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Felipe Rodriquez on Microsoft and the Internet's "paradigm shift"
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2004 09:20:42 -0500
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Cc: politech () politechbot com
From: felipe rodriquez <felipe () xs4all nl>
Subject: paradigm shift
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2004 12:51:09 +1100
To: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Declan,
Here is a little blurb I wrote yesterday:
I have this image forming in my mind about a cultural change through the
Internet. Its about a community that becomes increasingly vocal, creative
and constructive. Feel free to share it with others.
I have observed the Internet since 1989 and loved it myself for its
potential. That drove me to start my company in '93. I've been virtually
full-time immersed in the Internet since ~1991. I like it because of its
community and because of the way people self organize to achieve a common
goal. I have participated in many communities and usually loved it. In many
ways it is human evolution into a very different future world, society and
the international community will change, has changed, because of it.
National boundaries start dissolving, some traditional legislation can no
longer be enforced, new international subcultures form, communication can
not be controlled, the media have a harder time fooling us et cetera. This
has already happened.
Spontaneous self organization of people is what created the Internet.
Before it became commercial it drove on academics who donated their time to
participate in programming projects to develop the technology. The Internet
was created by the people, not by a business. The US government funded the
actual hardware network, but the software was mostly a community effort.
As the Internet is growing it is becoming more obvious what shape these
initiatives are taking. There is a huge Open Source community that develops
software that is free. That is where Linux, Darwin, FreeBSD et cetera come
from. A clone for Microsoft Office was also created in that community, and
a Microsoft emulator for Linux has been in development since 1993. The best
anti-spam software also comes from it, the world wide web too, email too et
cetera
Now these little communities move into other areas. I am very impressed by
the Wikipedia project at www.wikipedia.org This is an online encyclopedia
by the people for the people. It is completely free and operates on a
shoestring.
People are opening their wireless connection for the community. With long
range wireless like 802.16 people will start community networks, bypassing
commercial companies. It will be like HAM Radio for the masses.
Who knows what happens next. In this world when there is a group of people
that want something, there is a common goal, and they are online, then it
simply happens. Geographical location is not that important anymore. The
way we experience the world is undergoing tremendous changes and this
causes friction. Governments have already had their anxiety and tried to do
something about it by setting up censorship, surveillance and anti-spam
legislation. The censorship laws had no effect at all, the Internet routes
around it.
Not all fish know how to swim in this pond, it causes a culture clash for
many people and companies.
Microsoft is wetting their pants because of their angst of the Open Source
community. Free software is quickly catching up with the sophistication of
Microsoft. Office has already been replicated. A good writer friend of mine
in .nl always used Microsoft and has switched to Linux successfully. She is
not a geek expert hacker chic.
The reason Microsoft is scared is not just because the competing products
are catching up fast, it is also because Microsoft is increasingly under
attack from hackers and virus writers. This has been going on for years,
but now we're at a point that viruses come in by Email every day. Security
has never been Microsoft's forte.
In the old days when I was a hacker the main problem was that suppliers
would ship their unix mainframes with insecure settings. As a consequence
it would be trivial to gain access and get superuser privileges. Most unix
platforms that are shipped these days are watertight. Microsoft has a long
road to go to match that kind of security, and many monsters lurk on that
road to try and derail Microsoft.
Microsoft has a classic problem. Many companies and managers become very
defensive when there is a threat. They fight tooth and nail to defeat the
threat. This becomes a problem when the threat is the community at large.
It is the same mistake Scientology made and is continuing to make. The
Music industry is in this space too. So is SCO. Business-models will need
to change in order to survive. Embracing the community is survival,
coercion, legal battles against many individuals, aggression and
incompetence are certain death.
Microsoft has always dealt with threats successfully. Most competitors have
been wiped out. But can they win the sympathy of the community ? Can they
transform themselves into a pink, warm and cuddly company ? Will they
cooperate with the community to make a better product ? What other
companies are adapting poorly ?
Examples of companies that are doing this well are IBM, Apple, Cisco, most
Linux companies, Adobe. You can usually see by finding out if the company
provides an open online forum where products and problems can be publicly
discussed. For some reason many people and companies have a natural
tendency to not accept these kinds of feedback systems because they easily
feel threatened, they do not want their customers to organize themselves.
But it makes economic sense to listen to customers and give them what they
need, instead of being scared of the customer.
These are dilemmas many companies face. The world has changed much, is
always changing. Old habits die hard. In some cases the old habit will kill
the culprit. Darwinian evolution kicks in and takes out the elements that
do not work. Some companies will die or become obsolete, others will
mushroom. The trick will be identifying them. Which companies will
understand that it is better to ride the wave than to swim against the stream ?
Don't invest in Encyclopedia companies :-)
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