The genius of Mark Zuckerberg’s recent announcement of Meta, the alleged new Facebook, was that it managed to be both disappointing and sinister at the same time. Backed by a series of lame effects, the Zuck announced a virtual world that sounded as gimmicky and unsatisfying as Second Life had been, but authored by an organisation which had the power to enforce it everywhere.
The utterly uninspiring vision of Meta, like all such tech, draws on the utopian impulses which lurk in culture, in art, and in the very structure of human imagining and projection: that we can project worlds that are radically other to everyday life — and yet are still recognisable and meaningful — and able to be controlled and commodified.
The disappointment that has been widely expressed at this concept is due to what might be called the accumulated insufficiency of dreams.
That is, any new techno-cultural system which offers the capacity for otherworlds will launch to huge effect, as it opens a new way of seeing and being — or semi-being — which offers the form of human life, but with a lightness, freedom and possibility that the ground-down drudgery of day-to-day human life frequently lacks.
Cinema was probably at its most powerful when it was black-and-white and silent, and the darkened space of the auditorium was halfway between individual and collective dreaming; poetry at its height, when the recounting of an oral epic could summon up the gods as real.
As the capacity for technology to instantiate that provisional world becomes more totalising, the capacity for it to truly wow us for long diminishes.
But the launching of Meta as a Facebook salvation shows both how determined the company, and big tech, as a whole is to retain and extend control, and how impoverished is tech’s imagination of what that role might be. And it has come at a moment when the US government has finally moved to use its antitrust powers to address the power of big tech, as a series of de facto monopolies over whole areas of social life.
The EU, Australia and other jurisdictions had turned their attention to monopoly effects of big tech some time ago — not always for the cleanest of reasons, as Australia’s News Corp driven policy demonstrates — but nothing much could happen of real effect until the US joined in.
This it did in the last months of the Trump administration, as big tech swung decisively against the Donald, with a series of lawsuits filed (by both the DOJ and multiple state attorneys-general it must be said) against the big five — Google, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft; no one cares about Twitter — for monopolising search functions, e-commerce, and suppressing competition.
Now, the Biden administration has shown its determination to go further, with the appointment of antitrust academic Lina Khan as chair of the Federal Trade Commission this year, with a brief to renew aggressive antitrust law.
Khan’s academic work has been a critique of the interpretation of antitrust law that has held sway for 40 or so years, one governed by an ultra-free market Chicago school interpretation of human action.
This view — which emphasised the cost-benefit to consumers of de facto monopolies, rather than the fact of monopoly itself — more or less stalled the robust use of antitrust legislation on a grand scale.
The most high-profile case of that era — against Microsoft — was fought to a messy draw. Other de facto monopolies, such as Walmart, were allowed to run riot. Amazon, when it emerged, gained the same grace. Thus a 1970s change in legal regime decisively reshaped American life in every aspect. And ours too, by default.
Biden has given Khan and others more power to go after the big five than many expected, with an executive order in July promoting “competition in the American workplace”, and a new antitrust spirit has bipartisan support, with Trumpist Republicans lining up against big tech (often describing it as “communist”) alongside progressive Democrats lining up against corporate America in general.
That coalition will need to hang together for some time. Taking on the tech giants will be a truly massive undertaking. One of the things that killed effective antitrust prosecution was an antitrust lawsuit against IBM, which was thrown out of court in 1981, having begun, by some measures, in 1956, and running in full from 1969.
The failure showed how limited the effectiveness was of antitrust legislation that had been originally drafted in 1890 to an integrated tech economy, in which market dominance was being achieved not merely by explicit anti-competitive practices, but by the rapid universalisation of user-systems. Untangling that with regard to search engines, algorithms, etc, will take more than a decade, unless the government’s case is super-aggressive.
And it may still fail, due to the deep structure of the tech revolution, which largely involves the creation of fortunes and corporations via the discovery of natural monopolies.
But these are not natural monopolies grounded in the physical world — one railroad tunnel through the mountains — but in the very structure of language and communication.
Obviously, a single “realm” of connection, in which everyone connects to everyone, is “better” (if that borderlessness is what is wanted, a dubious desire in itself) than multiple, Balkanised services.
Rather than a further break-up, on its own terms, the most efficient service would be one which combined Google, Facebook, and Amazon, and then plugged them into government services.
This “Big One” might have been the sort of thing that developed had the battle for democratic socialism been won in the post-war era — a public service, in which online interconnection was as uniform, public and general as the streets of a city. One can see the first form of that in services like France’s Minitel (adopted by the UK as Teletext), which worked through the TV and phone system in the pre-PC age.
The true aim of the left in these decade-long disputes should be not the breaking-up of platform capitalism but the overall socialisation of it, intact. The left is co-operating with the right in attempts to restrain the big five through state action, both because the techno-social form by which they operate not only facilitates, but produces, the angry, isolated, asocial world that underlies a new hard-right politics.
