INTERVIEW: JOHN PERRY BARLOW
"What stops free flow
of information is dangerous"
He's a man of many parts. 53-year-old John
Perry Barlow has been a cattle-rancher in Wyoming and a lyricist
for the Grateful Dead. In his newest avatar, he is the founder of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to
preserving the rights of 'digital citizens'. Barlow was the first to use
the William Gibson coined term cyberspace to the global electronic space
in 1990. The man whom Yahoo Internet Life calls the Thomas Jefferson of
cyberspace was in India recently and BT's Roshni
Jayakar met up with him for a snappy tete-a-tete.
Q. John, you wrote what you term your
manifesto, A Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace, way back in 1996.
Are you thinking of making any changes in it?
A. I suppose I should come up with
revised edition. I want to make it more obvious that I didn't think that
cyberspace was sublimely detached from the real world. It isn't... it's
not like never never land. It bears the same relationship to the physical
world that the mind does to the body. They are intimately connected, but
are quite different. I'd also probably make it slightly less strident... I
was angry when I wrote it.
You are a believer in independence on the
Net. Does that mean ownership will not work on the web?
I believe there is no property in cyberspace.
The internet is a social space that is developing a political identity. It
does not have much respect for imposed authority. It's like declaring you
own your friends or your children.
Does that mean there is no need for
governance on the web?
We do need governance. That's different from
government. Government is something that is imposed in a particular place
by force and I don't think you can use force where people don't have
bodies and don't have material possessions that can be confiscated. I also
don't think that any government has a natural authority over the entire
world. Any effort to create a government that is global has only resulted
in paralysing bureaucracy. You look at the United Nations. It is not quite
useless, but pretty close.
But, there is governance in cyberspace and it
comes in two forms. First, in (the form of) social ethics of the people
who are inhabiting that region and doing social and economic transactions
there. And these ethics, despite the absence of law, have been really
good. I haven't, for example, seen a single instance where somebody passed
off somebody else's work as his own and tried to make commercial profit
from plagiarised work even though it would be quite easy to do (on-line).
The only thing that prevents that is the social code among the inhabitants
of cyberspace. The second (form of governance), is through technology.
This is an area where technological architecture defines the political
space. And the people who designed the internet had a very good sense of
what they were doing-what kind of space they were creating and what its
characteristics would be. They were all people who cared a lot about
freedom. I believe internet will be the principal factor behind the
withering away of the nation-states and other entities that impose
controls.
But many people think some form of
regulation is necessary simply because they claim the web hosts lots of
dangerous information...
What's dangerous? The only thing that is
dangerous is the one that is designed to stop free flow of information.
When I was a cattle-rancher, I had to blow up beaver dams-these animals
were building dams in my irrigation ditches. So, I went to an US force
service office and got a little book called Blasters' Guide that is still
available. It taught me how to mix basic fertiliser and diesel fuel to
create the same kind of bomb used in Oklahoma city. Should this not be
allowed on the internet?
What about patents and intellectual
property rights?
I don't believe in intellectual property. The
whole term is a recent invention. Copyright was never meant to be a form
of property; it was a temporary licence on a monopoly to express. You
didn't hear the term intellectual property more than 25 years ago. This is
the invention of large organisations that are trying to own creativity as
though it were real estate or steel or some other kind of physical stuff.
Why are you such an anti-company guy?
Well, I was brought to India by a company
(laughs). I am opposed to industrial practices for anything but industrial
ends. If you are going to make cars this is the way to do it. If you are
going to make ideas this is not the way to do it. I find that most of the
practices of the industrial period are just as bad as Karl Marx said they
were. But technology has made workers reconfigurable: in this so-called
information economy, I see a workforce composed entirely of free agents.
And the internet will make this happen...
You can't alienate somebody from the means of
production. Not in the information economy when he is the means of
production. I am presently working on what I call dot communism-basically
seeing the extent to which we can create an economy in cyberspace, which
is based on sharing rather than proprietary restriction. In the world of
ideas, sharing is a practical thing to do: the more access I have to
others' work, the better mine becomes; and it's a virtuous cycle all the
way round. The more we tell each other, the more we can learn.
Do you see technology creating a new
social order?
I see the fact that we have a large working
anarchy in the internet. I think that inspires people to try practical
anarchy as a social form in the physical world. I was at a 'festival' in
Nevada where there were 35,000 people 'without any laws' for a week and I
saw absolutely no bad behaviour. I didn't see anybody abusing anybody.
There was a common stake everybody had in making that thing work. Granted,
it was only for a week. And most of the people who were there were
involved in the internet: quite a few companies in Silicon Valley had just
closed down for the week, since most of their employees were going to be
there. So, I think it is starting to bleed through into the physical
world.
I am a fan of anarchy. During my visit to
India, I've seen anarchy working beautifully here.
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