Today's links
- "Disenshittify or Die": My speech from Defcon 32.
- Hey look at this: Delights to delectate.
- This day in history: 2009, 2014, 2019, 2023
- Upcoming appearances: Where to find me.
- Recent appearances: Where I've been.
- Latest books: You keep readin' em, I'll keep writin' 'em.
- Upcoming books: Like I said, I'll keep writin' 'em.
- Colophon: All the rest.
"Disenshittify or Die" (permalink)
Last weekend, I traveled to Las Vegas for Defcon 32, where I had the immense privilege of giving a solo talk on Track 1, entitled "Disenshittify or die! How hackers can seize the means of computation and build a new, good internet that is hardened against our asshole bosses' insatiable horniness for enshittification":
https://info.defcon.org/event/?id=54861
This was a followup to last year's talk, "An Audacious Plan to Halt the Internet's Enshittification," a talk that kicked off a lot of international interest in my analysis of platform decay ("enshittification"):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rimtaSgGz_4
The Defcon organizers have earned a restful week or two, and that means that the video of my talk hasn't yet been posted to Defcon's Youtube channel, so in the meantime, I thought I'd post a lightly edited version of my speech crib. If you're headed to Burning Man, you can hear me reprise this talk at Palenque Norte (7&E); I'm kicking off their lecture series on Tuesday, Aug 27 at 1PM.
==
What the fuck happened to the old, good internet?
I mean, sure, our bosses were a little surveillance-happy, and they were usually up for sharing their data with the NSA, and whenever there was a tossup between user security and growth, it was always YOLO time.
But Google Search used to work. Facebook used to show you posts from people you followed. Uber used to be cheaper than a taxi and pay the driver more than a cabbie made. Amazon used to sell products, not Shein-grade self-destructing dropshipped garbage from all-consonant brands. Apple used to defend your privacy, rather than spying on you with your no-modifications-allowed Iphone.
There was a time when searching for an album on Spotify would get you that album – not a playlist of insipid AI-generated covers with the same name and art.
Microsoft used to sell you software â sure, it was buggy â but now they just let you access apps in the cloud, so they can watch how you use those apps and strip the features you use the most out of the basic tier and turn them into an upcharge.
What â and I cannot stress this enough â the fuck happened?!
Iâm talking about enshittification.
Hereâs what enshittification looks like from the outside. First, you see a company thatâs being good to its end users. Google puts the best search results at the top; Facebook shows you a feed of posts from people and groups you follow; Uber charges small dollars for a cab; Amazon subsidizes goods and returns and shipping and puts the best match for your product search at the top of the page.
Thatâs stage one, being good to end users. But thereâs another part of this stage, call it stage 1a). Thatâs figuring out how to lock in those users.
Thereâs so many ways to lock in users.
If youâre Facebook, the users do it for you. You joined Facebook because there were people there you wanted to hang out with, and other people joined Facebook to hang out with you.
Thatâs the old ânetwork effectsâ in action, and with network effects come âthe collective action problem." Because you love your friends, but goddamn are they a pain in the ass! You all agree that FB sucks, sure, but can you all agree on when itâs time to leave?
No way.
Can you agree on where to go next?
Hell no.
Youâre there because thatâs where the support group for your rare disease hangs out, and your bestie is there because thatâs where they talk with the people in the country they moved away from, then thereâs that friend who coordinates their kidâs little league car pools on FB, and the best dungeon master you know isnât gonna leave FB because thatâs where her customers are.
So youâre stuck, because even though FB use comes at a high cost â your privacy, your dignity and your sanity â thatâs still less than the switching cost youâd have to bear if you left: namely, all those friends who have taken you hostage, and whom you are holding hostage
Now, sometimes companies lock you in with money, like Amazon getting you to prepay for a yearâs shipping with Prime, or to buy your Audible books on a monthly subscription, which virtually guarantees that every shopping search will start on Amazon. After all, youâve already paid for it.
Sometimes, they lock you in with DRM, like HP selling you a printer with four ink cartridges filled with fluid that retails for more than $10,000/gallon and using DRM to stop you from refilling any of those ink carts or using a third-party cartridge. So when one cart runs dry, you have to refill it or throw away your investment in the remaining three cartridges and the printer itself.
Sometimes, itâs a grab bag:
- You canât run your Ios apps without Apple hardware;
-
you canât run your Apple music, books and movies on anything except an Ios app;
-
your iPhone uses parts pairing â DRM handshakes between replacement parts and the main system â so you canât use third-party parts to fix it; and
-
every OEM iPhone part has a microscopic Apple logo engraved on it, so Apple can demand that the US Customs and Border Service seize any shipment of refurb Iphone parts as trademark violations.