But one effect of such a break-up — as it is with the break-up rather than socialisation of big banks — is to “re-set” capitalism to an earlier period of accumulation, slow down technical change that drives towards free association and near-zero-cost production, and thus restore capitalism’s faltering profit ratio.
Thus the world would have been very different if even one of these techpreneurs had had the decency of a Tim Berners-Lee, and just at some point socialised their innovations to be run by some interconnecting authority of state, public and citizen bodies.
That didn’t happen, and one tempting possibility is surely to let the right run with the antitrust stuff, fail, see the tech giants totalise their control until it becomes “obvious” that such organisations are in no sense private entities, and must be socialised.
But that of course relies on the gamble that there would be a sense of public life remaining, in which that struggle could be staged. The whole purpose of something like Zuckerberg’s “Metaverse” is to wholly own public space.
If one way to define “evil” is as the systemic abolition of the full humanity of others — in this case, through the total commodification of experience and relationships — then the conception of the Metaverse is really the intrinsic evil of capitalism being presented in its purest, most weightless form.
It is producing evil, megalomania, in a group of people who would not have been so in other contexts. The only way that big tech could live up to Google’s quaint early motto “Don’t be evil” would be to dissolve itself in its current form.
That is not going to happen, and their project will come into crisis eventually. Until then, antitrust suits may buy us some time to challenge them — but the later struggle, decades down the track, will be a more decisive and categorical one. Zucks to be us.
What a pity that the world embraced FB instead of the blockchain open source platform Diaspora back in the noughties.
It’s still going apparently https://diasporafoundation.org/
After reading Jaron Lanier I’m looking for alternatives to Meta. Is Diaspora viable?
It’s been over 10 years since I was on it but I’ve looked and it seems to still be going great guns. It apparently supports crossposting with Twitter, WordPress and Tumblr but all your data is instead hosted on a pod which you choose. More info here https://wiki.diasporafoundation.org/Choosing_a_pod
“The true aim of the left in these decade-long disputes should be not the breaking-up of platform capitalism but the overall socialisation of it, intact.”
I cannot see how a socialised version of some of these platforms would or could be better than the mess we have now. It could easily be worse. Look at China’s control of the internet, and don’t assume that couldn’t or wouldn’t happen here or in the US.
I’m more inclined to Cory Doctorow’s view that it’s better to force interoperability standards so that users aren’t locked in to bad services: https://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2021/10/255710-competitive-compatibility/fulltext
Just ban all the ads. Make it user pays. Like Crikey?
Too obvious, equitable & just.
I’d pay extra for a Crikey without the ads. Not sure what you’re talking about?
In the spirit of touching on so many different ideas and thoughts that GR affords,..
how fundamentally discordant the LNP’s view of the world is, I pity the reasonable parts of MP’s and those representatives that are trying to hold their understanding of what they believe and what is actually happening, together.
The simple fact that the LNP are missing at least two fundamental aspects of what it takes to live a good life that need to be before going out and making money, and then go on to feebly try to compensate for those things you need with money.
They believe the only right you have to deserve those things is if you earn that by working.
Not working on how to be happy and how to contribute in a way that means potentially more, but may not have the instant capitalist gratification.
What any decent party in this country has to have as its basic premise is that students can live poor but healthy ,that means a living income.That is our insurance we pay for in tax, our insurance policy.
And some people will be students for all their life, and everyone has the right to turn back into a student again, even it is just one of life.
I wonder if this argument is lost on the LNP and I think it is the type of question that Labor can now ask themselves.
I think the internet itself offers the nearest thing we have as a model for how the tech giants can be socialised. The idea of Amazon+Google+Facebook+Twitter combined and under state control in the USA is. let’s face it, a nightmare, and a popular revolution in the US wouldn’ make it more attractuive, to my mind. What needs to be regulated is the language and protocols by means of which these and other internet entities interact. The internet protocol is the first step in this. Without the internet protocol I guess none of them could exist. You want a situation where I could set up a search engine which could query the same data as Google, sell products on my shop front and see them listed on amazon as well and have my social media platform making friends with my facebook friends seemlessly.
I don’t know how that could be done, but I’m sure that with the power of the state it could be made to happen.
What does this mean?
The internet protocols are not secret or proprietary: they are pubilc documents.
You can build a search engine and it can query exactly the same data as Google. That’s just the combined world-wide web: all that is published over the HTTP(S) protocol from every web server in the world. That’s a big job: only four companies currently bother to do it, and only one does it well (Google; the other three are Bing, Baidu and Yandex. Duck Duck Go is a Bing reseller.)
You can set up web-based shop fronts and sell products. You can even list them on Amazon, I imagine: that’s between you and Amazon.
What is it that you imagine that the state (or its power) would do for you on that front? Maybe just fund you (and your data-center) for the ten or twenty years that it would probably take to get up to scale/speed? OK. Nice work if you can get it.