at
a rate not seen in living memory.
Now, compare that with the project of building a post-American
internet: a project to reduce tech debt, to unlock
America's monopoly trillions and divide them among the world's
entrepreneurs (for whom they represent untold profits), and the
world's technology users (for whom they represent untold savings);
all while building resiliency and sovereignty.
Now, some of you are probably feeling pretty cynical about this
right now. After all, your political leaders have demonstrated
decades of ineffectual and incompetent deference to the US, and an
inability to act, even when the need was dire. If your leaders
couldn't act decisively on the climate emergency, what hope do we
have of them taking this moment seriously?
But crises precipitate change. Remember when another
mad emperor – Vladimir Putin – invaded Ukraine, and
Europe experienced a dire energy shortage? In three short years,
the continent's solar uptake skyrocketed. The EU went from being 15
years behind in its energy transition, to ten years
ahead of schedule.
Because when you're shivering in the dark, a lot of fights you
didn't think were worth it are suddenly existential battles you
can't afford to lose. Sure, no one wants to argue with a tedious
neighbor who has an aesthetic temper tantrum at the thought of a
solar panel hanging from their neighbor's balcony.
But when it's winter, and there's no Russian gas, and you're
shivering in the dark, then that person can take their aesthetic
objection to balcony solar, fold it until it's all corners, and
shove it right up their ass.
Besides, we don't need Europe to lead the charge on a
post-American internet by repealing anticircumvention. Any
country could do it! And the country that gets there first gets to
reap the profits from supplying jailbreaking tools to the rest of
the world, it gets to be the Disenshittification Nation, and
everyone else in the world gets to buy those tools and defend
themselves from US tech companies' monetary and privacy
plunder.
Just one country has to break the consensus, and the case for
every country doing so is the strongest it's ever been. It used to
be that countries that depended on USAID had to worry about losing
food, medical and cash supports if they pissed off America. But
Trump killed USAID, so now that's a dead letter.
Meanwhile, America's status as the planet's most voracious
consumer has been gutted by decades of anti-worker, pro-billionaire
policies. Today, the US is in the grips of its third consecutive
"K-shaped" recovery, that's an economic rally where the rich get
richer, and everyone else gets poorer. For a generation, America
papered over that growing inequality with easy credit, with
everyday Americans funding their consumption with credit cards and
second and third mortgages.
So long as they could all afford to keep buying, other countries
had to care about America as an export market. But a generation of
extraction has left the bottom 90% of Americans struggling to buy
groceries and other necessities, carrying crushing debt from
skyrocketing shelter, education and medical expenses that they
can't hope to pay down, thanks to 50 years of wage stagnation.
The Trump administration has sided firmly with debt collectors,
price gougers, and rent extractors. Trump neutered enforcement
against rent-fixing platforms like Realpage, restarted debt
payments for eight million student borrowers, and killed a plan to
make live-saving drugs a little cheaper, leaving Americans to
continue to pay the highest drug prices in the world.
Every dollar spent servicing a loan is a dollar that can't go to
consumption. And as more and more Americans slip into poverty, the
US is gutting programs that spend money on the public's behalf,
like SNAP, the food stamps program that helps an ever-larger slice
of the American public stave off hunger.
America is chasing the "world without people" dream, where
working people have nothing, spend nothing, and turn every penny
over to rentiers who promptly flush that money into the stock
market, shitcoins, or gambling sites. But I repeat myself.
Even the US military – long a sacrosanct institution
– is being kneecapped to enrich rent-seekers. Congress just
killed a military "right to repair" law. So now, US soldiers
stationed abroad will have to continue the Pentagon's proud
tradition of shipping materiel from generators to jeeps back to
America to be fixed by their manufacturers at a 10,000% markup,
because the Pentagon routinely signs maintenance contracts that
prohibit it from teaching a Marine how to fix an engine.
