Post Politics

Individual Rights Central Railroad

Tuesday, April 19th, 2005

Apparently security good guy Bruce Schneier is behind this:

Today, the rights of individuals are being eroded: by government, by corporations, by society itself. This icon — the Individual-i — represents the rights of the individual.

It represents the right to privacy and anonymity in the information age. It represents the rights to an open government, due process, and equal protection under the law. It represents the right to live surveillance free, and not to be marked as “suspicious” for wanting these other rights.

It recognizes that a free society is a safe society, and that freedom is founded upon individual rights.

The battle for individual rights is just beginning; our side needs a symbol.

We hope to see this symbol displayed proudly wherever individual rights are valued.

The Individual-i symbol is not owned by any organization. There is no platform, no organizational structure, no meetings. This symbol is in the public domain: uncopyrighted, untrademarked, unowned. Anyone can use it for any purpose.

Sounds good to me.

The symbol reminds me of something from my childhood: the Illinois Central Railroad logo used 1967-1972 by the railroad and in the mid-seventies by my father’s model railroad.

I’m not going to suggest remixing other old Illinois Central logos along an individual rights theme.

Use [the] force

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2005

Saw this in a Robert Scheer column printed in today’s San Francisco Chronicle: The force Bush won’t use on Iran.

So, tangled history aside, what should the U.S. do now about a repressive and potentially threatening government in Iran? The one thing Bush strangely has refused to do throughout the world: practice the principles of capitalism.

The model for such a policy, which emphasizes normal trade relations even with regimes that have religious and political obsessions different from our own, was most successfully employed by Richard Nixon in his famous opening to “Red” China, as well as in the detente period that should properly be credited with the ultimate fall of the Soviet empire.

The most powerful liberalizing forces the U.S. wields are not military, but economic and cultural. Though not as macho as trying to spread democracy through the barrel of a gun, normalization offers a better prospect of accomplishing that end, while saving billions of dollars and priceless lives.

I’m pleased to read Scheer get it Wright.

Shallow thinking about filesharing

Monday, February 7th, 2005

Tyler Cowen “cannot accept the radical anti-copyright position” and so proffers apologia for the radical intellectual protectionist position. (NB no anti-copyright position is being argued in MGM v. Grokster.) Regarding Cowen’s three arguments:

1. In ten year’s time, what will happen to the DVD and pay-for-view trades? BitTorrent allows people to download movies very quickly.

BitTorrent downloads tend to be faster than those on typical file sharing networks but still very slow. Netflix is a far superior option unless you place a very low value on your time (in addition to waiting many hours in the case of BitTorrent to weeks in the case of eDonkey for a download to complete you also need to spend time finding active torrents or hash links and dealing with low quality, mislabled and overdubbed copies, which often means starting over, even after you’ve learned how to deal with all of these. I pity the computer semi-literate who just wants to snag some “free” movies) .

Note that DVDs already account for more than half of Hollywood domestic revenue. Furthermore the process will be eased when TVs and computers can “talk” to each other more readily. Yes, I am familiar with Koleman Strumpf’s excellent work showing that illegal file-sharing has not hurt music sales. But a song download can be a loss leader for an entire CD or a concert tour. Downloading an entire movie does not prompt a person to spend money in comparable fashion.

Radical protectionists said made similar arguments about the VCR, as have those in countless businesses faced with new technology. In the case of the VCR, entrepreneurs figured out how to use the new technology to make billions. Similarly, it should be up to entrepreneurs to figure out how to thrive in the environment of ubiquitous networking, rather than up to lawmakers to ensure existing businesses survive technological change.

2. Perhaps we can make file-sharing services identify (and block) illegally traded files. After all, the listeners can find the illegal files and verify they have what they wanted. Grokster, sooner or later, will be able to do the same. Yes, fully decentralized and “foreign rogue” systems may proliferate, and any identification system will be imperfect. But this is one way to heed legitimate copyright suits without passing the notorious “Induce Act.”

Fully decentralized filesharing systems have proliferated. LimeWire is #2 at download.com and several other decentralized filesharing clients make the top 50 downloads list.

The imperfections of an identification and blocking system will include invasion of privacy and censorship.

3. I question the almost universal disdain for the “Micky Mouse” copyright extension act. OK, lengthening the copyright extension does not provide much in the way of favorable incentives. Who innovates with the expectation of reaping copyright revenues seventy-five years from now? But this is a corporate rather than an individual issue. Furthermore economic research indicates that current cash flow is a very good predictor of investment. So the revenue in fact stimulates additional investment in creative outputs. If I had my finger on the button, I still would have pushed “no” on the Mickey Mouse extension, if only because of the rule of law. Privileges of this kind should not be extended repeatedly due to special interest pressures. But we are fooling ourselves if we deny that the extension will benefit artistic output, at least in the United States.

