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by Stuart Langridge.
Original Post: There is no tech industry
Feed Title: as days pass by
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Feed Description: scratched tallies on the prison wall
In the aftermath of the big
protest against the US SOPA
bill, I've seen a fair few people (including Joel
Spolsky) ask the question: why are we not lobbying for laws? Why is it that
other interests try and oppress the internet and we fight back; shouldn't we
be taking the fight to them? Lobby and push for laws that make the net
better, and have them fight us for once?
This thought, while it's got the fist-in-the-air fight-the-power undertones
that go over well with the internet crowd, is a bit worrying.
The movie and TV industry spent ninety
million dollars lobbying the American government in 2011. Where's our
ninety million? Most of the tech industry is struggling to stay alive on VC
money and the occasional payment; there's no central fund, and no-one with the
expertise to do the lobbying anyway, especially when that's combined with the
sneaking sense that paying money for attention and to get laws passed is
Not Really Cricket.
Hang on, though; the big players have a whole ton of money. Ninety million
is about two
days profit for Apple, about four days
profit for Google, about the same for Microsoft,
about the same for Oracle. Seriously, if those four firms donated one day's profit,
the tech industry could throw a hundred and fifty million dollars into the pot
without serious effort. The MPAA
have recently
started demanding quid pro quo for their donated money; maybe this
is the time to get in the game and outspend them. Any one of the four firms above,
and probably others besides, could swallow up the whole movie industry without
so much as a gulp if they wanted.
But then we hit the biggest problem. I've been talking about "the tech industry"
like it's a thing. There is no tech industry.
The movie people get this right. No-one's lobbying for only movies by
Twentieth Century Fox to get extra copyright protection. No-one's arguing that
TV programmes should be blocked from being written to DVDs but only if they've
got Martin Sheen in them. They work together. What we laughingly call "the tech
industry" does not. Do you honestly think that if Apple or Microsoft or Oracle
throw down a hundred million notes on a law that that law will benefit startups
and Canonical and Red Hat and hobby programmers? If Microsoft throw down that
money, do you think the resulting legislation will benefit Apple? Hell no. There's
almost no sense of collaboration in the "tech industry" at all; we're a bunch of
scratching yowling cats in a bag, too busy fighting one another to maintain a
front against outside opposition.
What's the solution here? I don't know. But I'm wary of a world where the
interests of the movie industry are less effective in the American Congress but
have been replaced by the interests of multi-billion-dollar computer companies.
That doesn't seem to benefit the internet all that much.