Think Different, amirite?
Getting you locked in completes phase one of the enshittification cycle and signals the start of phase two: making things worse for you to make things better for business customers.
For example, a platform might poison its search results, like Google selling more and more of its results pages to ads that are identified with lighter and lighter tinier and tinier type.
Or Amazon selling off search results and calling it an âadâ business. They make $38b/year on this scam. The first result for your search is, on average, 29% more expensive than the best match for your search. The first row is 25% more expensive than the best match. On average, the best match for your search is likely to be found seventeen places down on the results page.
Other platforms sell off your feed, like Facebook, which started off showing you the things you asked to see. But now, the quantum of content from the people you follow has dwindled to a homeopathic residue, leaving a void that Facebook fills with things that people pay to show you: boosted posts from publishers you havenât subscribed to, and, of course, ads.
Now, at this point you might be thinking âsure, if youâre not paying for the product, youâre the product.'
Bullshit!
Bull.
Shit.
The people who buy those Google ads? They pay more every year for worse ad-targeting and more ad-fraud.
Those publishers paying to nonconsensually cram their content into your Facebook feed? They have to do that because FB suppresses their ability to reach the people who actually subscribed to them.
The Amazon sellers with the best match for your query have to outbid everyone else just to show up on the first page of results. It costs so much to sell on Amazon that between 45 and 51% of every dollar an independent seller brings in has to be kicked up to Don Bezos and the Amazon crime family. Those sellers donât have the kind of margins that let them pay 51%. They have to raise prices in order to avoid losing money on every sale.
"But wait!" I hear you say!
[Come on, say it!]
"But wait! Things on Amazon arenât more expensive that things at Target, or Walmart, or at a mom and pop store, or direct from the manufacturer.
"How can sellers be raising prices on Amazon if the price at Amazon is the same as at is everywhere else?"
[Any guesses?!]
Thatâs right, they charge more everywhere. They have to. Amazon binds its sellers to a policy called âmost favored nation status,â which says they canât charge more on Amazon than they charge elsewhere, including direct from their own factory store.
So every seller that wants to sell on Amazon has to raise their prices everywhere else.
Now, these sellers are Amazonâs best customers. Theyâre paying for the product, and theyâre still getting screwed.
Paying for the product doesnât fill your vapid bossâs shriveled heart with so much joy that he decides to stop trying to think of ways to fuck you over.
Look at Apple. Remember when Apple offered every Ios user a one-click opt out for app-based surveillance? And 96% of users clicked that box?
(The other four percent were either drunk or Facebook employees or drunk Facebook employees.)
That cost Facebook at least ten billion dollars per year in lost surveillance revenue?
I mean, you love to see it.
But did you know that at the same time Apple started spying on Ios users in the same way that Facebook had been, for surveillance data to use to target users for its competing advertising product?
Your Iphone isnât an ad-supported gimme. You paid a thousand fucking dollars for that distraction rectangle in your pocket, and youâre still the product. Whatâs more, Apple has rigged Ios so that you canât mod the OS to block its spying.
If youâre not paying for the product, youâre the product, and if you are paying for the product, youâre still the product.
Just ask the farmers who are expected to swap parts into their own busted, half-million dollar, mission-critical tractors, but canât actually use those parts until a technician charges them $200 to drive out to the farm and type a parts pairing unlock code into their console.
John Deereâs not giving away tractors. Give John Deere a half mil for a tractor and you will be the product.
Please, my brothers and sisters in Christ. Please! Stop saying âif youâre not paying for the product, youâre the product.â
OK, OK, so thatâs phase two of enshittification.
Phase one: be good to users while locking them in.
Phase two: screw the users a little so you can be good to business customers while locking them in.
Phase three: screw everybody and take all the value for yourself. Leave behind the absolute bare minimum of utility so that everyone stays locked in to your pile of shit.
Enshittification: a tragedy in three acts.
Thatâs what enshittification looks like from the outside, but whatâs going on inside the company? What is the pathological mechanism? What sci-fi entropy ray converts an excellent and useful service into a pile of shit?
That mechanism is called twiddling. Twiddling is when someone alters the back end of a service to change how its business operates, changing prices, costs, search ranking, recommendation criteria and other foundational aspects of the system.