The paper Cowen links to above (Cash Flow and Outcomes: How the Availability of Cash Impacts the Likelihood of Investing Wisely) is hardly encouraging regarding the efficacy of additional investments correlated with increased cash flow.

Eric Rescorla points out that subsidizing organizations that happen to hold copyright to work created 70 years ago is hardly the best way to subsidize new content creation, should one wish to do that.

Mass Destruction of Software Patents

Thursday, February 3rd, 2005

Is there something in the ether? Two people “near” me declare software patents potential “Weapons of Mass Destruction” yesterday and today, apparently having been struck by the idea independently: Patents as WMD’s from Mitch Kapor (Creative Commons is housed in his office space) and On Software Patents and WMDs from Ben Adida (who represents Creative Commons at the W3c).

Kapor and Adida have different scenarios in mind. Very roughly North Korea and Al Qaeda respectively.

See also Wikipedia on the software patent debate.

Faith

Friday, January 28th, 2005

I’ve been meaning to write an essay much like Robert Wright’s Op-Ed in today’s New York Times for a few years.

Mr. Bush doesn’t grasp the liberating power of capitalism, the lethal effect of luring authoritarian regimes into the modern world of free markets and free minds.

Interventionists, in particular George Bush, talk a lot about freedom and liberty. So did the last century’s communists. Neither had or has any faith in actual freedom as their actions forcefully demonstrate. Read Wright.

[Via Chris Sciabarra.]

While on the subject of faith I must point to the Church of Reality. “If it’s real, we believe in it!” Ah do buhleeve!

A lie halfway fulfilled

Thursday, January 27th, 2005

Excerpt of Bush adds $80 billion to wars’ costs Afghanistan, Iraq tally would pass $300 billion if OKd from yesterday’s San Francisco Chronicle:

Before the March 2003 invasion of Iraq, estimates of the war’s cost were $50 billion, with assurances from administration officials that Iraqi oil revenues would pay for much of the effort.

Asked Tuesday how the administration’s estimates could be so far off, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said, “you have to be prepared for the unexpected, and you have to be flexible enough to adapt to circumstances on the ground. And it’s important that you give the commanders on the ground the flexibility they need to adapt to changing circumstances. And that’s what we will always do. That’s how you are able to succeed and complete the mission.”

As I’ve noted previously, this happens with every war. There’s nothing unexpected in things going not according to plan in war. There’s nothing unexpected in politicians underestimating costs by an order of magnitude as they make a hard sell for war (or whatever).

We’re near the halfway mark. Expect U.S. taxpayers to be on the hook for one half trillion dollars plus interest by the time the U.S. government declares victory, goes down to ignominious defeat, or otherwise winds down fighting in Iraq.

When an experienced programmer gives you an estimate on a routine software project, double the estimate. When a politician estimates the cost of a pet project, multiply by ten, then double that number (in order to be prepared for the unexpected).

[Via Thomas Knapp.]

Infoanarchy, DRM and Celestial Jukebox

Monday, January 10th, 2005

On the brouhaha over Bill Gates’ interview with CNET at CES. The relevant bit:

[D]o you think intellectual-property laws need to be reformed?

No, I’d say that of the world’s economies, there’s more that believe in intellectual property today than ever. There are fewer communists in the world today than there were. There are some new modern-day sort of communists who want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and moviemakers and software makers under various guises. They don’t think that those incentives should exist.

And this debate will always be there. I’d be the first to say that the patent system can always be tuned–including the U.S. patent system. There are some goals to cap some reform elements. But the idea that the United States has led in creating companies, creating jobs, because we’ve had the best intellectual-property system–there’s no doubt about that in my mind, and when people say they want to be the most competitive economy, they’ve got to have the incentive system. Intellectual property is the incentive system for the products of the future.

The “communists” bit is the part that has gotten so many people worked up.

The Response. I enjoy calling out Gates’ idiocies as much as the next person, though much of the response I’ve seen has been a tad ebullient. Microsoft fans don’t create fascist art knockoffs when that company’s detractors incorrectly call it fascist. Glenn Otis Brown has the best response I’ve seen, posted on the Creative Commons weblog.

What Would Brezhnev Do? In a communist state would there be no financial incentives for artists? No, they’d simply be employed by the state. The Soviet Union took information control to extremes, including prohibiting use of photocopiers by scientists. I suspect that had the USSR survived to this day, the KGB would now be furiously trying to make Digital Restrictions Management work so as to gain access to a few of the wonders of computing without permitting open communication.

