Monthly Archives: January 2011

[Elsewhere] Mickey Mouse Protection

There is a reason US copyright law is sometimes “affectionately” known as the Mickey Mouse Protection Act; there is a strange coincidence at play here – every time the copyright on Walt Disney’s early creations is about to expire, US copyright terms get magically extended by another few years. Currently, a work is under copyright both in the US and the UK for 70 years after the author’s death. This might make sense for Disney–at least someone is still making money from Walt’s creations–but for the vast majority of creative works out there, this lengthy copyright term is an issue.
Read more at ORGZine.

The economics of Net Neutrality

I haven’t really blogged much about digital rights here recently, mostly because the majority of my digital rights content at the moment tends to be published over at ORGZine. So here’s a little piece on the economics of Net Neutrality.
The story so far: Net neutrality is the idea that ISPs should treat all traffic equally, as zeroes and ones, rather than differentiate based on the content those zeroes and ones represent. Proponents of net neutrality believe that all users should have equal access to the net, regardless of the type of content they are viewing, the sites they are visiting, the platform or device they are using. If I can install Linux on a badger and want to use it to indulge my kink for Hansard, then I should be able to do that, without interference from my ISP.
Opponents of net neutrality, on the other hand, believe that ISPs should be able to discriminate against or prioritise certain traffic based on content or other factors. This would allow ISPs, for instance, to prioritise traffic from certain content providers, or to sell different packages based on content (much, for instance, like Sky TV does). They argue that the free market will work it all out in a way that is fair and efficient, that there is no need for regulation. My colleague @robcoh has a fun model for this. He calls it the Ryan Air principle: if you don’t have checked luggage, or use the toilet on the plane, why should you pay for it? Equally, if there is a part of the internet you don’t use, why should you pay your ISP for access to it? Rob would quite like a Sky-style internet access package. Other customers may have a need for other types of packages – demand and supply will sort all of that out.
Now, one of the three things I learned from my economics degree (I’ll tell you the other two some other time) is neatly summarised by the following stat: Out of said three-year degree, we spent one week learning how the free market worked, and the remaining time learning about all the ways in which it doesn’t. I therefore tend to approach “free market” arguments with a dose of suspicion. There’s a lenghtier economic argument to be made here, with reference to differences between perfect and free markets, rent-seeking, and the commoditisation of internet access, but I’ll leave that as an exercise for the reader. Here are just a few reasons why I am firmly in the camp of net neutrality proponents.
Firstly, ISPs aren’t content providers. They are infrastructure providers. If you’re an online gamer, an iTunes customer or a Netflix user, you’re already paying the content provider. ISPs implementing Rob’s Sky TV/Ryan Air model would be a bit like the council (which maintains the roads) charging you extra for your road usage depending on whether you’re going to the cinema or to the shopping mall. Now, there are good reasons why that is an incredibly attractive thought for ISPs. Infrastructure is a commodity, and commodities don’t exactly carry a lot of profit with them. Bandwidth from TalkTalk and bandwidth from BT are pretty much identical, so the lowest price wins. Content, on the other hand, is “value add” – you can differentiate your product based on content and therefore charge a premium.
Secondly, if your ISP drops Net Neutrality in order to give some companies preferential traffic, you are being ripped off. You are paying for your broadband. The content provider is also paying your ISP for the privilege of delivering their content to you faster. One of these payments is pure profit for the ISP. That is very far from the free market as defined by economists.
Thirdly, there are issues with anti-competitiveness here. Let’s say Sky – which is both an ISP and a content provider – decides that its ISP arm will prioritise traffic from its content arm over other content. That is clearly anti-competitive – a bit like Microsoft bundling Internet Explorer in with Windows, for those of us old enough to remember. In a more general case, it also creates barriers to entry and innovation. If the Next Big Thing in Web 3.0 can’t get off the ground because it can’t afford to pay ISPs to prioritise its traffic, you have a serious issue that has negative impacts well beyond just that one service.
Finally, there’s a public interest argument here too. Connectivity is rapidly becoming a utility, an essential part of our infrastructure, like water, electricity, gas and transportation. Some countries in Europe are actually going as far as legally defining internet access as a human right. These days, the inernet is a key tool for accessing education, employment, government services, and for participating in society and democracy. Compromising Net Neutrality would compromise all of those things. You can call me a communist if you want, but those are not things I’m prepared to just auction off to the highest bidder. Or would you think it’s okay for the water company in an emergency to prioritise supply to those who can afford to pay more?
There is a flip side to all this. Broadband, like infrastructure investment of any kind, doesn’t come cheap. I am told by people who work in the industry that the major ISPs who put out for the actual physical infrastructure are still waiting to make their money back on investments from the 1980s, which is why they’re so reluctant to lay any new cable and therefore why there are still large chunks of the rural Britain on dial-up. One of the major issues is that there are massive positive externalities associated with having a proper broadband infrastructure: lots of knock-on benefits for all kinds of people and society as a whole which are so indirect and dispersed that ISPs can’t monetise them. There are entire new industries which could not exist without that infrastructure, but it’s difficult to make everyone who benefits just from the fact that broadband exists (rather than from their specific usage of it) pay for those benefits. So in some ways ISPs carry the cost, while the rest of us reap the rewards.
Externalities – both positive and negative – are a form of market failure. They’re simply things the market doesn’t naturally deal with. There are a number of ways of addressing them, generally involving government intervention. So there is a strong case for the government to lend a helping hand when it comes to provision of connectivity infrastructure. Studies have shown that investment in connectivity can pay back up to ten-fold, and while that number is probably exaggerated, the payback is still very significant. It’s hardly likely, however, that this particular government would invest in anything, and so we’re stuck with the Net Neutrality debate instead.