Digital platforms are a twiddlerâs utopia. A grocer would need an army of teenagers with pricing guns on rollerblades to reprice everything in the building when someone arrives whoâs extra hungry.
Whereas the McDonaldâs Investments portfolio company Plexure advertises that it can use surveillance data to predict when an app user has just gotten paid so the seller can tack an extra couple bucks onto the price of their breakfast sandwich.
And of course, as the prophet William Gibson warned us, âcyberspace is everting.' With digital shelf tags, grocers can change prices whenever they feel like, like the grocers in Norway, whose e-ink shelf tags change the prices 2,000 times per day.
Every Uber driver is offered a different wage for every job. If a driver has been picky lately, the job pays more. But if the driver has been desperate enough to grab every ride the app offers, the pay goes down, and down, and down.
The law professor Veena Dubal calls this âalgorithmic wage discrimination.' Itâs a prime example of twiddling.
Every youtuber knows what itâs like to be twiddled. You work for weeks or months, spend thousands of dollars to make a video, then the algorithm decides that no one – not your own subscribers, not searchers who type in the exact name of your video – will see it.
Why? Who knows? The algorithmâs rules are not public.
Because content moderation is the last redoubt of security through obscurity: they canât tell you what the como algorithm is downranking because then youâd cheat.
Youtube is the kind of shitty boss who docks every paycheck for all the rules youâve broken but wonât tell you what those rules were, lest you figure out how to break those rules next time without your boss catching you.
Twiddling can also work in some usersâ favor, of course. Sometimes platforms twiddle to make things better for end users or business customers.
For example, Emily Baker-White from Forbes revealed the existence of a back-end feature that Tiktokâs management can access they call the âheating tool.â
When a manager applies the heating tool to a performerâs account, that performerâs videos are thrust into the feeds of millions of users, without regard to whether the recommendation algorithm predicts they will enjoy that video.
Why would they do this? Well, hereâs an analogy from my boyhood. I used to go to this traveling fair that would come to Toronto at the end of every summer, the Canadian National Exhibition. If youâve been to a fair like the Ex, you know that you can always spot some guy lugging around a comedically huge teddy bear.
Nominally, you win that teddy bear by throwing five balls in a peach basket, but to a first approximation, no one has ever gotten five balls to stay in that peach basket.
That guy âwonâ the teddy bear when a carny on the midway singled him out and said, "fella, I like your face. Tell you what Iâm gonna do: you get just one ball in the basket and Iâll give you this keychain, and if you amass two keychains, Iâll let you trade them in for one of these galactic-scale teddy-bears."
Thatâs how the guy got his teddy bear, which he now has to drag up and down the midway for the rest of the day.
Why the hell did that carny give away the teddy bear? Because it turns the guy into a walking billboard for the midway games. If that dopey-looking Judas Goat can get five balls into a peach basket, then so can you.
Except you canât.
Tiktokâs heating tool is a way to give away tactical giant teddy bears. When someone in the TikTok brain trust decides they need more sports bros on the platform, they pick one bro out at random and make him king for the day, heating the shit out of his account.
That guy gets a bazillion views and he starts running around on all the sports bro forums trumpeting his success: I am the Louis Pasteur of sports bro influencers!"
The other sports bros pile in and start retooling to make content that conforms to the idiosyncratic Tiktok format. When they fail to get giant teddy bears of their own, they assume that itâs because theyâre doing Tiktok wrong, because they donât know about the heating tool.
But then comes the day when the TikTok Star Chamber decides they need to lure in more astrologers, so they take the heat off that one lucky sports bro and start heating up some lucky astrologer.
Giant teddy bears are all over the place: those Uber drivers who were boasting to the NYT ten years ago about earning $50/hour? The Substackers who were rolling in dough? Joe Rogan and his hundred million dollar Spotify payout? Those people are all the proud owners of giant teddy bears, and theyâre a steal.
Because every dollar they get from the platform turns into five dollars' worth of free labor from suckers who think they're just internetting wrong.
Giant teddy bears are just one way of twiddling. Platforms can play games with every part of their business logic, in highly automated ways, that allow them to quickly and efficiently siphon value from end users to business customers and back again, hiding the pea in a shell game conducted at machine speeds, until theyâve got everyone so turned around that they take all the value for themselves.
Thatâs the how: how the platforms do the trick where they are good to users, then lock users in, then maltreat users to be good to business customers, then lock in those business customers, then take all the value for themselves.
So now we know what is happening, and how it is happening, all thatâs left is why itâs happening.
