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| Newmedia {AT} aol.com: Re: <.nettime> Conflicting paradigms <...> |
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From: Newmedia {AT} aol.com
Date: Tue, 8 Jun 1999 12:27:52 EDT
Subject: Re: <.nettime> Conflicting paradigms, Internet history and ICANN
To: johan.hjelm {AT} 42forlag.com
CC: nettime-l {AT} desk.nl
Johan:
Yes, I believe that a *new* form of governance is exactly what is being
attempted.
Your choice of Soros is a good one. His effort to catapult his ideas about a
*new* form of global bank off the back of last year's economic meltdown are
the case in point. Leave the World Bank and IMF in place, he says, but
supercede them with *my* new bank.
The UN still exists, but it has been superceded in Serbia by NATO. (Which is
one of the big issues in the current talks, since Russia and others want to
bolster the UN.) NATO still exists, but the EU is going to build their own
force (with past NATO-head running it) to potentially supercede NATO.
We are in an era where "world government" is toying with superceding the
institutions which were put in place following WW II. Nixon scrapped Bretton
Woods, but now the approach is to carve out new areas of responsibility and
gradually emasculate the older institutions. So goes the attack on the
nation-state, for instance.
Many believe that ICANN is a part of this larger puzzle. As a completely new
(or so it is claimed) phenomenon, the Internet deserves a new institutional
approach.
Those who believe that Esther Dyson, for instance, is simply a anti-statist,
libertarian on the one hand, or an auto-cratic, backroom schemer on the other
hand, miss who she is, her history and her context.
Best,
Mark Stahlman
P.S. Few anylonger view the key early Internet funding as simply an attempt
at Cold War net-hardening. The more accurate view is that the Net (and
related technologies) arose largely as a result of ARPA's interest in finding
a way to get (often arrogant) top scientists together to brainstorm without
having to put them on planes. (Rarely did this brainstorming have
"operational" goals, btw.) This was augmented by sincere efforts (yes, with
military funding) to enhance human communications in general -- quite
idealistic, as it turns out -- which were understood and approved at the
highest levels in the funding agencies. The notion that the military (or spy
agencies) is out to kill and not to change society -- even "progressively" --
is not supported by the historic record. Now, as for George Soros' idealism
. . . <g>