| Sedimentary Rock | The Open Source Manifesto The world has reached a cusp at which the future of the modern economic model of capitalism will be decided. The system of economics native the United States and much of the Western world is heavily reliant upon the profit potential of proprietary information, systems and products. Over the past 20 years, this model has been undercut by more equitable alternative solutions. These solutions demonstrate efficiency and support structures which dwarf those rooted in the contemporary arrangement and therefore, they threaten the prolonged dominance of proprietary capitalism and corporate structure.
Wikipedia can be analyzed as a microcosm of what is taking place in the larger economic scheme. Wikipedia (wiki) is one of the foremost proponents of Open Source, free software and liberation of information. Their mission is to enlighten the entire world without taking value from their users lives in the form of monetary cost. Recently, this company initiated a fund raising campaign due to its inability to maintain existing services and growth potential with current finances and revenues. The problem Wikipedia is experiencing is the result of critical miscalculations in the structure of their business model. Because users of the online encyclopedia database do not have to provide funds to the owners, who need money to maintain physical costs, and advertising revenues are not possible due to the open source license under which the company operates, the Wiki owners have had to find their resources elsewhere. It happens that they were unable to secure the necessary monies to maintain their expanding system.
The basis of Wikipedia is open membership and contribution in order to provide content. As the system grows, more resources are required to accommodate increased traffic, data and bandwidth needs. This is because Wikipedia is merely a central server which acts as a storage and transfer station, accumulating all resources in one location, and making such compiled data available to all users. It is this structure that has rendered their economic form unsustainable, as its recourse and quality increases directly result in popularity increases. In essence, they are fighting the business model that they simultaneously support, and they are losing. Even if they succeed in securing the necessary funds required to maintain their systems through their fund drive, their needs will only continue to increase, and their funds will again prove insufficient.
One of two things will now happen to the Wikipedia company. They will either fail outright and cease to exist or their business model will change in order to address their needs. I believe that their function is in too much demand to fail entirely; making it so only the second option is viable. A change critical to the companies identity will take place. There is a list of possible changes that could save the system, all of which fit into two categories:
• They can maintain a central server and develop a steady income through various methods
• They can outsource their physical requirements to their vast pool of users
The first option is considerably less viable than the second for a number of reasons. First: Wikipedia’s license does not allow advertizing, nor would users likely stand for such a change. Second: no end user required payment structure is possible under the company’s license, and again, users would likely be outraged with such a change. Third: a change in the company’s license would likely result in serious legal ramifications and decrease in popularity, as any attempt to go public or for profit would necessitate making all current content proprietary. Such a change can simply not be afforded.
The second alternative solution to Wikipedia’s problem is therefore the only possible option after all: To outsource data and traffic requirements from central server to user machines and effectively reduce the websites function to that of its current central networking hub. This part of its current system requires only but a small fraction of the funds needed to operate the entire company, and even this can be disassembled into constituent parts: in the form of executable software operating on end user’s machines, although such a change will probably not be necessary. If indeed Wiki adopts this type of solution, it will closely resemble operations such as Torrent browsers, acting to perform user searches and tracking fragmented data deposits on individual machines.
In order to achieve such a structure, Wiki would only need to implement one small change at a time. The first would be to have Wiki articles attach themselves to the machines of individual users, not one article to each user; rather, a clone of the original on each machine that accesses the data. Once every article is fixed with such an operation, a hash checking software, like that present in Torrent systems, will we installed attached to each article, coordinated by automatic updates provided when visits to the web based browser are made. This will effectively maintain the possibility of continuous modification of data by contributing users and make the changes unanimous among users. Next, a small software modification should be made available as a tool on web browsers that enable rapid torrent downloads and uploads between user pools. Such systems have existed for several years already and have demonstrated themselves to be widely popular and effective. After these modifications are made, the central server at Wikipedia can be shut down to the point that only the browsing function remains, effectively cutting down an estimated 90% of operating costs. When such changes are made, Wikipedia will effectively resemble, in its own structure, the system of information sharing that they have made possible and popular.
These are exactly the types of issues that are taking place on the global scale. Individuals and groups are finding their published works illegally distributed and their products reverse engineered and produced under a different name, receiving no royalties, in a different country. One of the major problems is that, although the proprietary capitalist system has been widely adopted, the majority of the world lacks the legislation to protect intellectual property and the resources to enforce such legislation. Yet, at the same time that the creators of the pirated information feel largely cheated, their ideas are raising the standard of living for many people, a large number of which were, and continue to be, in dire poverty.
In some situations, pirates and users of pirated property are found and prosecuted for many times the value of that which was stolen, and never less, but in the wider scheme, it is only a token percentage of those guilty of such actions that are ever caught. In the majority of these cases, the situation is already untenable for license holders, and they face circumstances at least as grim as those faced by Wikipedia. No achievable amount of legislation or enforcement is likely to mitigate the issues, so the question becomes, how these entities and the system they exist in will survive.
The answer is identical to that which must be embraced by Wikipedia. The forces acting to countermeasure efforts made by the license distributors and holders are overwhelming and posses a capacity to decimate opposition and avoid detection with efficiency comparable to epidemic viruses. There is now widespread fear and hatred for these forces among the elite of the entrenched proprietary capitalist system: corporations, engineers, researchers, universities, publishers, authors, artists, musicians, designers, architects and those in a multitude of other creative capacities, are enraged by the determination and efficiency with which their works are stolen.
Already, many of these people have realized that their goals to make profit on all replication of their work are unattainable against these new forces, and their hatred has turned to fear. All of the attempts to secure intellectual property have failed at an accelerating rate since the late 1980’s, regardless of the cost of the protective measures. As an example; in 2007, the Sony Corporation released their new media format, the Blue Ray Disk. It was accompanied by a very advanced, very expensive anti piracy program called BD+. This software cost millions of dollars in research and development and its programmers made the claim that it was a self defending, hacker proof system. After a few movies were released on the new format various members of the intellectual property law counter movement set to breaking the system. Within a few months, “arnezami,” a member on a website called Doom9.org, posted that he had cracked the code.
Facing these terrifying facts, intellectuals amongst those in danger of losing the ability to make a profit have started putting up a stink. Lobbyists from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and other endangered industries have embarked on a campaign to convince the government of the necessity to bypass the laws of due process and allow the immediate prosecution of individuals determined to be pirates by RIAA snoop software. Continued on next post
Last edited by Aeschines; Nov 16, 2007 at 05:27 am.
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