[governance] Hmmmm... Google: "Internet Freedom!"... (from taxes?
Riaz K Tayob
riaz.tayob at gmail.com
Wed Dec 5 16:05:42 EST 2012
Frankly I am not sure what kind of institutionalist Milton is. This is
not the Alexander Hamilton, Daniel Rayomond, Richard Ely, E Pershine
Smith, Frederich List and JK Galbraith, who all had a keen head for
facts and history.
Britain used free trade ideas as a means to maintain its dominance over
other nations. The workshop of the world that encouraged everyone to
liberalise, that free trade (and then classical economics) was best. And
in the Pax (?) Americana, neoclassical economics (in infinite disguises)
and the Washington Consensus serves the same function.
Now I have no truck disagreeing with Mueller on economics - these
approaches differ in method as well as context, so there is room for
disagreement. But on the politics of the matter (sorry Milton, for some
Institutionalists if it is relevant then it must be included in the
"calculation") Milton, with what I surmise from his Institutionalism -
not having read all his work, is no different from American
Exceptionalists on this list. Of course I am aware that in the American
context(where what passes for progressive is quit different, this may
well be the case. It simply cannot be generalised.
And in the "competition" through subsidised efforts Europe builds
capabilities - both the tech no-(harware) and -ology (its people). One
of the key elements of benefiting from a network is that skills can be
diffused. Consumption of technology rich goods is not the same as
producing them. Actually in a reverse sort of way the status quoists
(exceptionalists, Institutionalists of a special type, neoliberals, etc)
seek to maintain the US dominance by playing to that nations comparative
advantage - also in institutions like ICANN and the posse that goes with
it.
On 2012/12/05 10:25 PM, Dominique Lacroix wrote:
> Le 05/12/12 20:26, Milton L Mueller a écrit :
>>
>> "Frankly", development of the TCP/IP protocols were supported by
>> military research contracts, which had no intention of supporting a
>> commercial industry. "The Internet" spread to the general population
>> and succeeded because of telecommunications liberalization and a free
>> market.
>>
> Dear Milton, you seem a little dizzy. You skipped merrily the NSF
> action in the 1981-1995 years...
> And then, also, the CIA action, via the In-Q-Tel venture capital firm,
> launched in 1999.
> And also the military orders in the advanced IT field.
> Perhaps I forget something. I'm also a bit dizzy...
>>
>> The government played an important role in facilitating that process
>> by privatizing control and paving the way for competition among ISPs.
>> There is no doubt about that.
>>
> Exact. And not enough: Google should be prosecuted for dominance abuse.
>>
>> While we are being frank, perhaps you can tell me how successful
>> European efforts to subsidize search engine technology to compete
>> with Google has been?
>>
> I assume you already heard about the networks effect that gives an
> advantage to the first big player.
> That's exactly why China and other countries protect their boundaries
> in order to help their IT industry to find existence.
>
> Do you think that Europe also ought to close their virtual boundaries?
>
> @+, Dom
>
>> Please frankly, Milton, did internet begin in the US by free market
>> or by the US Gov action?
>>
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