[Elsewhere] HOWTO: Creative Commons

Have you heard of Creative Commons (CC)? Well, you’ve almost certainly benefited from it.
When was the last time you read something on Wikipedia? The vast majority of content on Wikipedia is under a Creative Commons license, which is what makes it legal for you to use the material, copy it, distribute it, build on it, and do pretty much whatever else you can think of with it – within certain guidelines.
Read more at ORGZine.

Puppies are not just for Christmas and equality is not just for women

Nick Clegg has today announced a number of initiatives to make the world of work more “family friendly”. The right to request flexible working arrangements will be extended to everyone, and the government will implement Labour’s proposals to increase the amount of paternity leave available to new fathers.
I unequivocally welcome these moves. Equality is not just for women, and is not true equality until both genders feel able to make meaningful choices on how to raise their children and split other work involved in running a household, until they are truly supported in those choices by our society. Too many young couples find themselves in a situation where the man goes out to work while the woman stays at home with the children, despite never intending to have this lifestyle, simply because that is what the current parental leave system defaults to. There are other factors too, to which I will come later, but the parental leave arrangements play a significant role, and this is a big step in the right direction.
The reactions to these government proposals have, on the other hand, given us a glimpse into the kinds of challenges the government will face with the implementation of these plans – and the kinds of challenges that working parents face on a daily basis. The Daily Mail today takes the side of the Federation of Small Businesses, which is crying blue murder over the proposals. Difficult to administer, costs too much, makes it difficult to plan – these are just some of the objections the FSB is throwing at this. The Mail’s fix is the “free market”:

The motivation for Government meddling in this area is that men and women should be treated the same. They could achieve this objective much better by allowing a free market – the state getting out of the way and leaving employees and employers to negotiate their own arrangements. This would mean treating us as grown ups when we have children.

Quite how the author thinks allowing the free market to “fix” this would be any different from the situation before the introduction of maternity leave, or even the current situation which still sees most fathers not even taking the two weeks they currently have a right to is not entirely clear.
SkyNews quotes David Frost from the British Chambers of Commerce:

Many employers shy away from hiring women of childbearing age. Nick Clegg’s proposals might see employers avoiding recruitment of any person in their 20s or 30s, which would lead to an increase in the number of age discrimination claims and the burden of tribunal claims on employers.

