If you wanted to get the political establishment on your side, just
find some vocal interest group to hypothecate your iPod tax towards
(e.g. starving millionaire rock stars), et voila the lawmaking machinery jumps into action. Don’t campaign against DRM.
Use the price mechanism, Luke - it pervades all things and binds all
things together. Find your own body of vested interest, and harness it.
Perhaps we should simply generalise this? Laws like DMCA and EUCD are
little more than state-sponsored protection rackets for established
business models, so why not claw back some of the benefit? Sure, you
can have DMCA protection! Just as long as
you register your product with the Bit Reproducion and Transmission
Device Commission and pay the usual 5% of sales to the government ;)
Quite how the anti-tax free-marketer inside me manages to struggle out of this intellectual straight-jacket, I’m not so sure…
I’ve been slowly making my way into Oz Shy’s Economics of Network Industries (about 18 months after Bruce Williamson first recommended it to me at WTF,
so it’s taking a while). I’ll comment about the book in more detail
another day, but if there’s one take-away it is this: there are many
different kinds of network industry resulting from different forms of
“interface” between the network components. It is by no means obvious
which (if any) flavours of network industry a DMCA-like law is economically efficient for, or whether indeed any such in-depth analysis was ever done prior to copyright maximalism taking hold. It might behoove some of the campaigners for DRM reform
to look beyond their own intellectual circle and engage the economists
who have already trodden this turf. Make the lawmakers see you’ve done
your homework.
Hmm, how about this for a really wild thought, well outside telecom.
Capitalism is the economic technology that replaced feudalism. It found
a superior way of harnessing self-interest to promote the wider good.
This was achieved through increased decentralisation of economic power
— you didn’t need to ask permission to start a business. We’re still
hunting for the social technology to replace v1.0 mass democracy, whatever it may be. Once we crack the problem issues like DMCA will probably go away, since capture of the lawmaking process will become too expensive. To subvert Hayek’s
economic message, the pricing information of new laws will more readily
become apparent to those affected. This undermines the “information
advantage” that the lobbyists have: a few people know they stand to
gain much, whilst the masses don’t realise they’ve each lost a little
bit of their cultural and economic opportunity.
(Then again, if Americans haven’t yet discovered the superiority of Bramley apples
for making apple pie, I don’t hold out too much hope for a world
without distance eliminating all social and economic barriers to
opportunity…)
Until you either reach your techno-regulated anarchist nirvana (or opt out of trying), there’s only way of dealing with polluting digital technologies: old-fashioned political slog.
Posted via Telepocalypse