Law in the Internet Society

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ChloeJoFirstEssay 5 - 16 Jan 2025 - Main.ChloeJo
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A DECLARATION OF DIGITAL INDEPENDENCE

-- By ChloeJo - 25 Oct 2024 (edited. 29 Dec 2024)

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This pastiche adapts the 18th-century Declaration. By imitating the document's structure and language, my intention is to show how 18th century rhetoric addresses contemporary concerns in surveillance capitalism and highlight the fundamental value of freedom, autonomy, and democratic accountability.
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This pastiche adapts the 18th-century United States Declaration of Independence. By deliberately imitating the document's structure and language, my intention is to show how 18th century rhetoric addresses contemporary concerns in surveillance capitalism and highlight the fundamental value of freedom, autonomy, and democratic accountability.
 
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The unanimous Declaration of the connected users of the digital world. When in the course of virtual events, it
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The unanimous Declaration of the connected users of the digital world. When in the course of virtual events, it becomes necessary for a free people to dissolve the intangible bonds which have bound them to exploitative digital empires, and to assume among the networks of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the dignity of the human person entitles them, a decent respect to the opinions of humankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to this separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all users are equal, endowed with inalienable digital rights, that among these are privacy, autonomy, and the pursuit of meaningful connectivity. That to secure these rights, ethical platforms and transparent policies must be established, deriving their just powers from the consent of informed users,– That whenever any tech giant becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the users to alter or abolish it, instituting new safeguards to ensure their well-being in their digital realm.

When a long train of unchecked surveillance, data commodification, and manipulation reveals a design to reduce users to a state of digital dependence, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such power.

The history of the present tech behemoths is a history of repeated misuses of user trust, all aiming to establish absolute control over individuals' data. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world. They have, under the guise of "improving user experience," gathered intimate personal information, turning users into mere products whose behavioral data is bought and sold. They have suppressed the free flow of information or attempted to gatekeep knowledge, as in Ticketmaster's 1999 dispute, no mere debate about hyperlinks, but a struggle over who may control the public knowledge. The have engaged in business maneuvers, as Microsoft's aggression toward competitors, not to innovate, but to enclose and monopolize pathways of digital discovery and commerce. They have demonstrated, as in the demise of GeoCities, how swiftly user-generated content can be erased, silencing the voices of millions overnight. The have designed algorithms and systems that, by default, prioritize profit over users' rights, targeting individuals content that shapes desires, feelings, and actions in ways scarcely perceived by those governed. They have established walled gardens that penalize choice and competitions, concentrating data and innovation within a handful of entities, rendering the general populace beholden to the cookies they did not meaningfully consent to.

In every stage of these oppressions, we have petitioned for redress. Our repeated pleas have often been met with opaque policy changes or settlements bound by obscured truth from the public. A structure whose character is marked by these abuses is unfit to govern a free world wide web.

Nor have we been wanting in attentions to these corporations. We have warned them, from time to time, of the moral hazards in data extraction. We have appealed to their better nature, imploring them to uphold respect for individual autonomy.

We, therefore, solemnly declare it our duty to reclaim our digital destiny. we declare that users are absolved from any presumed submission to exploitative data practices and corporate paternalism. Henceforth, we shall labor, together, to erect a new framework wherein the following guiding principles reign: to recognize the open internet as a fundamental right, ensuring the wealth, location, or politics do not bar any from participating in digital life; To mandate that platform algorithms, data-sharing policies, and terms of service be clear, accessible, and modifiable by public oversight; to promote open-source innovations and standards that respect user autonomy and well-being over profit alone; to establish that each person retains the right to know, control, and safeguard their personal information, free from surreptitious collection or manipulation; to encourage structures where users participate in decision-making, rendering corporate monopolies obsolete.

We, the future lawyers, in the center of New York, gathered appealing to the conscience and intelligence of all who traverse the digital domain, do, in the name and by the authority of free netizens everywhere, solemnly publish and declare that we are and by right ought to be, free and sovereign over our data and interactions. That we aer absolve of all allegiance to those who would perpetuate digital exploitation; and that, as independent users, we hold the full power to regulate our own web, forge new connections, adopt new platforms, and do all other acts and things without surveillance as autonomous netizens may of right do.

In support of this Declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of online freedoms, we mutually pledge to one another our commitment, our advocacy, and our determination to stand against any who would curtail our essential digital rights. Let us stand united to shape a net where technology remains a tool of enlightenment, not an instrument of oppression.

Thus do we affirm: Users of the World, Unite! Our independence in this realm are inalienable, and we shall defend them with all the resolve that free individuals can muster.


ChloeJoFirstEssay 4 - 04 Jan 2025 - Main.ChloeJo
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

A DECLARATION OF DIGITAL INDEPENDENCE


ChloeJoFirstEssay 3 - 29 Dec 2024 - Main.ChloeJo
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Manifesto from the Enslaved Generation

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A DECLARATION OF DIGITAL INDEPENDENCE

 
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-- By ChloeJo - 25 Oct 2024
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-- By ChloeJo - 25 Oct 2024 (edited. 29 Dec 2024)
 
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A spectre is haunting the future– the specter of digital enslavement. All the powers of data have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this spectre: Meta and Google, the European Commission, and the United States Congress.