The post-American world is really coming on fast. As we repeal
our anticircumvention laws, we don't have to care what America
thinks, we don't have to care about their tariffs, because they're
already whacking us with tariffs; and because the only people left
in the US who can afford to buy things are rich people, who just
don't buy enough stuff. There's only so many Lambos and Sub-Zeros
even the most guillotineable plute can usefully own.
But what if European firms want to go on taking
advantage of anticircumvention laws? Well, there's good news there,
too. "Good news," because the EU firms that rely on
anticircumvention are engaged in the sleaziest, most disgusting
frauds imaginable.
Anticircumvention law is the reason that Volkswagen could get
away with Dieselgate. By imposing legal liability on
reverse-engineers who might have discovered this lethal crime,
Article 6 of the Copyright Directive created a chilling effect, and
thousands of Europeans died, every year.
Today, Germany's storied automakers are carrying on the
tradition of Dieselgate, sabotaging their cars to extract rent from
drivers. From Mercedes, which rents you the accelerator pedal in
your luxury car, only unlocking the full acceleration curve of your
engine if you buy a monthly subscription; to BMW, which rents you
the automated system that automatically dims your high-beams if
there's oncoming traffic.
Legalize jailbreaking and any mechanic in Europe could unlock
those subscription features for one price, and not share
any of that money with BMW and Mercedes.
Then there's Medtronic, a company that pretends it is Irish.
Medtronic is the world's largest med-tech company, having purchased
all their competitors, and then undertaken the largest
"tax-inversion" in history, selling themselves to a tiny Irish
firm, in order to magick their profits into a state of untaxable
grace, floating in the Irish Sea.
Medtronic supplies the world's most widely used ventilators, and
it booby-traps them the same way John Deere booby-traps its
tractors. After a hospital technician puts a new part in a
Medtronic ventilator, the ventilator's central computing unit
refuses to recognize the part until it completes a cryptographic
handshake, proving that an authorized Medtronic technician was paid
hundreds of euros to certify a repair that the hospital's own
technician probably performed.
It's just a way to suck hundreds of euros out of hospitals every
time a ventilator breaks. This would be bad enough, but during the
covid lockdowns, when every ventilator was desperately needed, and
when the planes stopped flying, there was no way for a Medtronic
tech to come and bless the hospital technicians' repairs. This was
lethal. It killed people.
There's one more European company that relies on
anticircumvention that I want to discuss here, because they're old
friends of CCC: that's the Polish train company Newag. Newag
sabotages its own locomotives, booby-trapping them so that if they
sense they have been taken to a rival's service yard, the train
bricks itself. When the train operator calls Newag about this
mysterious problem, the company "helpfully" remotes into the
locomotive's computers, to perform "diagnostics," which is just
sending a unbricking command to the vehicle, a service for which
they charge 20,000 euros.
Last year, Polish hackers from the security research firm Dragon
Sector presented on their research into this disgusting racket in
this very hall, and now, they're being sued by Newag under
anticircumvention law, for making absolutely true disclosures about
Newag's deliberately defective products.
So these are the European stakeholders for anticircumvention
law: the Dieselgate killers, the car companies who want to rent you
your high-beams and accelerator, the med-tech giant that bricked
all the ventilators during the pandemic, and the company that tied
Poland to the train-tracks.
I relish the opportunity to fight these bastards in Brussels, as
they show up and cry "Won't someone think of the train
saboteurs?"
The enshittification of technology – the decay of the
platforms and systems we rely on – has many causes: the
collapse of competition, regulatory capture, the smashing of tech
workers' power. But most of all, enshittification is the result of
anticircumvention law's ban on interoperability.
By blocking interop, by declaring war on the general-purpose
computer, our policy-makers created an enshittogenic environment
that rewarded companies for being shitty, and ushered in the
enshittocene, in which everything is turning to shit.
Let's call time on enshittification. Let's seize the means of
computation. Let's build the drop-in, free, open, auditable
alternatives to the services and firmware we rely on.
Let's end the era of silos. I mean, isn't it fucking
weird how you have to care which network someone is using
if you want to talk to them? Instead of just deciding who
you want to talk to?
