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Can we talk? This is really more a cri du coeur than anything else, I'm afraid. So, it's too long. Ignore at will. It will also seem like a geek-out, but really the issue for me is the direction of Spirit. I'm posting this here because the Spirit part is the crucial thing to me, the geeks wouldn't understand.
I get really depressed when Net Neutrality seems about to disappear. Even during the depths of the Bush years, the demise of Net Neutrality seemed more crucial to me than even the war, or the damage to the rule of law, because to lose the Internet to corporate control seems to me to destroy the possibility of fighting back against all the other stuff. (It's strange to me that the Republicans have behaved as if they are less willing to give the Internet over to corporate control than the Democrats have. I really have had a hard time dealing with that, too.)
Maybe that's an exaggeration, but it's never seemed that way to me. I fall into thinking not just that this may be one of those inflection points in human history, as many of us do in this forum, but that access to the Internet, and how that access is constructed, will determine much of the future. A sign, as it were, of the direction that Spirit is going to take, either upward (citizen control) or not (corporate control). This is the moment that just a moderate amount of pressure would make a big difference. Other “emergencies” distracting people from opposing these crucial, almost silent structural changes remind me of conspiracies or thoroughly prepared opportunism.
Part of why I get so depressed is the parallel history of another recent technological development, the operating system. Do you know what an operating system is? Operating systems are what make it possible for the human to get the computer hardware to do what the human wants. Microsoft sells one, so does Apple, there is another that is partially proprietary called Unix, some other small ones, and Linux, the only one that's completely non-proprietary. Microsoft's operating system (Windows) is notoriously buggy at the same time as it is the most widely used, which fact has contributed to operating system problems being invisible to most people. If everybody has the same difficulties with their machines, then those problems are “normal” - no one expects a comprehensive solution to exist, or “everyone would be using it.”
So, what gets me is the realization that what seems to me to be an incredibly precious, progressive gem (the Linux operating system), offered to everyone literally for free, simply generates very little interest. People are so distracted, and their thinking is so hemmed in by consumerism and capitalist propaganda, that they ignore all the freedom and benefit that they (and everyone) could get, and instead settle for a tiny bit of comfort, or a small bargain on price or time. Will they neglect Net Neutrality too? Easier access to entertainment trumps increased access to free speech?
The benefits of Linux are huge, both in terms of money and for the welfare of society, and they're all literally a free gift. You save an enormous amount of money because you don't need to buy software or upgrade your computer when Microsoft decides you should; you have negligible concerns about viruses (really!); the machines run much more reliably; you're participating and helping to extend science and its benefits to everyone (Linux can't be bought, just like nobody can own chemistry or physics); and politically you're keeping computers out of corporate proprietary control at the same time as you're expanding citizen control of the technology.
Yet, virtually no-one wakes up and takes the gift. Even progressives are uninterested, even though it cuts directly into corporate control. I think sometimes that they would consider Linux a glittering, unattainable dream only if it didn't already exist.
The problem seems to be in consciousness So, I've been thinking about the prospective Split too, the two worlds, all that stuff. Is it possible, I wonder, that I've actually been experiencing the split in the technology I use? My degree is in religion, but I've been using Linux for about 15 years, and I get all the benefits all the time. I have bought only a few limited programs over those years, maybe $100 worth, mostly games. I read about virus problems, and they affect me as much as the weather in Brazil affects my hometown Chicago. My machines never crash in ordinary use (they do sometimes when I'm doing extreme techie stuff, but that's under my control).
If it is a symptom of the split, am I just hanging out with the wrong people in my non-virtual life? Will Net Neutrality not be the turning point, i.e. has the turn already been made for the better? Is depression appropriate, or joy?
Thanks for listening.
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