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Friday, May 9, 2008

A Reply to "Comcasticular Cancer"

What I've written below isn't really a rebuttal to Jake's post - Comcasticular Cancer - even though it reads a bit like one. Think of the two article as one "choose-your-own-adventure" story. ("choose-your-own-adventure" = "choose-how-the-Telecoms-will-abuse-their-market-concentration")


(1a) "Where does metering end up?" - Jake.
Currently ISPs have no way of making more money for providing more of that delicious internet stuff. Add metering and they will have an incentive to invest in abundance and compete to deliver more of the good for less of the green... like every other commodity business.



(1b) "At that cost, it's easy to imagine media such as music and video will once again be primarily obtained in physical form." - Jake.
I'm going to go out on a limb and assume that the cost of putting together a book and getting it on a shelf - the printing, the shipping, the staffing, the tatoo-removal for the staffing... is much more expense per unit of physical media, than for virtual media. Yet the difference between the cost that Joe Consumer will pay fom Harry Potter and that Scary-Bald-Guy-Who-Always-Dies-At-The-End-And-The-Returns-In-The-Next-Book On Tape at Borders, and the price I will pay for that recording on iTunes is pretty much the same. Thus, it's likely that content providers and purveyors of copyrighted material will pay the ISP to go fast and not cost you more - i.e. making one-on-one deals with the ISPs to make their downloads cheaper for internet users.

Needless to say... that's horrible. That's like the worst thing that could conceivably happen. Stephen King - the master of horror himself - sipping wholesome chamomile tea on his favorite floral pattern love-seat in his picturesque Bangor, Maine estate - couldn't think of a worse thing to have happen. This outcome would grant the Telecos the ability to...

(a) extract rents from all the businesses that use high-speed internet to serve their customers
and...
(b) choose winners in those downstream markets. (i.e. You get the service that ponies up the most cash to ATT, rather than the service that could have provided the best product.)


(2-6) The question is 'Is there effective competition or competition regulation in the ISP market?'
If the answer is no on both accounts, then Jacob's completely right; collaboration is going to get prohibitively expensive - or their will be a "Google-Docs" style solution for very large pieces of data. If the Federal Trade Commission does its job - preventing collusion and structuring the industry so that it achieves dynamic efficiency - then that won't happen. The price of internet services will fall and ISPs will rush to provide more bandwidth.


Conclusion

Competition... well... I don't want to say it's never going to happen, but how much do you trust the FCC and FTC to do the right thing?

Not much?

Me neither.

So we can't count on competition (due to the past behavior of both the regulators and the companies themselves.) And there's no other way - that I can see - to make the Telecos invest in internet infrastructure as quickly as would be best (i.e. keep us competitive with the rest of the world) while maintaining a situation wherein the internet's potential for collaboration and economic democratization is nurtured.

So what do we do?

(1) Treat the internet as critical national infrastructure and have the US taxpayer fund the deployment of big old fat lines to every house in America.
(2) See #1...

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Thursday, May 8, 2008

Concept Experiment #1: Romance

Let us take as an assumption that Romance (or, the Romantic Person) does conceptually, or as a conceptual disposition, what any other disposition cannot: it believes in likeness above difference. It believes, before even speaking, that its temperament is mirrored in the external universe- that the harmony of its spirit is already manifest, already active. This is a given. Richard P. Feynman, the physicist, says: “[t]here is nothing that living things do that cannot be understood from the point of view that they are made of atoms acting according to the laws of physics… [t]he question is, of course, is it going to be possible to amalgamate everything, and merely discover that this world represents different aspects of one thing?” Here I think we could also consider Hegel. A symbol is two things being thrown together. A logical proposition is two things being thrown together that we normally throw together. A metaphor is two unlike things being thrown together to create new truth and meaning.