The fact that you have to figure out whether the discussion
you're trying to join is on Twitter or Bluesky, Mastodon or
Instagram – that is just the most Prodigy/AOL/Compuserve-ass
way of running a digital world. I mean, 1990 called and they want
their walled gardens back
Powerful allies are joining our side in the War on General
Purpose Computation. It's not just people like us, who've been
fighting for this whole goddamned century, but also countries that
want to convert American tech's hoarded trillions into fuel for a
single-use rocket that boosts their own tech sector into a stable
orbit.
It's national security hawks who are worried about Trump
bricking their ministries or their tractors, and who are also
worried – with just cause – about Xi Jinping bricking
all their solar inverters and batteries. Because, after all, the
post-American internet is also a post-Chinese internet!
Nothing should be designed to be field updatable without the
user's permission. Nothing critical should be a black box.
Like I said at the start of this talk, I have been doing this
work for 24 years at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, throwing
myself at a door that was double-locked and deadbolted, and now
that door is open a crack and goddammit, I am hopeful.
Not optimistic. Fuck optimism! Optimism is the idea that things
will get better no matter what we do. I know that what we do
matters. Hope is the belief that if we can improve things, even in
small ways, we can ascend the gradient toward the world we want,
and attain higher vantage points from which new courses of action,
invisible to us here at our lower elevation, will be revealed.
Hope is a discipline. It requires that you not give in to
despair. So I'm here to tell you: don't despair.
All this decade, all over the world, countries have taken up
arms against concentrated corporate power. We've had big, muscular
antitrust attacks on big corporations in the US (under Trump I
and Biden); in Canada; in the UK; in the EU and member
states like Germany, France and Spain; in Australia; in Japan and
South Korea and Singapore; in Brazil; and in China.
This is a near-miraculous turn of affairs. All over the world,
governments are declaring war on monopolies, the source of
billionaires' wealth and power.
Even the most forceful wind is invisible. We can only see it by
its effects. What we're seeing here is that whenever a politician
bent on curbing corporate power unfurls a sail, no matter where in
the world that politician is, that sail fills with wind and propels
the policy in ways that haven't been seen in generations.
The long becalming of the fight over corporate power has ended,
and a fierce, unstoppable wind is blowing. It's not just blowing in
Europe, or in Canada, or in South Korea, Japan, China, Australia or
Brazil. It's blowing in America, too. Never forget that as screwed
up and terrifying as things are in America, the country has
experienced, and continues to experience, a tsunami of antitrust
bills and enforcement actions at the local, state and federal
level.
And never forget that the post-American internet will be
good for Americans. Because, in a K-shaped, bifurcated,
unequal America, the trillions that American companies loot from
the world don't trickle down to Americans. The average American
holds a portfolio of assets that rounds to zero, and that includes
stock in US tech companies.
The average American isn't a shareholder in Big Tech, the
average American is a victim of Big Tech. Liberating the
world from US Big Tech is also liberating America from US Big
Tech.
That's been EFF's mission for 35 years. It's been my mission at
EFF for 25 years. If you want to get involved in this fight –
and I hope you do – it can be your mission, too. You can join
EFF, and you can join groups in your own country, like Netzpolitik
here in Germany, or the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, or La
Quadrature du Net in France, or the Open Rights Group in the UK, or
EF Finland, or ISOC Bulgaria, XNet, DFRI, Quintessenz, Bits of
Freedom, Openmedia, FSFE, or any of dozens of organizations around
the world.
The door is open a crack, the wind is blowing, the post-American
internet is upon us: a new, good internet that delivers all the
technological self-determination of the old, good internet, and the
ease of use of Web 2.0 so that our normie friends can use it,
too.
And I can't wait for all of us to get to hang out there. It's
gonna be great.