This open admission that employers already discriminate against women of child-bearing age is, frankly, scandalous. Of course, perhaps someone should point out to Mr. Frost that, unlike women, men do not lose their fertility once they hit 40 or so – perhaps then businesses will stop employing men entirely.
Additionally, even if the proposals for increasing paternity leave are fully implemented, true equality is still a long way away. When Labour first introduced the plans, a YouGov poll showed that over two thirds of people would not take advantage of the extended paternity leave, the main reason cited being financial. With women still earning nearly 20% less than their male counterparts for the same job, this should hardly be a surprise.
Statistics show that women’s last pay cheque in 2010 might as well have been on November 2nd due to the gender pay gap, and that on average people in the UK don’t start getting paid again in 2011 until February 27th if we take into account all the unpaid overtime we work. For working women this is a spectacular double burden, which sees them lose out on around 4 months’ worth of income every year.
As parental leave is paid at a statutory £125 per week, few are the families who can afford to lose the bulk of the man’s income for 20 weeks. It is much easier for the woman to stay at home as her income is considerably lower already and thus less of a loss.
Yet the government is actively choosing not to address this issue, by deciding to drop the powers to mandate large private sector companies to conduct equal pay audits from the Equality Act. So what Nick Clegg is giving us with one hand, he is taking away with the other. If he and this government are truly committed to gender equality and family friendliness, I would strongly encourage them to reconsider their approach to the Equality Act and re-establish the powers with regards to equal pay audits. Until then, no amount of legislation will force true equality as financial necessity will always trump any legal rights.

[Elsewhere] It’s not a bug, it’s a feature

Amazon’s Kindle has been the 2010 Christmas rage, but the DRM limitations on the product are endlessly infuriating. The adverts trying to tell me that I can read my Kindle books on any device are incredibly misleading: you can read your ebooks on your desktop and your laptop and your Kindle and your iPhone and your Android phone, because there’s a Kindle app for all of them. But what, dear Amazon, happens if I want a Sony e-reader, or if my laptop happens to run on Linux? In effect, tough beans.
Read more at ORGZine.

Women will not be intimidated out of political discourse

On Saturday, I went to Netroots UK – a one-day conference for the online progressive left. Overall, it was a great day. I met some awesome people, I learned some new things, I had some great discussions.
Among other things I attended a session called “Digital Equality” on engaging women online. Now, Netroots as a whole wasn’t exactly a troll-free zone. If you look through the #netrootsuk hashtag on Twitter you’ll spot that a good 10% if not more of comments are from right-wing trolls. I’m not talking constructive discussion here; I’m talking personal attacks on individuals, and calling the conference a wankfest. The Digital Equality session, however, was singled out for particular troll attention. The most “creative” they got was telling us we should be doing the washing-up. And just as Jessica Asato was telling us about a particularly nasty tweet aimed at one of the contributors to the workshop, I got picked out for trolling simply for being in that room.
The sheer nastiness of the online political blogging environment for women was one of the key topics of the workshop. All of the speakers shared personal experiences of the kind of attacks they’ve been subject to. Laurie Penny gets five emails a week describing how she deserves to get raped; Lisa Ansell gets told she is worthless scum and should shut up and get back to the kitchen; I myself have had the dubious honour of being on the receiving end of the CiF comment thread. And yes, while CiF can get fairly nasty regardless of who the contributor is, female contributors, female bloggers, women who dare stand up and speak out are singled out for particularly vicious attacks all over the net. These comments range from the dismissive to the downright threatening. They are designed to undermine our confidence, make us doubt ourselves, to intimidate us and scare us. They are designed to exclude us from the political discourse online.
Lisa Ansell made a very good point – women are politically engaged and politically active online. Organisations like Mumsnet have not inconsiderable influence. And yet, the way these organisations engage is different: they create spaces where women talk to each other, focus on specific “women’s issues”. While this is necessary, in my mind it doesn’t go far enough. All political issues are women’s issues, and all women’s issues are political issues – the divide is artificial. It is vital for women to get involved in the mainstream discourse. And yet, every time we do, we are dismissed, intimidated, threatened. Can you imagine a male blogger getting told he deserves to get raped?
There are those of us who have grown a thick skin. A day on CiF is remarkably helpful in that respect. Yes, the comments still affect me – they hurt, they intimidate, they make me feel helpless sometimes, and very often very very angry. But I have learned to get through that and come out the other side. I have (mostly) learned not to feed the trolls, not to waste energy on anger, and to keep writing. One thing that helps are supportive comments from others. Just when that troll has managed to make you doubt yourself, and external sanity check, even just a simple reminder not to feed the troll, is fantastically useful.
Many women, though, are put off by the nastiness and viciousness of the environment. Younger women especially may decide it’s easier and safer to stay down and not to speak out. And that for me is not acceptable. We cannot let a small group of pathetic, immature individuals who are secretly terrified of women scare us – and those who come after us – into silence. We have a right to be part of the “mainstream” political debate, both to contribute and to lead. As Laurie Penny said on Saturday, feminism isn’t some kind of political ghetto, and we have a right to make ourselves heard.
And so I’m standing up for women bloggers. And when I see one of them attacked I will stand up and speak out. I will not let the trolls get away with it. I will not let women bloggers think they are alone, because they are not. Will you join me?