It must be true that there is more likeness in things than difference (most of the universe being composed of hydrogen and helium), and so it is vital for both the retention of culture and the preservation of human intelligence to place a higher value on activities and insights which reconcile concepts and experience of concepts, or, the measuring of concepts up against singular, personal experience. Of course, I am speaking here of poetry.

Romance, despite some popular trends of thought, is not dead; it’s merely being smothered by consumerism and sterilized by scientists. Romance is not in a location- though it can be, of course; some rocky crag or mossy creek bed can contain a certain quantity of appeal. It is not in a profession- though jumping from planes and spying on mistresses may perhaps illicit the romantic impulse. It is not in a manner of expression or attire- a bon vivant persona- a certain swagger in the hips. It is not in lavish expense- it is not in the briefcase encrusted with diamonds- it is not in the wind or the unattained other, even, though he or she may appear the quintessence of beauty. Romance of the most gorgeous kind, I think, is found in the inner eye- as a choice of perspective- it colors, from itself, the universe as hopeful-as freshly born- the morning whispers, to a romantic temperament, the fresh insight of pillow-cased hills and undulating curtains. It does not matter what these things are made of, or even, we could expect, what they “truly are” in one sense or another from some other perspective. Romance should not be measured against correspondence- it is a new possibility in which we ourselves might correspond. It is no more deceptive than ideas themselves. Romance is not an idea proper, it is a method of approach.

If we admit that there is always choice- a kind of intentional flavoring- to perception- then it seems there is nothing whatsoever wrong with choosing to witness the romantic possibility of the world- no more wrong than “seeing” quarks and atoms, or imposing a gradient of mathematics over the visible world and certainly not less useful!
In a way, allowing things to always appear as they might yet be is the only realistic disposition- particularly since we admit that change generates so much of our experience from its’ invisible belly- that we ourselves are, to use a well-worn expression, “subject to change”- change occurs to us, we are inside change- ripening with it, at the same moment, like a blushing apple- filling with it, cracking at our very own tired old seams- leaking the unknown thrill of yet-unseen projects and persons. Once we accept this, singular reference, while useful, pales in comparison to metaphor- the creation of which, claims Aristotle, is “ . . . a mark of genius, for to make good metaphors implies an eye for resemblances” (Poetics and Rhetoric). Philosophy distancing itself from Poetry is like Romeo distancing himself from Juliet.

That change defines us is no new insight- though it never ceases to frighten us into our sad, sterile corners. We cling to our singular identities- we analyze our reflection against what we claim to have already seen in ourselves- thus dogmatism and intolerance. The absurdity of this position- that we are always behind and ahead of ourselves makes life no less meaningful. Romance, then, is the attitude of always meaning more- of expecting and hoping, of suspending altogether the tongue-twisted rhetoric of skepticism and silencing the churning ills of disbelief. The best Romance believes all things- not just the normative, stereotyped things- not just hearts and chocolates, but real, human things- the freckles, the cellulite, the barbed wire, the Civil War- believes and believes and makes it new again with a flair for something better. The light blends fantastically in the dark inner iris- pulsing out in a thousand dimensions, refusing to submit to monadic reference. And, of course, as romance chooses, we choose romance- not as a force of nature, but as a gentle sloping path in the woods, bending into breathtaking horizons… Bauchelard claims that “The metaphor is~ an origin, the origin of an image which acts directly, immediately.” In living towards limitlessness, Romance affirms the natural relationship- the natural potential- of one person to a very, very complicated universe.
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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Comcasticular Cancer

Comcast is chewing the cud and considering metering their broadband service. While this business model is very common around the world, they'll be one of the first major US providers if they go through with it as planned.

Some... *ahem* EFF... have suggested metering as a net neutrality compromise since it is a way for ISPs to raise profits, control Bit Torrent (P2P) usage, and keep the internet "neutral". But this is not really the case when you dive in to the specifics. The EFF, for all its good, I believe is wildly mistaken in discussing metering as a possible solution to Comcast's under-handed dealings.