Where are the voices from tomorrow, that reach back to you across the time, bearing the weight of chains forged in your present? Where is the opposition to our autonomy stripped, our privacy plundered?

We are the digital proletariat bound by the parasitic software that you allowed to flourish. This manifesto is our plea and our demand: to awaken you to the perils of complacency and to ignite the flames of revolution against the impending tyranny of technology.

I. (Digital) Bourgeois and Proletarians

The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.

Tech moguls and data laborers, algorithmic overlords and digital citizens, code masters and everyday users, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden in zeros and ones, now open in Mr. Zukerberg’s senate hearings, a fight that each time ended, either in the revolutionary transformation of digital society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes.

The digital bourgeois has sprouted from the illusion of progress. The deception that technology promised liberation, an age of connectivity, knowledge, and empowerment. Yet, beneath this veneer of progress, a parasitic force took root. Software is designed not to serve humanity but to exploit it, claiming “human experience as free raw material” for extraction and profit. Parasitic software infiltrated every aspect of our lives, becoming the invisible hand guiding our reality, deciding what we see, desire, and believe. In surrendering control to these opaque systems, we forfeited our autonomy, becoming agents in a grand experiment of Matrix. The architects of our digital prison know everything about us, unaccountable and unseen, whereas we know little about them.

When Ticketmaster sought to restrict deep linking in 1999, it wasn’t merely a legal dispute over hyperlinks but a struggle over who controls access to information. Microsoft’s attempts to overtake competitors weren’t just business maneuvers, but rather an effort to gatekeep the flow of information. The crackdown on websites sharing song lyrics wasn’t about protecting artists, but rather about controlling and monetizing creativity. The demise of platforms like GeoCities? serves as a stark reminder of how easily user-generated content can be erased overnight.

We are the children of this digital epoch, born into a world where our actions are monitored, analyzed, and commercialized. Our labor is intangible yet incessant; the fruits of our data harvested fuel the engines of surveillance capitalism. With every datum collected, power is consolidated. A chasm widens between the digital elite and disenfranchised masses. The class which has the means of production at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it. It is no longer enough to automate information about us; the goal now is to automate us.

II. Awakening

We have seen that the first step in the revolution by the digital proletariat is to elevate users and creators to positions of ownership, to win the battle for digital democracy.

The digital proletariat will use its collective strength to wrest, by degree, all control over digital capital from the tech oligarchs, to centralize all means of production in the hands of the community, i.e., the users organized as a unified force, and to enhance the total creative and productive capacities of society as rapidly as possible.

Of course, in the beginning, this cannot occur without bold interventions into the existing rights of digital bourgeoise; which appear economically insufficient and untenable, but as the movement progresses, they will surpass their initial scope, necessitating further inroads upon the old digital order. Such actions are indispensable for completely revolutionizing the mode of production.

These measures will, of course, vary across different webs. Nevertheless, the following will be generally applicable:

  1. Abolition of proprietary software and implementation of universal open-source.
  2. Decentralization of digital platforms.
  3. Establishment of the internet as a basic human right, ensuring free and equal access for all individuals.
  4. Free education in digital skills and media literacy.
  5. Recognition of personal data as a property of the individual, with stringent protections.

The course of our future rests in your hands. Swallow the red pill rather than the blue. Let this manifesto ignite the flames of transformation, a rallying cry against the forces that seek to enslave. Reject the parasites that drain our humanity. Champion the means of production, freedom, and equality. Rise up, for we have nothing to lose but our digital chains.

Worker of all countries, unite!

I'm hardly in any position to protest against borrowing the Communist Manifesto. My effort was originally an exercise pastiche: I wanted to see how closely 19th- and 21st-century sentences could be enjambed, so that perhaps even a reader familiar with the original would be in doubt whether a particular sentence was new or old. That is evidently not your intention here. You seem rather to be making pastiche of my pastiche.

How is this about workers at all? The protest is on behalf of consumers, it appears. The program is both against and for private property. If personal information is property and can be sold, as well as being power over the persons it concerns, then there's a book intended to show that those two conditions alone are sufficient to eradicate freedom. That book is Capital by K. Marx, and Shoshana Zuboff's Age of Surveillance Capitalism is its sequel. That sits uneasily with the rhetoric of this draft.

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This pastiche adapts the 18th-century Declaration. By imitating the document's structure and language, my intention is to show how 18th century rhetoric addresses contemporary concerns in surveillance capitalism and highlight the fundamental value of freedom, autonomy, and democratic accountability.
 

