Hacker Crackdown by Bruce Sterling (the reader ebook txt) đ
- Author: Bruce Sterling
- Performer: 055356370X
Book online «Hacker Crackdown by Bruce Sterling (the reader ebook txt) đ». Author Bruce Sterling
Kapor is an entrepreneur. Like all hackers, he prefers his involvements direct, personal, and hands-on. âThe fact that EFF has a node on the Internet is a great thing. Weâre a publisher. Weâre a distributor of information.â Among the items the eff.org Internet node carries is back issues of PHRACK. They had an internal debate about that in EFF, and finally decided to take the plunge. They might carry other digital underground publicationsâbut if they do, he says, âweâll certainly carry Donn Parker, and anything Gail Thackeray wants to put up. Weâll turn it into a public library, that has the whole spectrum of use. Evolve in the direction of people making up their own minds.â He grins. âWeâll try to label all the editorials.â
Kapor is determined to tackle the technicalities of the Internet in the service of the public interest. âThe problem with being a node on the Net today is that youâve got to have a captive technical specialist. We have Chris Davis around, for the care and feeding of the balky beast! We couldnât do it ourselves!â
He pauses. âSo one direction in which technology has to evolve is much more standardized units, that a nontechnical person can feel comfortable with. Itâs the same shift as from minicomputers to PCs. I can see a future in which any person can have a Node on the Net. Any person can be a publisher. Itâs better than the media we now have. Itâs possible. Weâre working actively.â
Kapor is in his element now, fluent, thoroughly in command in his material. âYou go tell a hardware Internet hacker that everyone should have a node on the Net,â he says, âand the first thing theyâre going to say is, âIP doesnât scale!ââ (âIPâ is the interface protocol for the Internet. As it currently exists, the IP software is simply not capable of indefinite expansion; it will run out of usable addresses, it will saturate.) âThe answer,â Kapor says, âis: evolve the protocol! Get the smart people together and figure out what to do. Do we add ID? Do we add new protocol? Donât just say, WE CANâT DO IT.â
Getting smart people together to figure out what to do is a skill at which Kapor clearly excels. I counter that people on the Internet rather enjoy their elite technical status, and donât seem particularly anxious to democratize the Net.
Kapor agrees, with a show of scorn. âI tell them that this is the snobbery of the people on the MAYFLOWER looking down their noses at the people who came over ON THE SECOND BOAT! Just because they got here a year, or five years, or ten years before everybody else, that doesnât give them ownership of cyberspace! By what right?â
I remark that the telcos are an electronic network, too, and they seem to guard their specialized knowledge pretty closely.
Kapor ripostes that the telcos and the Internet are entirely different animals. âThe Internet is an open system, everything is published, everything gets argued about, basically by anybody who can get in. Mostly, itâs exclusive and elitist just because itâs so difficult. Letâs make it easier to use.â
On the other hand, he allows with a swift change of emphasis, the so-called elitists do have a point as well. âBefore people start coming in, who are new, who want to make suggestions, and criticize the Net as âall screwed upââŠ. They should at least take the time to understand the culture on its own terms. It has its own historyâshow some respect for it. Iâm a conservative, to that extent.â
The Internet is Kaporâs paradigm for the future of telecommunications. The Internet is decentralized, nonhierarchical, almost anarchic. There are no bosses, no chain of command, no secret data. If each node obeys the general interface standards, thereâs simply no need for any central network authority.
Wouldnât that spell the doom of AT&T as an institution? I ask.
That prospect doesnât faze Kapor for a moment. âTheir big advantage, that they have now, is that they have all of the wiring. But two things are happening. Anyone with right-of-way is putting down fiberâSouthern Pacific Railroad, people like thatâthereâs enormous âdark fiberâ laid in.â (âDark Fiberâ is fiber-optic cable, whose enormous capacity so exceeds the demands of current usage that much of the fiber still has no light-signals on itâitâs still âdark,â awaiting future use.)
âThe other thing thatâs happening is the local-loop stuff is going to go wireless. Everyone from Bellcore to the cable TV companies to AT&T wants to put in these things called âpersonal communication systems.â So you could have local competitionâyou could have multiplicity of people, a bunch of neighborhoods, sticking stuff up on poles. And a bunch of other people laying in dark fiber. So what happens to the telephone companies? Thereâs enormous pressure on them from both sides.
âThe more I look at this, the more I believe that in a post-industrial, digital world, the idea of regulated monopolies is bad. People will look back on it and say that in the 19th and 20th centuries the idea of public utilities was an okay compromise. You needed one set of wires in the ground. It was too economically inefficient, otherwise. And that meant one entity running it. But now, with pieces being wirelessâthe connections are going to be via high-level interfaces, not via wires. I mean, ULTIMATELY there are going to be wiresâbut the wires are just a commodity. Fiber, wireless. You no longer NEED a utility.â
Water utilities? Gas utilities?
Of course we still need those, he agrees. âBut when what youâre moving is information, instead of physical substances, then you can play by a different set of rules. Weâre evolving those rules now! Hopefully you can have a much more decentralized system, and one in which thereâs more competition in the marketplace.