Hey look at this (permalink)


Object permanence (permalink)
#20yrsago Online sf mag Infinite Matrix goes out with a bang
– new Gibson, Rucker, Kelly
https://web.archive.org/web/20060101120510/https://www.infinitematrix.net/
#20yrsago Wil McCarthy’s wonderful “Hacking
Matter” as a free download
https://web.archive.org/web/20060103052051/http://wilmccarthy.com/hm.htm
#15yrsago Papa Sangre: binaural video game with no video
https://web.archive.org/web/20101224170833/http://www.papasangre.com/
#15yrsago DDoS versus human rights organizations
https://cyber.harvard.edu/publications/2010/DDoS_Independent_Media_Human_Rights
#15yrsago Why I have a public email address
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2010/dec/21/keeping-email-address-secret-spambots
#15yrsago How the FCC failed the nation on Net Neutrality
https://web.archive.org/web/20101224075655/https://www.salon.com/technology/network_neutrality/index.html?story=/tech/dan_gillmor/2010/12/21/fcc_network_neutrality
#15yrsago Bankster robberies: Bank of America and friends
wrongfully foreclose on customers, steal all their belongings
https://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/22/business/22lockout.html?_r=1&hp
#10yrsago India’s deadly exam-rigging scandal: murder,
corruption, suicide and scapegoats
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/17/the-mystery-of-indias-deadly-exam-scam
#10yrsago Copyright infringement “gang” raided by UK
cops: 3 harmless middle-aged karaoke fans
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/12/uk-police-busts-karaoke-gang-for-sharing-songs-that-arent-commercially-available/
#10yrsago IETF approves HTTP error code 451 for Internet
censorship
https://web.archive.org/web/20151222155906/https://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-http-451-error-code-for-censorship-is-now-an-internet-standard
#10yrsago Billionaire Sheldon Adelson secretly bought newspaper,
ordered all hands to investigate judges he hated
https://web.archive.org/web/20151220081546/http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/judge-adelson-lawsuit-subject-unusual-scrutiny-amid-review-journal-sale
#10yrsago Tax havens hold $7.6 trillion; 8% of world’s
total wealth
https://web.archive.org/web/20160103142942/https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2016/01/14/parking-the-big-money/
#10yrsago Mansplaining Lolita https://lithub.com/men-explain-lolita-to-me/
#10yrsago Lifelock admits it lied in its ads (again), agrees to
$100M fine
https://web.archive.org/web/20151218000258/https://consumerist.com/2015/12/17/identity-theft-company-lifelock-once-again-failed-to-actually-keep-identities-protected-must-pay-100m/
#10yrsago Uninsured driver plows through gamer’s
living-room wall and creams him mid-Fallout 4 https://www.gofundme.com/f/helpforbenzo
#10yrsago Juniper Networks backdoor confirmed, password
revealed, NSA suspected
https://www.wired.com/2015/12/juniper-networks-hidden-backdoors-show-the-risk-of-government-backdoors/
#10yrsago A survivalist on why you shouldn’t bug out
https://waldenlabs.com/10-reasons-not-to-bug-out/
#1yrago Nurses whose shitty boss is a shitty app
https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/18/loose-flapping-ends/#luigi-has-a-point
#1yrago Proud to be a blockhead
https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/21/blockheads-r-us/#vocational-awe
Upcoming appearances (permalink)


Recent appearances (permalink)

- "Canny Valley": A limited edition collection of the collages I
create for Pluralistic, self-published, September 2025
-
"Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to
Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/
-
"Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the
heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February
2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels).
-
"The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech
and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024
(thebezzle.org).
-
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate
emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023
(http://lost-cause.org).
-
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and
Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org).
Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
-
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave
you knowing more about how the world works than you did before."
Tor Books http://redteamblues.com.
-
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content,
and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the
markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com

- "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted
from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond,
2026
-
"Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to
Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026
-
"The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2026
-
"The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a
better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, June 2026

Today's top sources:
Currently writing:
- "The Reverse Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book for Farrar,
Straus and Giroux about being an effective AI critic. LEGAL REVIEW
AND COPYEDIT COMPLETE.
-
"The Post-American Internet," a short book about internet policy
in the age of Trumpism. PLANNING.
-
A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

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