borders



July 1, 2005 06:52 AM | Phil Wolff

Firecrackers echoed down the street, through my window this evening. An early welcome to America's Independence Day weekend. The sounds of war used to celebrate, and to remember.

We weren't the first, nor the last, to fight a war for national independence. We fought to rule ourselves, a freedom from monarchy. We get to vote, organize, and lobby - to have our voices heard, to hold those we elect responsible, to cast a strong light on their work and the personnel who operate our governments. A Civic Skype buttonIt's an imperfect arrangement, but democracy is all the rage.

When telephone networks were first rolled out, they were private affairs run by companies.

We've added government to the equation since then. To assure universal access. To compel emergency services. To break up monopolies, increase competition, keep prices affordable for the many. To protect caller privacy, fend off telemarketers, and access for the deaf.

There are many governments with a say. Cities. Counties. States. Nations. International lands. Tribal lands. Each representing the interests of their constituencies.

These often conflict with the interests of a profit-minded company.

Like Skype.

A company with users on seven continents. Beholden only to the commercial interests of its investors and executives.

Leaving government out of it for the moment, how can Skype users assert their interests?

  • How might we organize?
    • Do we need our own virtual town hall?
    • Do we even need representative democracy or can direct democracy work?
    • Do corporations have a voice, or just people who may work for/with corporations?
    • How about electing directors to Skype's board after they go public?
    • Need we group our voices by geography? Language? Operating system? Dominant communication mode (text, voice, video, etc.)?
  • What recurring issues warrant standing bodies?
    • Security? Privacy? System health?
    • Foreign relations? With other networks? With governments?
    • Taxation and funding?
    • Development direction?
    • Certification and testing of Skype-compatible systems?
    • Accessibility?
    • Universal Access?
    • Names and Identity disputes?
    • What else?
Your Skype Citizen Assignment for this week:
Chat with a friend. Talking points:
  1. Will Skype become as important to you as your other phones?
  2. What would you miss if Skype Technologies was taken over by bad people?
  3. Who can you call if you want Skype to do something?

If you record your text or audio conversations, please let us know.
Suggestions for Skype Citizen Assignments are welcome; please leave your comments.