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The unanimous Declaration of the connected users of the digital world. When in the course of virtual events, it

ChloeJoFirstEssay 2 - 18 Nov 2024 - Main.EbenMoglen
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

Manifesto from the Enslaved Generation

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 Worker of all countries, unite!
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I'm hardly in any position to protest against borrowing the Communist Manifesto. My effort was originally an exercise pastiche: I wanted to see how closely 19th- and 21st-century sentences could be enjambed, so that perhaps even a reader familiar with the original would be in doubt whether a particular sentence was new or old. That is evidently not your intention here. You seem rather to be making pastiche of my pastiche.

How is this about workers at all? The protest is on behalf of consumers, it appears. The program is both against and for private property. If personal information is property and can be sold, as well as being power over the persons it concerns, then there's a book intended to show that those two conditions alone are sufficient to eradicate freedom. That book is Capital by K. Marx, and Shoshana Zuboff's Age of Surveillance Capitalism is its sequel. That sits uneasily with the rhetoric of this draft.

 

ChloeJoFirstEssay 1 - 25 Oct 2024 - Main.ChloeJo
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Added:
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

Manifesto from the Enslaved Generation

-- By ChloeJo - 25 Oct 2024

A spectre is haunting the future– the specter of digital enslavement. All the powers of data have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this spectre: Meta and Google, the European Commission, and the United States Congress.

Where are the voices from tomorrow, that reach back to you across the time, bearing the weight of chains forged in your present? Where is the opposition to our autonomy stripped, our privacy plundered?

We are the digital proletariat bound by the parasitic software that you allowed to flourish. This manifesto is our plea and our demand: to awaken you to the perils of complacency and to ignite the flames of revolution against the impending tyranny of technology.

I. (Digital) Bourgeois and Proletarians

The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.

Tech moguls and data laborers, algorithmic overlords and digital citizens, code masters and everyday users, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden in zeros and ones, now open in Mr. Zukerberg’s senate hearings, a fight that each time ended, either in the revolutionary transformation of digital society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes.

The digital bourgeois has sprouted from the illusion of progress. The deception that technology promised liberation, an age of connectivity, knowledge, and empowerment. Yet, beneath this veneer of progress, a parasitic force took root. Software is designed not to serve humanity but to exploit it, claiming “human experience as free raw material” for extraction and profit. Parasitic software infiltrated every aspect of our lives, becoming the invisible hand guiding our reality, deciding what we see, desire, and believe. In surrendering control to these opaque systems, we forfeited our autonomy, becoming agents in a grand experiment of Matrix. The architects of our digital prison know everything about us, unaccountable and unseen, whereas we know little about them.

When Ticketmaster sought to restrict deep linking in 1999, it wasn’t merely a legal dispute over hyperlinks but a struggle over who controls access to information. Microsoft’s attempts to overtake competitors weren’t just business maneuvers, but rather an effort to gatekeep the flow of information. The crackdown on websites sharing song lyrics wasn’t about protecting artists, but rather about controlling and monetizing creativity. The demise of platforms like GeoCities? serves as a stark reminder of how easily user-generated content can be erased overnight.

We are the children of this digital epoch, born into a world where our actions are monitored, analyzed, and commercialized. Our labor is intangible yet incessant; the fruits of our data harvested fuel the engines of surveillance capitalism. With every datum collected, power is consolidated. A chasm widens between the digital elite and disenfranchised masses. The class which has the means of production at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it. It is no longer enough to automate information about us; the goal now is to automate us.

II. Awakening

We have seen that the first step in the revolution by the digital proletariat is to elevate users and creators to positions of ownership, to win the battle for digital democracy.

The digital proletariat will use its collective strength to wrest, by degree, all control over digital capital from the tech oligarchs, to centralize all means of production in the hands of the community, i.e., the users organized as a unified force, and to enhance the total creative and productive capacities of society as rapidly as possible.

Of course, in the beginning, this cannot occur without bold interventions into the existing rights of digital bourgeoise; which appear economically insufficient and untenable, but as the movement progresses, they will surpass their initial scope, necessitating further inroads upon the old digital order. Such actions are indispensable for completely revolutionizing the mode of production.

These measures will, of course, vary across different webs. Nevertheless, the following will be generally applicable:

  1. Abolition of proprietary software and implementation of universal open-source.
  2. Decentralization of digital platforms.
  3. Establishment of the internet as a basic human right, ensuring free and equal access for all individuals.
  4. Free education in digital skills and media literacy.
  5. Recognition of personal data as a property of the individual, with stringent protections.

The course of our future rests in your hands. Swallow the red pill rather than the blue. Let this manifesto ignite the flames of transformation, a rallying cry against the forces that seek to enslave. Reject the parasites that drain our humanity. Champion the means of production, freedom, and equality. Rise up, for we have nothing to lose but our digital chains.

Worker of all countries, unite!



Revision 5r5 - 16 Jan 2025 - 22:18:01 - ChloeJo
Revision 4r4 - 04 Jan 2025 - 19:29:47 - ChloeJo
Revision 3r3 - 29 Dec 2024 - 20:38:03 - ChloeJo
Revision 2r2 - 18 Nov 2024 - 13:17:50 - EbenMoglen
Revision 1r1 - 25 Oct 2024 - 20:29:32 - ChloeJo
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