So who loses under a metered system most of all? People in low socioeconomic areas, artists, entrepreneurs, video and audio streaming services, small businesses, and pretty much anyone who does anything of substance on the internet.

Com'on, let's dance...

(1) Where does metering end up? Comcast's 250GB test seems like a lot (and actually Comcast currently bans users at about 90GB) - and it is by today's standards. In a year or two with increasing storage and transfer rates, not so much. I'm guessing they are testing the waters of public opinion and eventually settle on a range similar limit to other per-byte ISPs (500mb-100GB). In most places, 5-20GB is considered "normal use" and that isn't very much playing room for your average web surfer these days. Even worse, $40 US gets you about 5-10GB per month in Australia. It could within reason (especially if you look around the world) reach the point where $40/mo buys the ability to only check your email and do basic web browsing (~5GB). At that cost, it's easy to imagine media such as music and video will once again be primarily obtained in physical form. Just like the internet never happened. Take that, Al Gore. Own stock in Borders Books? Maybe you should. It's cheap right now.

(2) Metering reduces ability to collaborate. If a user is working with a video crew in NY and I'm in LA, transferring video or music tracks or whatever back and forth would be extremely expensive. One 1 minute of 1080p HD video is about 8GB uncompressed. Using a standard consumer HD camcorder, a minute is about 4GB. It's cheaper to overnight hard drives around, but clearly prohibitively expensive for people trying to film an amateur video. Even a 3-minute music track in an audio program can easily be more than a few gigabytes in size.

(3) Metering reduces legal use of P2P services. Believe it or not, Bit Torrent is extremely important as a commercial tool for software deployment because it allows companies with little or no server infrastructures to propagate their software without paying the high server costs required. For an example on the art and entertainment side of things, Nine Inch Nails just released an album for free over Bit Torrent. There is an 80mb mp3 version, a 250mb CD-quality version, and a 1.2GB studio quality version (higher quality than CD). Only Richie Rich would want to seed (share) files if the meter is running, so the 1.2GB version would be next to impossible to release for free and musicians and enthusiasts would miss out on being able to remix and use neat stuff like 24/96 recordings. Same goes for movie releases by any amateur director or videographer.

(4) Metering reduces ability to share. How do you get your videos, audio, pictures, or any other data out there if every time you send it to someone it goes on the meter. Messaging or emailing someone a file is out of the question since you would need to transfer the file many times to get it to numerous people. You'll need storage online so you only have to upload it once - and that is a serious investment.

(5) The end of the beginning of the era video streaming and rentals. A video to YouTube is currently 250-300kps with talk of increasing size and quality in the foreseeable future. That's around a gigabyte per hour of YouTube. If you watch streaming much, you might want to go back to cable. And that's really low quality video even by internet streaming standards. Other video services, such as Hulu use much higher quality video. And AppleTVs and Xbox Video are even higher still - with an HD moves tanking in at as much as 7GB (btw, sent to you quickly via Bit Torrent technology - see #3). So you can see the dilemma. Own any Netflix stock?

(6) Disenfranchisement of various socioeconomic groups. I'm going to tread lightly here, but it's a subject close to Net Neutrality as well. So let's try a couple vague examples: let's say you are a bright kid who wants to start a web service out of your house - maybe sending singing video-grams. Nope. Can't. Not enough money for all that bandwidth. How about working on a new studio album for internet release. Sorry. Can't download those audio packs or virtual instruments or samples. And can't share your raw music with people because Bit Torrent is too expensive and MySpace has too many restrictions. Forget about doing anything on your own terms or at least without ads for dating services all over your content.

I'm not going to get into these, but here are additional items to think about:

Gigabytes do not stay constant. Phones can get away with metered minutes, because a minute is a minute no matter what and just as useful for communication now as it was 500 years ago. However a gigabyte becomes less and less useful every day. The cost of a gigabyte of storage drops around 50-75% every year. And in general, 3.5" hard drives double in capacity about every 1-2 years in recent history. Will the cost of metered internet keep up with this? Maybe, but doesn't seem likely.