Advice to Gates. Call reformers anarchists rather than communists. For most people “anarchist” is derogatory and you wouldn’t be telling quite as much of a bald-faced lie.

The Real Issue. Forget labels. Gates’ substantial claim is that strong intellectual protectionism drives economic growth. Gates believes this. He isn’t simply shilling for MSFT’s latest strategy. It is on this point that Gates must be rebutted.

Apologies to you the reader and to Robert Nozick for this post’s overwrought title.

Year in Prediction Markets

Saturday, January 8th, 2005

Chris F. Masse offers his highlights of the past year in prediction markets. His list is long and informative. Go read it. I have a few quibbles:

Biggest Winner/Loser of 2004. I agree with Masse’s picks (Winner: TradeSports, Loser: NewsFutures), but not his focus on the U.S. presidential election. TradeSports became the premier service for placing non-sports real money bets (despite offering only a small number of semi-interesting contracts) and the authoratative citation for market odds. NewsFutures launched with a fair amount of hype but always struck me as less than serious.

Destined for Stardom and Most Under-Reported Story. Masse says HedgeStreet and their CFTC approval. Last month I glanced at their home price hedgelets, which seemed too short term (one quarter? — I’m interested in betting on housing market “fundamentals” but not on short term movements) and very thinly traded. I don’t know anything about the company, but I wish them well. They’re hiring software engineers. I wonder if successful use of information markets inside corporations during the last year will come to light. That would be my bet for both destiny and under-reported categories.

Biggest Waste of Money. Not Andrew Tanenbaum‘s supposed $3000 expenditure on setting up a poll tracking site. If Masse knows how to create a top 1000 website for less than $3000 I hope he lets us in on the secret. Prediction markets did outperform polls, though I suspect Masse’s motivation for this anti-award is dislike of Tanenbaum’s politics. By the way, Tanenbaum didn’t teach Linus Torvalds computer science, as Masse claims, though Tanenbaum did give Torvalds a virtual ‘F’ in a 1992 Usenet debate.

Best Idea of 2004. I think Wolfers’ and Zitzewitz’s idea is backwards. I don’t care much about how events influence elections (useful information for campaign consultants). I do care about how elections influence events (useful information for voters).

Masse’s prediction markets portal has scads of interesting links. Presently missing is zMarket: An Open-Source Platform for Developing Decentralized Markets, which could be an interesting development for 2005.

[Via Tyler Cowen.]

Flip a coin, don’t recount, revote, and litigate

Thursday, December 30th, 2004

Votes for Washington state governor cast in November have now been counted three times. One candidate won the first two counts (first by 261 votes, then 42) , the other won the second recount by 129 votes. Dino Rossi (Republican), the candidate who won the first two counts, wants a revote and is threatening litigation. Christine Gregoire (Democrat), who won the second recount, says a revote would waste $4 million, according to Rossi urges revote to fix “mess” in the Seattle Times.

Why re-count, re-vote, or litigate over same at all? Change whatever rule determines that a recount is necessary to mandate a coin flip instead of a recount.

It turns out that many people have suggested flipping a coin in this election and in the past (e.g., Ralph Nader on Florida in 2000), including several stories and columns from the Seattle Times, but I don’t gather that anyone is seriously considering the option. “Counting every vote” is too sacred.

However, “counting every vote” is itself subject to random errors. If an election is close enough for a recount, the recount won’t necessarily be any more accurate than a coin flip.

Apparently many jurisdictions allow flipping a coin or drawing lots to determine the winner of close elections in low-stakes contests. Given that recounts are no more accurate than coin flips, chance should be allowed to determine the outcome of any close election, especially “high stakes” elections, as those will be the most costly to recount, revote, and litigate.

I’d be happy to replace most elections entirely with random selection, which in my view would be far more democratic and far less costly than the current system.

Individual Rights Management

Wednesday, December 29th, 2004

Cory Doctorow correctly lambastes those soft on DRM for the umpteenth time. The following excerpt sparked a thought:

DRM isn’t protection from piracy. DRM is protection from competition.

Reminds me of airport “security” and similar. In the essay IDs and the illusion of security Bruce Schneier makes a case (not nearly as forcefully as can be done) that

Identification and profiling don’t provide very good security, and they do so at an enormous cost.

I’d argue that most measures justified by “security” actually make us less secure, in part because of their enormous cost. Another time.

Anyway, I think there’s a nice (ugly) symmetry in the arguments of apologists for Digital Restrictions Management and the national security state. Both are really much about restricting competition.

[Schneier link via Anton Sherwood.]