Spying and cyber theft are not freak
phenomena; they're unavoidable consequences of online access as it now
exists. Illustration: Chloe Cushman for the Guardian
What will life be like after the internet? Thanks to the mass
surveillance undertaken by the National Security Agency and the general
creepiness of companies like Google and Facebook, I've found myself
considering this question. I mean, nothing lasts forever, right?
There's
a broad tech backlash going on right now; I wonder just how deep the
disillusionment runs. I get the feeling that there are folks out there
who would relish putting the internet behind us sooner rather than
later. Imagine that: even the internet could be a thing of the past one
day. What would that be like? No Facebook. No Google. No government
nerds looking through your webcam.
But could we become more secure
without abandoning the internet? What if there's a third way? One that
doesn't involve either passive resignation to being exploited or a
Luddite smash-the-looms fantasy. What if we began to develop and
encourage the adoption of machines and a network that are actually
secure – through which neither thieves, corporations, nor the NSA could
track us – and what if these could be configured by us, to really do
what we want them to do? To stop the spying, stealing and monitoring,
but to allow other things to continue.
What would that look like?
A problem: maybe the internet wasn't built to be secure
I know I feel safer now! Happy viewing, guys! If we had any doubts
before, now we know that the government doesn't trust us – so very many
of us – and we certainly don't trust it.
Meanwhile, thieves have managed to get their hands on more than 100 million credit card numbers and PINs
from Target and Neiman Marcus. Lots of cyber thieves operate in the
former Soviet republics, so maybe that new sports car in Baku or that
night on the town in Sofia is courtesy of your hard-earned savings.
It's
not just the government and thieves who take advantage of the web's
weird combination of opacity and insecurity; Google, Apple, Facebook,
Microsoft and other tech companies repurpose our phones and tablets into
tracking and monitoring devices. Google, for one, makes a lot of money gathering information from us
and selling it to advertisers. The free conveniences we enjoy – email,
endless web browsing, cats and all sorts of gossip – are not, in fact,
free. They are merely clever trade-offs for information about you. In
return for access to much of the world's knowledge, we hand over
valuable personal information about everything we believe, everything
we're curious about, everything we desire or fear – everything that
makes us who we are, at least to the retailers, advertisers and secret
government agencies on the receiving end.
It is we who are being sold.
Trading
our privacy for the convenience of a Google search is not so different
from giving up constitutionally protected freedoms in exchange for the
"security" that our government claims to offer. At least with Google and
other tech services we know we're getting something; whether we
actually are more secure because of the NSA's surveillance is an
unresolved question. We are frequently told that this indiscriminate
data collection has produced valuable results, but those results are
"secret," so you'll just have to trust the government. I'm not saying we
don't need strong security measures to protect us from lunatics, but
this dragnet surveillance has gone way beyond meeting that need.
Cyber thieves, for their part, don't offer the average internet user anything in return – not only that, but they make money selling information about the security gaps
they find to the US government. It's an open question whether the
government actually wants to patch up those holes and make the internet
more secure. For now, it's in its interest to keep these holes open –
available for future use, but secret. And we know how good the
government is at keeping secrets.
To a lot of folks it appears
that the corporations, the thieves and the government are all doing
exactly the same thing: the "legal" behavior and the illegal theft are
cousins. Spying and cyber theft are not freak phenomena; increasingly,
they appear to be unavoidable consequences of online access as it now
exists.
As the internet has become more integral to our lives,
we've become more vulnerable to its seductions, and the web has started
to act like a bully, a drug dealer. It knows we need it, love it and are
addicted to it, so it can take advantage of that need.
Moreover,
the internet is no longer even egalitarian. And that was one of the big
pluses! Once it seemed that everyone had the same access to information.
Soon, though, its glories will be available only to those who can
afford them. Recently, Verizon won a court ruling against net neutrality, which the Federal Communications Commission has announced it will not appeal,
so the way is clear for corporations to play favorites with internet
traffic. Clearly this miraculous technology – developed in part with the
noble ambition that nuclear scientists might communicate freely – has
been perverted into something dark and disturbing.
A thought experiment: what if we broke the internet?
These deteriorating conditions feed into the rapidly growing discontent regarding the internet.
What if the disillusionment eventually reaches a point at which many
feel that the free services and convenience no longer compensate for the
exploitation, control and surveillance? What if, one night, a small
group of people decided they've had enough and say, Let's call it a day?
What exactly might this imaginary band of outsiders do? Would they or
could they shut down the entire internet? Is that even possible? And
what would be the consequences? Now, let's be clear, I'm not advocating
this, but I also don't think it's entirely outside the realm of
possibility.
As we all know by now, the NSA tapped into a vast amount of international and domestic internet communications by installing devices in small rooms in data centers
in San Francisco and a few other places. It didn't require an all-out
assault to subvert one of these fortresses – just a small intervention
with impunity and intent. Here is what the inside of one of these
buildings looks like:
Photograph: Julian Stratenschulte / EPA
That's what makes it all work? My music studio isn't this messy!
The
internet, it seems, is not "nowhere". There are nodes in the internet,
where great amounts of data come and go, and they do have real physical
locations. Intercept a few of these nodes – there are some here in
downtown New York, linked to some in Lisbon, where the fiberoptic cables
surface – and you can infiltrate the whole world, as the NSA knows.
They needed access to only a few undistinguished buildings to get what
they wanted.
So… imagine that a hypothetical group of
disillusioned citizens obtains access to the same nodes – let's say it's
an inside job by some building employees – but instead of tapping the
nodes, as the NSA did, they break them. And to avoid any
possibility of repair, they detonate a small timed radioactive paintball
after they leave. No one gets hurt, but the radioactive splatter
creates a no-go zone. As a result, no one can fix the fiber optics or
even get near them for, let's say, 100 years. The city outside, and even
the rest of the building, might remain safe, but don't go near that
room on the 20th floor!