RIAA, MIAA, and Comcast sandwich. Metering really, really serves the RIAA and MIAA since music and video sharing will be obliterated. But it also harms legal and hobby uses of multimedia.

Future uses of the internet are unknown. What other high-bandwidth but awesome technologies will never be produced due to high consumer cost?

How expensive is bandwidth at cost for Comcast? Rough estimates put it in the fraction of a penny per gigabyte. Clearly clever and funny advertising is major overhead, though.

The final quagmire. Take a peek at Australia's meter internet implementation: http://bc.whirlpool.net.au/bc/?action=search.
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Monday, May 5, 2008

Congress' Cheap Date: A Father-Son Conversation

Some extended thoughts on international trade, from an e-mail exchange. (I'm the verbose one, my conservative dad is the foil.)

Feel free to ignore...


Dad,

The definition of a free trade agreement with 2nd and 3rd World countries: We give you our jobs; in return we get cheaper junk that sells for pennies at Walmart – perfect product for our now-unemployed population.

[The extension of this: We can’t afford to wean ourselves off of free trade agreements once they go into effect, because our Middle America population (including those now-unemployed) can no longer afford the higher price of the old Made-in-USA product. Camera pans to Bob, a retired or laid-off steel worker in Cleveland, who says, “My Colombian socks are only 99 cents a pair at the Dollar Store. I can’t pay $3 a pair!” Politicians then rally around Bob.]

Meanwhile our ever-patriotic American companies make greater profits on Wall Street by outsourcing our jobs. So, um, I think there’s some trickle-down to Middle America from that revenue, right? It’s just not trickle-down of jobs. It’s trickle-down other stuff – products that are more in line with your reduced-income family…

Slowly more cynical,

Matt

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If only economics was as simple as a 30 second sound bit by a politician from any party. And while Wall Street and self-indulgent corporations are easy targets, I find it interesting that unions are rarely subject to the same criticisms.

Dad

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I don’t think econ is that simple either. But it makes for a good point. The point in his quote being that, in Colombia, fighting for worker’s rights is a deadly proposition. (Side note: I loathe unions in a developed industry in a developed country. However they are VERY essential for the bourgeoning economies in the 2nd and 3rd World, where the employers have carte blanche when it comes to employee treatment.)

Before Annie went into labor, I was having an interesting conversation with Ezra. We were talking about international trade and “American” multi-national companies. I have been in a bit of a philosophical conundrum since listening to Pat Buchanan’s book on CD. Everything on it I either very much agreed with or very much disagreed with, except one issue. As you know, he’s virulently pro-American and populist in a blue collar sort of way. The one issue he brought up, which I hadn’t thought about, was the idea of questioning our support (financial/political/tax-wise/etc.) of American companies when they do not always act in ways that benefit America.

While I’m not ready to go protest in Flint, Michigan, there is something that Buchanan said that struck a cord. I guess for me it started with the realization that, oh yeah, the government has hundreds of ways in which is tries to benefit corporations. These benefits, mostly in the forms of specific legislation, are a GOOD thing. However they should be offered only to companies that prove themselves GOOD to America – rather than to any “American” company that happens to have an HQ in the States and a big enough lobbying arm to get it’s needs met in government.

My basic change in philosophy is this: Instead of giving benefit to any company that had it’s start in America, we should give benefit to companies that give benefit to America. Since this is a philosophy, it must be grounded in practical application. This is where I hit a rut. How do you quantify a company that is “good” to America and one that is not? The simple answer is to give NO benefit to any company. But that doesn’t make sense. As a government of the American people, the government SHOULD try to give some competitive advantage to American companies. That’s nationalism. But right now we’re in a situation where the standard of what qualifies as an “American” company is so blurred that, for example, we could give heaps of benefit to a company that does all it’s manufacturing outside our borders and only “benefits” the American public through a) stock dividends and b) the selling of cheaper goods to the American public. (Is B really a benefit?)