Now, on the one hand, the why is pretty obvious. The less value that end-users and business customers capture, the more value there is left to divide up among the shareholders and the executives.
Thatâs why, but it doesnât tell you why now. Companies could have done this shit at any time in the past 20 years, but they didnât. Or at least, the successful ones didnât. The ones that turned themselves into piles of shit got treated like piles of shit. We avoided them and they died.
Remember Myspace? Yahoo Search? Livejournal? Sure, theyâre still serving some kind of AI slop or programmatic ad junk if you hit those domains, but theyâre gone.
And thereâs the clue: It used to be that if you enshittified your product, bad things happened to your company. Now, there are no consequences for enshittification, so everyoneâs doing it.
Letâs break that down: What stops a company from enshittifying?
There are four forces that discipline tech companies. The first one is, obviously, competition.
If your customers find it easy to leave, then you have to worry about them leaving
Many factors can contribute to how hard or easy it is to depart a platform, like the network effects that Facebook has going for it. But the most important factor is whether there is anywhere to go.
Back in 2012, Facebook bought Insta for a billion dollars. That may seem like chump-change in these days of eleven-digit Big Tech acquisitions, but that was a big sum in those innocent days, and it was an especially big sum to pay for Insta. The company only had 13 employees and a mere 25 million registered users.
But what mattered to Zuckerberg wasnât how many users Insta had, it was where those users came from.
[Does anyone know where those Insta users came from?]
Thatâs right, they left Facebook and joined Insta. They were sick of FB. Even though they liked the people there, they hated creepy Zuck, they hated the platform, so they left and they didnât come back.
So Zuck spent a cool billion to recapture them, a fact he put in writing in a midnight email to CFO David Ebersman, explaining that he was paying over the odds for Insta because his users hated him, and loved Insta. So even if they quit Facebook (the platform), they would still be captured by Facebook (the company).
Now, on paper, Zuckâs Instagram acquisition is illegal. But normally, that would be hard to stop, because youâd have to prove that he bought Insta with the intention of curtailing competition.
But in this case, Zuck tripped over his own dick: he put it in writing.
But Obamaâs DoJ and FTC just let that one slide, following the pro-monopoly policies of Reagan, Bush I, Clinton and Bush II, and setting an example that Trump would follow, greenlighting gigamergers like the catastrophic, incestuous Warner-Discovery marriage.
Indeed, for 40 years, starting with Carter, and accelerating through Reagan, the US has encouraged monopoly formation as an official policy, on the grounds that monopolies are âefficient.â
If everyone is using Google Search, thatâs something we should celebrate. It means theyâve got the very best search and wouldnât it be perverse to spend public funds to punish them for making the best product?
But as we all know, Google didnât maintain search dominance by being best. They did it by paying bribes. More than 20 billion per year to Apple alone to be the default Ios search, plus billions more to Samsung, Mozilla, and anyone else making a product or service with a search box on it, ensuring that you never stumble on a search engine thatâs better than theirs.
Which, in turn, ensured that no one smart invested big in rival search engines, even if they were visibly, obviously superior. Why bother making something better if Googleâs buying up all the market oxygen before it can kindle your product to life?
Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Amazon â theyâre not âmaking thingsâ companies, theyâre âbuying thingsâ companies, taking advantage of official tolerance for anticompetitive acquisitions, predatory pricing, market-distorting exclusivity deals and other acts specifically prohibited by existing antitrust law.
Their goal is to become too big to fail, because that makes them too big to jail, and that means they can be too big to care.
Which is why Google Search is a pile of shit, and everything on Amazon is dropshipped garbage that instantly disintegrates in a cloud of offgassed volatile organic compounds when you open the box.
Once companies no longer fear losing your business to a competitor, itâs much easier for them to treat you badly, because whatâre you gonna do?
Remember Lily Tomlin as Ernestine the AT&T operator in those old SNL sketches? âWe donât care. We donât have to. Weâre the phone company.â
Competition is the first force that serves to discipline companies and the enshittificatory impulses of their leadership, and we just stopped enforcing competition law.
It takes a special kind of smooth-brained asshole â that is, an establishment economist – to insist that the collapse of every industry from eyeglasses to vitamin C into a cartel of five or fewer companies has nothing to do with policies that officially encouraged monopolization.
Itâs like we used to put down rat poison, and we didnât have a rat problem. Then these dickheads convinced us that rats were good for us and we stopped putting down rat poison, and now rats are gnawing our faces off and theyâre all running around saying, "Whoâs to say where all these rats came from? Maybe it was that we stopped putting down poison, but maybe itâs just the Time of the Rats. The Great Forces of History bearing down on this moment to multiply rats beyond all measure!"