âThe role of government will be to make sure that nobody cheats. The proverbial âlevel playing field.â A policy that prevents monopolization. It should result in better service, lower prices, more choices, and local empowerment.â He smiles. âIâm very big on local empowerment.â
Kapor is a man with a vision. Itâs a very novel vision which he and his allies are working out in considerable detail and with great energy. Dark, cynical, morbid cyberpunk that I am, I cannot avoid considering some of the darker implications of âdecentralized, nonhierarchical, locally empoweredâ networking.
I remark that some pundits have suggested that electronic networkingâfaxes, phones, small-scale photocopiersâplayed a strong role in dissolving the power of centralized communism and causing the collapse of the Warsaw Pact.
Socialism is totally discredited, says Kapor, fresh back from the Eastern Bloc. The idea that faxes did it, all by themselves, is rather wishful thinking.
Has it occurred to him that electronic networking might corrode Americaâs industrial and political infrastructure to the point where the whole thing becomes untenable, unworkableâand the old order just collapses headlong, like in Eastern Europe?
âNo,â Kapor says flatly. âI think thatâs extraordinarily unlikely. In part, because ten or fifteen years ago, I had similar hopes about personal computersâwhich utterly failed to materialize.â He grins wryly, then his eyes narrow. âIâm VERY opposed to techno-utopias. Every time I see one, I either run away, or try to kill it.â
It dawns on me then that Mitch Kapor is not trying to make the world safe for democracy. He certainly is not trying to make it safe for anarchists or utopiansâleast of all for computer intruders or electronic rip-off artists. What he really hopes to do is make the world safe for future Mitch Kapors. This world of decentralized, small-scale nodes, with instant global access for the best and brightest, would be a perfect milieu for the shoestring attic capitalism that made Mitch Kapor what he is today.
Kapor is a very bright man. He has a rare combination of visionary intensity with a strong practical streak. The Board of the EFF: John Barlow, Jerry Berman of the ACLU, Stewart Brand, John Gilmore, Steve Wozniak, and Esther Dyson, the doyenne of East-West computer entrepreneurismâshare his gift, his vision, and his formidable networking talents. They are people of the 1960s, winnowed-out by its turbulence and rewarded with wealth and influence. They are some of the best and the brightest that the electronic community has to offer. But can they do it, in the real world? Or are they only dreaming? They are so few. And there is so much against them.
I leave Kapor and his networking employees struggling cheerfully with the promising intricacies of their newly installed Macintosh System 7 software. The next day is Saturday. EFF is closed. I pay a few visits to points of interest downtown.
One of them is the birthplace of the telephone.
Itâs marked by a bronze plaque in a plinth of black-and- white speckled granite. It sits in the plaza of the John F. Kennedy Federal Building, the very place where Kapor was once fingerprinted by the FBI.
The plaque has a bas-relief picture of Bellâs original telephone. âBIRTHPLACE OF THE TELEPHONE,â it reads. âHere, on June 2, 1875, Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson first transmitted sound over wires.
âThis successful experiment was completed in a fifth floor garret at what was then 109 Court Street and marked the beginning of world-wide telephone service.â
109 Court Street is long gone. Within sight of Bellâs plaque, across a street, is one of the central offices of NYNEX, the local Bell RBOC, on 6 Bowdoin Square.
I cross the street and circle the telco building, slowly, hands in my jacket pockets. Itâs a bright, windy, New England autumn day. The central office is a handsome 1940s-era megalith in late Art Deco, eight stories high.
Parked outside the back is a power-generation truck. The generator strikes me as rather anomalous. Donât they already have their own generators in this eight-story monster? Then the suspicion strikes me that NYNEX must have heard of the September 17 AT&T power-outage which crashed New York City. Belt-and- suspenders, this generator. Very telco.
Over the glass doors of the front entrance is a handsome bronze bas-relief of Art Deco vines, sunflowers, and birds, entwining the Bell logo and the legend NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANYâan entity which no longer officially exists.
The doors are locked securely. I peer through the shadowed glass. Inside is an official poster reading:
âNew England Telephone a NYNEX Company
ATTENTION
âAll persons while on New England Telephone Company premises are required to visibly wear their identification cards (C.C.P. Section 2, Page 1).
âVisitors, vendors, contractors, and all others are required to visibly wear a daily pass.
âThank you.
Kevin C. Stanton, Building Security Coordinator.â
Outside, around the corner, is a pull-down ribbed metal security door, a locked delivery entrance. Some passing stranger has grafitti-tagged this door, with a single word in red spray-painted cursive:
FURY
My book on the Hacker Crackdown is almost over now. I have deliberately saved the best for last.
In February 1991, I attended the CPSR Public Policy Roundtable, in Washington, DC. CPSR, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, was a sister organization of EFF, or perhaps its aunt, being older and perhaps somewhat wiser in the ways of the world of politics.
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility began in 1981 in Palo Alto, as an informal discussion group of Californian computer scientists and technicians, united by nothing more than an electronic mailing list. This typical high-tech ad-hocracy received the dignity of its own acronym in 1982, and was formally incorporated in 1983.
CPSR lobbied government and public alike with an educational outreach effort, sternly warning against any foolish and unthinking trust in complex computer systems. CPSR insisted that mere computers should never be considered a magic panacea for humanityâs social, ethical or political problems. CPSR members were especially troubled about the stability, safety, and
Comments (0)