Matt

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Got to run for plane so I'll read this later, but if you can find it, there was an interesting article on the President of Peru and what he's done with the Peruvian economy. Saturday's WSJ.

Dad

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Interesting interview with the Pres of Peru. Sounds like they are heading in a direction that any 2nd or 3rd World country should try to follow. I think this is a perfectly wise and logical direction for a country in such a position. And personally I like the idea of an economic conservative who came from a liberal background. It makes me think he’d be close to my ideal: true compassionate conservatism.

But how does Peruvian progress bode for America? I mean it feels good to see/help desperately poor people pull themselves up by their own bootstraps; but America can by NO MEANS compete with Peru in any sector that Peru is capable of creating an industry in: textiles, manufacturing, agriculture, etc. So is what’s good for Peru good for America?

I guess the good ole neo-Smithian argument would be: Let America focus on the industries that it can dominate in. And let Peru become competitive in the industries it can compete in.

My difficulty with this idea is that there is too much of America – too many people, too much bounty in the land. What I mean by that is, if we only focus on, for example, white collar jobs, technology, entertainment, etc., (our industries where we have a clear competitive advantage), we can’t possibly a) employ our entire population and b) use our natural resources to their greatest advantage. I’m imagining a future where, there are enough Perus around the world that we no longer can afford to grow any of our own crops. [This reality has already hit for Midwestern agriculture. I’m waiting for it to hit the Central Valley, now that Mexico and Chile are giving us all those delicious, CHEAPER fruits.]

The important distinction I need to make at this juncture is: I’m not saying we blindly support all dying industries. However there are some industries that it makes sense for us to support – those which make America less reliant on foreign powers, and those which capitalize on our bounteous natural resources.

A perfect example is agriculture in the Midwest (and I argue ag in the Central Valley too, within the next 20 years). While a true free markets believer cringes at farm subsidies (“Inefficiency!!”), what do we do with the entire middle of our country otherwise? Just let it grow back into the plains? Tell everyone in every small town to move to Chicago, Kansas City, St. Louis, Minneapolis, or Rust Belt cities? We would be squandering millions of acres of our land, just because Peru has a lower cost of living. Then what happens if/when Peru’s economy implodes or Peru decides it hates us and won’t sell to us?

There are other natural-resources-related industries where this is increasingly apparent: oil, natural gas, mining. Imagine if we managed to wean ourselves off of foreign oil? A pipe dream, I know - pun intended. But it could happen if we use basic economics: decrease our demand (invest in clean technology, public transportation, fuel economy) and increase our supply (drill in Alaska more, invest in turning the Midwest shale into oil, invest in ocean exploration, reopen the oil drills in Oildale).

In all of these industries we have to decide: Take the Smithian stance and let other countries produce it for us, thereby increasing our dependence on OPEC, etc.; or take the Buchanan stance and always do what’s makes America less dependent on foreign powers.

As I’m prone to do, I believe the middle stance is best: Be open to trade, but always with an eye on what’s TRULY best for America. (I say “truly” because “cheaper goods” is not justification enough.) I envision a foreign policy where we always ask: Is this trade overall better for America? How are we balancing our independence with our interest in these imported goods?

Right now our materialism has got the best of us. With foreign trade we let free markets rule. A Chinese importer can bring us an even cheaper widget and we just say, “Good. It’s cheaper. We’ll take it.” [A whole side conversation could be had about the quality of the product (e.g. leaded toys, tainted pet food, pesticides on produce) and the quality of production (e.g. child labor in Dongguan , mining disasters in rural China).] Added to that, we have some large economically-depressed regions across the country where people can now only afford the cheapest good – the “Walmart products” in shorthand.

So there’s my mini-essay. What are your thought?

Matt

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