Capitalism didn't give us the internet.
Large-scale cooperation, open protocols, and free software gave us the internet. Capitalism gave us mobile sites that don't work because fifteen ads cover the screen.
Capitalism didn't give us the internet.
Large-scale cooperation, open protocols, and free software gave us the internet. Capitalism gave us mobile sites that don't work because fifteen ads cover the screen.
@prw @existentialcomics 1982, fuck.
Goes to show old documents can be right at times.
@existentialcomics The U.S. government gave us the Internet, so the tax payer...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARPANET
I think you mean the (World Wide) Web.
@thegreatgonzo @greenpete @sememmon @existentialcomics This. Australia was 10% of this era of the internet, and it was funded by universities under a variety of funding models, lead by a very small team*, supported by diverted equipment and a huge amount of seconded and volunteer labour. The word I like to use is "collegiate".
* I was fortunate to be a member of the third generation of that team.
The US government gave us ARPANET, an early experiment with some internet-related techniques. Countless universities around the world, through hi-profile research projects and drop-outs who still had had computer access and everything in between, gave us the Internet (this applies both to the web and to the Internet for 20 years before the web).
So some taxpayer money, some other sources. Certainly not capitalism and certainly not any one specific government.
Practical Guidance on KR, Knowledge Graphs, Semantic Technologies, and KBpedia A Knowledge Representation Practionary: Guidelines Based on Charles Sanders Peirce Michael K. Bergman Springer International Publishing, 464 pp., December 2018 ISBN 978-3-319-98091-1 This major work on knowledge represe
> Large-scale cooperation, open protocols, and free software gave us the internet.
Also government. The foundations of the internet started as US government research projects. That's why, to this day, reverse DNS lookups include references to the `in-addr.arpa` domain, with ARPA being the Advanced Research Projects Agency.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.arpa
I am no fan of government, but I gotta give them their due on this.
(But yes, very much agreed on "not capitalism"! ππ»π―)
@kagan
I feel like govt and capitalism had the same role. They didn't give us the internet, they directed resources via finance. They gave in essence "permission" for the researchers to do their thing. They gave "permission" for people to scale up data centers and lay fiber and etc.
They like to take credit. But if permission weren't required wed have the internet instead of browsers and phones that spy on you. The permission holds us back, but is sold as progress
@existentialcomics
@dlakelan @kagan @existentialcomics
It's not just permission, it's also the society's resources.
If the scientists and engineers building the internet had to farm their own food, smelt their own copper, and make every single transistors themselves, they wouldn't have any time left in a day to build the internet.
Even if we don't credit the person who allocated the resources, let's at least acknowledge the many people who produced them.
@wolf480pl
Yes, everyone needs to use resources that other people are producing. What government and capitalism do is concentrate control of those resources into the hands of a few who can then take credit for "making" something when they pay for it. Which is just giving permission for those resources to be reallocated in a certain way.
So, agreed, but finance isn't creation, as Meta's billions for the metaverse it killed off before ever being used shows.
@kagan @existentialcomics
@kagan @existentialcomics The government gave a bunch of hackers money to build a research and military resource sharing network.
The hackers very deliberately built protocols designed to network the whole world. 32 bits was overkill otherwise.
Much like von Braun took money to build the V2 and built the foundations of a space program with it.
Give technical people resources, let them share what they build, and things will get built that could not be done for profit with a trillion dollars.
@RobinDoody @existentialcomics
if you want to go really far back, you can go further than that and tell almost any story you want depending on where you make the cut-off
but the fact of the matter is that The World Wide Web came out of CERN, and the internet as an actual internet connecting the world together came into being through universities and the education sector, and today the world's internet infrastructure is hosted on Linux servers running open source solutions
@existentialcomics Technically, it's the military that gave us Internet, just like global positioning systems and satellite images. For-profit corporations rarely develop something that is truly ground-breaking. They simply repackage stuff differently with a "brand" and some hype to make a profit.
Not trying to promote military development, but just showing that when money is not the goal, technological innovations often flourish.
@Mrpotatoqc9 @existentialcomics But that's a comms protocol to communicate over a network....said network being the web.
Sure, you could "Baud" your way to someone else's computer but that wasn't "the web".
@dom @existentialcomics it's the military who gave us IP. It's large scale science who gave us the web. It's universities who gave us email and irc.
It's not one group is all of them together
@existentialcomics Fun fact: Capitalism *did* try to develop a protocol on top of IP called OSI that was co-developed by a bunch of industry titans at the time. It was complex and bloated with a very proprietary tech stack.
It never caught on because of an open protocol that was much simpler overtook it back in the early 80s called TCP.
These days the only remnant from the OSI initiative in use today is the "OSI model" used to describe the tech stack for the internet in general.
@existentialcomics Ads apart, mobile sites are also very painful to use and the design is poor and unoptimized purposefully, to force you to install another app to track you.
All these apps could've been well mantained, efficient websites!
@existentialcomics There is so many people arguing that "despite what existential comics say, it was actually the government and the military that gave us the internet"...
Like, Existential Comics is not saying that the *government* did not participate in the creation of the internet, but that *openness and cooperation* are what built the internet. The government and the military, along with universities and some corporations, developed *open* protocols for anyone to connect to each other. This contrasts with the tendency of Capitalism to make everything closed and restrictive to maximize profit, as seen in the mobile computing space.
Some of the people who added "government" did add interesting things to the conversation, but that angle is not a "gotcha", it does not contradict EC's point.
oh and don't forget spyware being normalized and embedded in almost any website.