Antitrust didnât slip down that staircase and fall spine-first onto that stiletto: they stabbed it in the back and then they pushed it.
And when they killed antitrust, they also killed regulation, the second force that disciplines companies. Regulation is possible, but only when the regulator is more powerful than the regulated entities. When a company is bigger than the government, it gets damned hard to credibly threaten to punish that company, no matter what its sins.
Thatâs what protected IBM for all those years when it had its boot on the throat of the American tech sector. Do you know, the DOJ fought to break up IBM in the courts from 1970 to 1982, and that every year, for 12 consecutive years, IBM spent more on lawyers to fight the USG than the DOJ Antitrust Division spent on all the lawyers fighting every antitrust case in the entire USA?
IBM outspent Uncle Sam for 12 years. People called it âAntitrustâs Vietnam.â All that money paid off, because by 1982, the president was Ronald Reagan, a man whose official policy was that monopolies were âefficient." So he dropped the case, and Big Blue wriggled off the hook.
Itâs hard to regulate a monopolist, and itâs hard to regulate a cartel. When a sector is composed of hundreds of competing companies, they compete. They genuinely fight with one another, trying to poach each other's customers and workers. They are at each other's throats.
Itâs hard enough for a couple hundred executives to agree on anything. But when theyâre legitimately competing with one another, really obsessing about how to eat each other's lunches, they canât agree on anything.
The instant one of them goes to their regulator with some bullshit story, about how itâs impossible to have a decent search engine without fine-grained commercial surveillance; or how itâs impossible to have a secure and easy-to-use mobile device without a total veto over which software can run on it; or how itâs impossible to administer an ISPâs network unless you can slow down connections to servers whose owners arenât paying bribes for âpremium carriage"; thereâs some other company saying, âThatâs bullshitâ
âWeâve managed it! Hereâs our server logs, our quarterly financials and our customer testimonials to prove it.â
100 companies are a rabble. They're a mob. They canât agree on a lobbying position. Theyâre too busy eating each othersâ lunch to agree on how to cater a meeting to discuss it.
But let those hundred companies merge to monopoly, absorb one another in an incestuous orgy, turn into five giant companies, so inbred theyâve got a corporate Habsburg jaw, and they become a cartel.
Itâs easy for a cartel to agree on what bullshit theyâre all going to feed their regulator, and to mobilize some of the excess billions theyâve reaped through consolidation, that freed them from âwasteful competition," so they can capture their regulators completely.
You know, Congress used to pass federal consumer privacy laws? Not anymore.
The last time Congress managed to pass a federal consumer privacy law was in 1988: The Video Privacy Protection Act. Thatâs a law that bans video-store clerks from telling newspapers what VHS cassettes you take home. In other words, it regulates three things that have effectively ceased to exist.
The threat of having your video rental history out there in the public eye was not the last or most urgent threat the American public faced, and yet, Congress is deadlocked on passing a privacy law.
Tech companiesâ regulatory capture involves a risible and transparent gambit that is so stupid, itâs an insult to all the good hardworking risible transparent ruses out there.
Namely, they claim that when they violate your consumer, privacy or labor rights, itâs not a crime, because they do it with an app.
Algorithmic wage discrimination isnât illegal wage theft: we do it with an app.
Spying on you from asshole to appetite isnât a privacy violation: we do it with an app.
And Amazonâs scam search tool that tricks you into paying 29% more than the best match for your query? Not a ripoff. We do it with an app.
Once we killed competition – stopped putting down rat poison – we got cartels – the rats ate our faces. And the cartels captured their regulators – the rats bought out the poison factory and shut it down.
So companies arenât constrained by competition or regulation.
But you know what? This is tech, and tech is different.Itâs different because itâs flexible. Because our computers are Turing-complete universal von Neumann machines. That means that any enshittificatory alteration to a program can be disenshittified with another program.
Every time HP jacks up the price of ink, they invite a competitor to market a refill kit or a compatible cartridge.
When Tesla installs code that says you have to pay an extra monthly fee to use your whole battery, they invite a modder to start selling a kit to jailbreak that battery and charge it all the way up.