This might sound far-fetched. Surely no
one can "break" the internet! The internet is our friend! And how could
anyone even get into the buildings that keep it running?! But as we've
seen, neither our "security" organizations nor the world's largest
corporations are very good at keeping their shit secure.
OK, now, for the sake of this thought experiment…
A wasteland: what if the web as we know it didn't exist?
It's hard to weigh the worth of the Internet
because we can't even imagine life without it. It's part of us.
Illustration: Chloe Cushman for the Guardian
The internet is a thing of the past. What now?
Obviously
business goes haywire, to say nothing of the profitable business of
watching us. High-speed automated trading, which makes up half or more of New York's stock market activity (though the proportion is currently declining,
ends. Wall Street initially crashes, but eventually it finds a new
normal. (There was trading before the internet, after all.) Streaming
movies and music, however, is totally over. Skyping your grandmother –
over.
Google is now absolutely worthless, though it still has all
its existing data housed in massive server farms. No more drones will
take flight or drop bombs on Pakistan or Yemen. Cash and checks are
still pretty good; credit and debit cards can't rely on internet
connections to verify accounts anymore – though they still work, as they
did before the web. Amazon has ceased to exist, and huge
brick-and-mortar stores like Wal-Mart have lost track of their massive
inventories. Small towns and bookstores make a comeback! Even record
stores!
No one can unfriend you, and Mark Zuckerberg won't know
what and whom you like or don't like ever again. Online courses will
halt; teachers will have to teach their students face-to-face. The Singularity will be postponed.
Would the world really be a better place without the internet? Is a complete reset really necessary?
For
some, the internet has offered endless moneymaking opportunities, but
whether many of the web's touted benefits end up reaching the majority
of people is debatable. More and more, it seems that only a minority are
making a fortune off what was extolled as a universally liberating
technology.
To be fair, the internet offers some egalitarian
benefits, besides pictures of cats. There's the well-publicized
assistance it lends to movements for human rights and democracy and the
instantaneously accessible forum it provides for much of the world's
knowledge. Truth be told, the internet didn't actually create any of
those movements or that knowledge, but it has certainly empowered a lot
of previously voiceless people who now have access to them.
It's
hard to weigh the worth of the internet because we can't even imagine
life without it. We've internalized it. It's part of us, which explains
why we are exploited so easily online. Is the internet a cancer killing
us little by little or a wonderful cybernetic extension of our brains?
Let's say we wanted to rid ourselves of the cancer. Would the cure be
catastrophic or would the liberation be worth it?
A utopia: what would a revised internet look like?
The NSA and the other data thieves and
collectors would be helpless, but could we still build a secure
internet? Illustration: Chloe Cushman for the Guardian
To be honest, I have a hard time imagining internet 2.0. I'm old
enough to remember the utopian enthusiasm that greeted the internet when
it emerged 20 years ago. We can't go back – we know too much now – but
maybe we can learn from what we loved about the internet back then.
Namely, its egalitarian nature – that homemade and small-scale sites
were just as accessible as the emerging e-commerce platforms. It was a
pleasant, chaotic jumble. Can we revive the feeling of a souk and lose
the big-box store feel?
Some folks have advocated that the
internet be considered a utility. A "necessary" part of our lives like
water, electricity or gas. It might be better to have some fair
regulation than to let market forces shape the landscape. Can you
imagine if corporations owned our water supply?
Imagine this: in a
new internet, we'd still be able to send emails. Academic and nonprofit
institutions would still share resources online. Wikipedia and
web-based journalism would still exist. But if we can't be tracked as we
are now, a lot would change. Google would lose its primary sources of
revenue – ads – and return to being a very good search engine, with a
lot fewer employees. The NSA and the other data thieves and collectors
would be helpless. No one would have data on countless innocent citizens
that could be repurposed to God knows what ends. The Chinese couldn't
hack into the North American power grid.
All that money that was
poured into online surveillance programs could of course now be spent on
health and education (I did say "could" – I'm being very optimistic).
That would actually increase security – worldwide. It's pretty
well accepted that extreme poverty breeds terrorism. Offering attractive
alternatives to extremism that lead to better lives is the way to win
the "war on terror". Guns, drones and mass surveillance do the opposite:
they actually breed terrorism. If we have the imagination to rethink
both network security and national security – and that's a big if – then the whole world would have the opportunity to become safer, no matter what the US government claims.
Is there a will to change?
Let's
assume that such a secure network structure is technically possible.
internet 2.0 for real. Even if it is technically possible, I have a
feeling that it might take a lot of willpower to walk away from the tit
of convenience. Corporations and governments have built massive economic
and political systems based on our accepting things as they are, and
they will fight powerfully against any reforms.
What could make
that surge of willpower come into existence? The information-hoovering
in which corporations engage is of a kind with the government
surveillance; in both cases we are prey to distant agendas. The three
forms of data-gathering (if one includes cyber crime) are all connected –
and none of them make us happier or more secure.
Reassessing what
makes us secure might be a start. Real, life-long security comes not
from the barrel of a gun or from being able to spy on your fellow
citizens like a Stasi informant; it comes with less harsh extremes of
wealth and poverty and increased access to health care and education.
Embracing the security that comes with a more robust democracy is far
preferable to other incentives to change, like all our credit cards
becoming worthless or the NSA leaking incriminating webcam pictures of
its critics. Before a catastrophic collapse like my hypothetical one
ever comes, let's find it within ourselves to give up some convenience
and become a little more human.