Beware the flocking immigrants

Another installment in my semi-regular “I read ConHome so you don’t have to” feature…
A few days ago, Conservative Home linked to this article in the Sun. The angle ConHome chose to take on it was… interesting.

Half a million Hungarians could come to Britain
“PM David Cameron vowed to cap net immigration – currently 200,000 a year – at “tens of thousands”. But the influential Institute for Public Policy Research says that does not take account of the flow from European countries. About 500,000 ethnic Hungarians living in non-EU countries could head to Britain…A Sun investigation has found that 300,000 living in Serbia and 160,000 in the Ukraine are among those who could seek to come here on Hungarian passports.”

A few things strike me about this.

  • Quite how the Sun has decided that the free movement of people (as well as of course the important things like capital, goods and services) in the European Union is news is beyond me. Britain joined the EU in 1973, and thus this news item is about… oh, 38 years out of date. Even if you could argue that the government’s plans to cut immigration are more recent, most papers picked up on this particular point several months ago.
  • I particularly like the ConHome sensationalist headline. Not even the Sun dared go with “500k Hungarians expected to flock to Britain” – that was a small part of the article. What’s actually behind this headline is the fact that Hungary is extending the right to Hungarian citizenship to around 460,000 ethnic Hungarians who currently live outside the EU. So basically what ConHome is telling us is that all those people are going to claim their Hungarian passports, after which they’ll up sticks from places where they and their families have lived for centuries, and all move to Britain. Now, even if we assume that indeed all of those people decide to move (highly unlikely!) the EU has 27 member states; even if we thought that proportionaltely more would come to Britain simply because Britain is one of the larger countries, there’s no reason to think that more than about 55,000 would come to Britain. So basically, the assumption that all 500,000 of these people would move to Britain is about as realistic as saying all of Germany could decide to up sticks and come here next. “80 million Germans about to flock to Britain” would be a much more fun headline, and about as accurate, don’t you think?
  • And just in case a realistic look at the numbers hasn’t stopped you from quivering in your boots with fear of all the flocking immigrants, I also love the Sun’s explanation of “how citizens of struggling countries such as Greece, Ireland, Spain and Portugal will flock to Britain seeking work if the UK’s economy does better than the eurozone.” Might I point out that Germany’s growth projections look quite healthy right now, and they have the lowest unemployment rate since reunification, while this government is cutting public sector jobs, raising sales taxes which is highly likely to negatively impact consumer demand, and generally doing all within its power to drive us back into recession? Now, which of these two countries looks like a more attractive destination?
  • And lest we forget, the largest wave of intra-EU migration is still Britons moving to Spain. Ho hum.