Lemme take you through a little example of how that works: imagine this is a product design meeting for our companyâs website, and the guy leading the meeting says, âDudes, you know how our KPI is topline ad-revenue? Well, Iâve calculated that if we make the ads just 20% more invasive and obnoxious, weâll boost ad rev by 2%.â
This is a good pitch. Hit that KPI and everyone gets a fat bonus. We can all take our families on a luxury ski vacation in Switzerland.
But hereâs the thing: someoneâs gonna stick their arm up – someone who doesnât give a shit about user well-being, and that person is gonna say, âI love how you think, Elon. But has it occurred to you that if we make the ads 20% more obnoxious, then 40% of our users will go to a search engine and type 'How do I block ads?'"
I mean, what a nightmare! Because once a user does that, the revenue from that user doesnât rise to 102%. It doesnât stay at 100%. It falls to zero, forever.
[Any guesses why?]
Because no user ever went back to the search engine and typed, 'How do I start seeing ads again?'
Once the user jailbreaks their phone, or discovers third party ink, or develops a relationship with an independent Tesla mechanic whoâll unlock all the DLC in their car, that user is gone, forever.
Interoperability â that latent property bequeathed to us courtesy of Herrs Turing and Von Neumann and their infinitely flexible, universal machines – that is a serious check on enshittification.
The fact that Congress hasnât passed a privacy law since 1988 Is countered, at least in part, by the fact that the majority of web users are now running ad-blockers, which are also tracker-blockers.
But no oneâs ever installed a tracker-blocker for an app. Because reverse engineering an app puts you in jeopardy of criminal and civil prosecution under Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, with penalties of a 5-year prison sentence and a $500k fine for a first offense.
And violating its terms of service puts you in jeopardy under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986, which is the law that Ronald Reagan signed in a panic after watching Wargames (seriously!).
Helping other users violate the terms of service can get you hit with a lawsuit for tortious interference with contract. And then thereâs trademark, copyright and patent.
All that nonsense we call âIP,â but which Jay Freeman of Cydia calls âFelony Contempt of Business Model."
So if weâre still at that product planning meeting and now itâs time to talk about our app, the guy leading the meeting says, âOK, so weâll make the ads in the app 20% more obnoxious to pull a 2% increase in topline ad rev?â
And that person who objected to making the website 20% worse? Their hand goes back up. Only this time they say, âWhy donât we make the ads 100% more invasive and get a 10% increase in ad rev?"
Because it doesn't matter if a user goes to a search engine and types, âHow do I block ads in an app?" The answer is: you can't. So YOLO, enshittify away.
âIPâ is just a euphemism for âany law that lets me reach outside my companyâs walls to exert coercive control over my critics, competitors and customers,â and âappâ is just a euphemism for âa web page skinned with the right IP so that protecting your privacy while you use it is a felony.â
Interop used to keep companies from enshittifying. If a company made its client suck, someone would roll out an alternative client; if they ripped a feature out and wanted to sell it back to you as a monthly subscription, someone would make a compatible plugin that restored it for a one-time fee, or for free.
To help people flee Myspace, FB gave them bots that youâd load with your login credentials. It would scrape your waiting Myspace messages and put âem in your FB inbox, and login to Myspace and paste your replies into your Myspace outbox. So you didnât have to choose between the people you loved on Myspace, and Facebook, which launched with a promise never to spy on you. Remember that?!
Thanks to the metastasis of IP, all that is off the table today. Apple owes its very existence to iWork Suite, whose Pages, Numbers and Keynote are file-compatible with Microsoftâs Word, Excel and Powerpoint. But make an IOS runtime thatâll play back the files you bought from Appleâs stores on other platforms, and theyâll nuke you til you glow.
FB wouldnât have had a hope of breaking Myspaceâs grip on social media without that scrape, but scrape FB today in support of an alternative client and their lawyers will bomb you til the rubble bounces.
Google scraped every website in the world to create its search index. Try and scrape Google and theyâll have your head on a pike.
When they did it, it was progress. When you do it to them, thatâs piracy. Every pirate wants to be an admiral.
Because this handful of companies has so thoroughly captured their regulators, they can wield the power of the state against you when you try to break their grip on power, even as their own flagrant violations of our rights go unpunished. Because they do them with an app.
Tech lost its fear of competition, it neutralized the threat from regulators, and then put them in harness to attack new startups that might do unto them as they did unto the companies that came before them.
But even so, there was a force that kept our bosses in check. That force was us. Tech workers.
Tech workers have historically been in short supply, which gave us power, and our bosses knew it.
