2022-01-03 15:56:24 +00:00
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title: "York Festival of Ideas 2015"
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---
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2020-11-24 22:46:02 +00:00
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## Users vs. Techs
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This year, I learned about York's Festival of Ideas. Started in 2011, this year's
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theme was "Secrets and Discoveries", which included a whole day (today) on
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Surveillance, Snowden and Security. Right up my alley, so off I went. This
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article is really about things that were brought up in a panel discussion,
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entitled The Future of Cyber-Security. I don't know if these things are being
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recorded and uploaded, but I'll link if it becomes available.
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=> https://yorkfestivalofideas.com/2015/ Festival of Ideas
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=> https://yorkfestivalofideas.com/2015/focus-days/surveillance/ Surveillance, Snowden and Security
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=> http://yorkfestivalofideas.com/2015/talks/the-future-of-cyber-security/ The Future of Cyber-Security
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The panel was composed of five speakers, with what could be called a range of
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experience; it was chaired by a BBC technology correspondent. Early in the main
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discussion came a generally-agreed maxim - that "we" shouldn't let "the techies"
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determine our online future. Being as charitable as I can be to this idea, I think
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it's expressible as "not everything that is possible should be permitted". Or maybe,
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"techies should build the online environment we mutually agree we should have,
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rather than the one techies think is best". At the time, it came across as being
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quite antagonistic - in any division of the populace between "techie" and "everyone else",
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I'm surely in the former group, after all.
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Later in the discussion, an illuminating window was shone on this attitude - at
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least for me - by a digression into the power that a small, elite group of
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technologists sitting in Silicon Valley and working on huge online edifices that
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we find ourselves willing, or forced, to use. Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft,
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etc. These services and software companies mediate a large portion of online
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interactions, and to a very real approximation, they *do* decide what is possible
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online for people. This became evident in the last (and best) audience question
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of the session, where someone asked what alternatives there were to these
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behemoths - the questioner wanted to know what she could do, right now, to avoid
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them, if possible.
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None of the panel could answer this. They all sheepishly proclaimed their allegiance
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to Google, or to Apple, and commuted the question to "can we do without this service?"
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or "what's the minimum amount of information I can give to this company while still
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using their service?". One of the panellists (I forget who) managed to note that
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alternatives do exist for some of these services, but didn't know what any of them
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were, and opined that the cost of finding and using such an alternative outweighed
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the benefits of escaping the Silicon Valley set of solutions.
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These people are users. More than that, they are consumers. Consumer activism,
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it turns out, is how they expect their online services to evolve in a direction
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that fulfils their wishes. (The pig-dog blog, incidentally, turns out to be
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consumer activism and it's not a new thing. Who knew?) The techs are expected to
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present a choice of online services that represents the range of the possible
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(well, minus a few that have been determined ahead-of-time to be too dangerous),
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and consumer choice is meant to filter out the bad ones. Wouldn't that be nice?
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In reality, of course, the options open to me as a tech for any online service
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are much broader than the options open to a user, simply because many ways of
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providing a given service haven't been productised in any sensible fashion. I
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host my own email and instant messaging, and create my own encryption keys to
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secure these things over the wider Internet. This is the online equivalent of
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brewing your own beer, or making your own biltong. Those who can't are unlikely
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to ever have the *dubious* pleasure of tasting Henderson's Relish biltong.
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Anyway, these users have their view of what is possible shaped by the products
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that are currently successful. The "right to be forgotten" ruling came up partway
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through this panel. Removing search results from Google indexing is fairly
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pointless, a techie will cry - the content still exists, after all, and other
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search indexes also exist. You just can't stop YaCy from indexing them. But it
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doesn't matter to the user - the desired effect has been achieved according to
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their (limited) view of what is possible.
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The idea of having your own email securely located in your own living room, or
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being responsible for asserting your own identity online, is a revolutionary
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concept to users in general. They're just not aware that it's an option until a
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helpful techie informs them that it is - brainstorming "alternatives to GMail"
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with such a group is going to throw up replies like "hotmail". Their view of
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hat is possible is shaped by the techies providing the services they already
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use.
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Attempts to productise self-hosting of email, say, are ongoing - but it's a niche
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thing. The other side of the coin is attempting to convince users to be more
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gung-ho with non-productised (or less-productised, I guess) solutions. If we're
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sat in a wood, freezing to death, a decent proportion of us could make fire from
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first principles, even if we don't have a Zippo lighter with us. As things are
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with online services, we wouldn't even start collecting the analogous driftwood.
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Groups of techies like those behind MailPile have got the right idea, I think,
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but it's an uphill slog - and trying to make users aware of these possibilities,
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and get them into policy and legislative debates, is the hardest bit. The tech
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comes naturally to us, after all. Did I stand up and say any of this at the panel
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discussion? Of course not :p.
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