To get us to work crazy hours, they came up with a trick. They appealed to our love of technology, and told us that we were heroes of a digital revolution, who would âorganize the worldâs information and make it useful,â who would âbring the world closer together.â
They brought in expert set-dressers to turn our workplaces into whimsical campuses with free laundry, gourmet cafeterias, massages, and kombucha, and a surgeon on hand to freeze our eggs so that we could work through our fertile years.
They convinced us that we were being pampered, rather than being worked like government mules.
This trick has a name. Fobazi Ettarh, the librarian-theorist, calls it âvocational awe, and Elon Musk calls it being âextremely hardcore.â
This worked very well. Boy did we put in some long-ass hours!
But for our bosses, this trick failed badly. Because if you miss your motherâs funeral to hit a deadline, and then your boss orders you to enshittify that product, you are gonna experience a profound moral injury, which you are absolutely gonna make your boss share.
Because what are they gonna do? Fire you? They canât hire someone else to do your job, and you can get a job thatâs even better at the shop across the street.
So workers held the line when competition, regulation and interop failed.
But eventually, supply caught up with demand. Tech laid off 260,000 of us last year, and another 100,000 in the first half of this year.
You canât tell your bosses to go fuck themselves, because theyâll fire your ass and give your job to someone whoâll be only too happy to enshittify that product you built.
Thatâs why this is all happening right now. Our bosses arenât different. They didnât catch a mind-virus that turned them into greedy assholes who donât care about our usersâ wellbeing or the quality of our products.
As far as our bosses have always been concerned, the point of the business was to charge the most, and deliver the least, while sharing as little as possible with suppliers, workers, users and customers. Theyâre not running charities.
Since day one, our bosses have shown up for work and yanked as hard as they could on the big ENSHITTIFICATION lever behind their desks, only that lever didnât move much. It was all gummed up by competition, regulation, interop and workers.
As those sources of friction melted away, the enshittification lever started moving very freely.
Which sucks, I know. But think about this for a sec: our bosses, despite being wildly imperfect vessels capable of rationalizing endless greed and cheating, nevertheless oversaw a series of actually great products and services.
Not because they used to be better people, but because they used to be subjected to discipline.
So it follows that if we want to end the enshittocene, dismantle the enshitternet, and build a new, good internet that our bosses canât wreck, we need to make sure that these constraints are durably installed on that internet, wound around its very roots and nerves. And we have to stand guard over it so that it canât be dismantled again.
A new, good internet is one that has the positive aspects of the old, good internet: an ethic of technological self-determination, where users of technology (and hackers, tinkerers, startups and others serving as their proxies) can reconfigure and mod the technology they use so that it does what they need it to do, and so that it canât be used against them.
But the new, good internet will fix the defects of the old, good internet, the part that made it hard to use for anyone who wasnât us. And hell yeah we can do that. Tech bosses swear that itâs impossible, that you canât have a conversation with a friend without sharing it with Zuck; or search the web without letting Google scrape you down to the viscera; or have a phone that works reliably without giving Apple a veto over the software you install.
They claim that itâs a nonsense to even ponder this kind of thing. Itâs like making water thatâs not wet. But thatâs bullshit. We can have nice things. We can build for the people we love, and give them a place thatâs worthy of their time and attention.
To do that, we have to install constraints.
The first constraint, remember, is competition. Weâre living through an epochal shift in competition policy. After 40 years with antitrust enforcement in an induced coma, a wave of antitrust vigor has swept through governments all over the world. Regulators are stepping in to ban monopolistic practices, open up walled gardens, block anticompetitive mergers, and even unwind corrupt mergers that were undertaken on false pretenses.
Normally this is the place in the speech where Iâd list out all the amazing things that have happened over the past four years: the enforcement actions that blocked companies from becoming too big to care, and the ones that scared companies away from even trying.
Like Wiz, which just noped out of the largest acquisition offer in history, turning down Googleâs $23b cashout, and deciding to, you know, just be a fucking business that makes money by producing a product that people want and selling it at a competitive price.
Normally, Iâd be listing out FTC rulemakings that banned noncompetes nationwide. Or the new merger guidelines the FTC and DOJ cooked up, which â among other things â establish that the agencies should be considering whether a merger will negatively impact privacy.
I had a whole section of this stuff in my notes, a real victory lap, but I deleted it all this week.
[Can anyone guess why?]
Thatâs right! This week, Judge Amit Mehta, ruling for the DC Circuit of these United States of America, in the docket 20-3010, a case known as United States v. Google LLC, found that âGoogle is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly," and ordered Google and the DOJ to propose a schedule for a remedy, like breaking the company up.
So yeah, that was pretty fucking epic.
Now, this antitrust stuff is pretty esoteric, and I wonât gatekeep you or shame you if you wanna keep a little distance on this subject. Nearly everyone is an antitrust normie, and that's OK. But if youâre a normie, youâre probably only catching little bits and pieces of the narrative, and let me tell you, the monopolists know it and they are flooding the zone.
The Wall Street Journal has published over 100 editorials condemning FTC Chair Lina Khan, saying sheâs an ineffectual do-nothing, wasting public funds chasing doomed, quixotic adventures against poor, innocent businesses accomplishing nothing.
[Does anyone out there know who owns the Wall Street Journal?]
Thatâs right, itâs Rupert Murdoch. Do you really think Rupert Murdoch pays his editorial board to write one hundred editorials about someone whoâs not getting anything done?
The reality is that in the USA, in the UK, in the EU, in Australia, in Canada, in Japan, in South Korea, even in China, we are seeing more antitrust action over the past four years than over the preceding forty years.
Remember, competition law is actually pretty robust. The problem isnât the law, itâs the enforcement priorities. Reagan put antitrust in mothballs 40 years ago, but that elegant weapon from a more civilized age is now back in the hands of people who know how to use it, and theyâre swinging for the fences.
Next up: regulation.
As the seemingly inescapable power of the tech giants is revealed for the sham it always was, governments and regulators are finally gonna kill the âone weird trickâ of violating the law, and saying âIt doesnât count, we did it with an app.â
Like in the EU, theyâre rolling out the Digital Markets Act this year. Thatâs a law requiring dominant platforms to stand up APIs so that third parties can offer interoperable services.
So a co-op, a nonprofit, a hobbyist, a startup, or a local government agency will eventually be able to offer, say, a social media server that can interconnect with one of the dominant social media silos, and users who switch to that new platform will be able to continue to exchange messages with the users they follow and groups they belong to, so the switching costs will fall to damned near zero.
Thatâs a very cool rule, but whatâs even cooler is how itâs gonna be enforced. Previous EU tech rules were âregulationsâ as in the GDPR – the General Data Privacy Regulation. EU regs need to be âtransposedâ into laws in each of the 27 EU member states, so they become national laws that get enforced by national courts.
For Big Tech, that means all previous tech regulations are enforced in Ireland, because Ireland is a tax haven, and all the tech companies fly Irish flags of convenience.
Hereâs the thing: every tax haven is also a crime haven. After all, if Google can pretend itâs Irish this week, it can pretend to be Cypriot, or Maltese, or Luxembougeious next week. So Ireland has to keep these footloose criminal enterprises happy, or theyâll up sticks and go somewhere else.
This is why the GDPR is such a goddamned joke in practice. Big tech wipes its ass with the GDPR, and the only way to punish them starts with Irelandâs privacy commissioner, who barely bothers to get out of bed. This is an agency that spends most of its time watching cartoons on TV in its pajamas and eating breakfast cereal. So all of the big GDPR cases go to Ireland and they die there.
This is hardly a secret. The European Commission knows whatâs going on. So with the DMA, the Commission has changed things up: the DMA is an âAct,â not a âRegulation,â meaning it gets enforced in the EUâs federal courts, bypassing the national courts in crime-havens like Ireland.
In other words, the âwe violate privacy law, but we do it with an appâ gambit that worked on Irelandâs toothless privacy watchdog is now a dead letter, because EU federal judges have no reason to swallow that obvious bullshit.
Here in the US, the dam is breaking on federal consumer privacy law â at last!
Remember, our last privacy law was passed in 1988 to protect the sanctity of VHS rental history. It's been a minute.
And the thing is, there's a lot of people who are angry about stuff that has some nexus with America's piss-poor privacy landscape. Worried that Facebook turned grampy into a Qanon? That Insta made your teen anorexic? That TikTok is brainwashing millennials into quoting Osama Bin Laden? Or that cops are rolling up the identities of everyone at a Black Lives Matter protest or the Jan 6 riots by getting location data from Google? Or that Red State Attorneys General are tracking teen girls to out-of-state abortion clinics? Or that Black people are being discriminated against by online lending or hiring platforms? Or that someone is making AI deepfake porn of you?
A federal privacy law with a private right of action – which means that individuals can sue companies that violate their privacy – would go a long way to rectifying all of these problems
There's a pretty big coalition for that kind of privacy law! Which is why we have seen a procession of imperfect (but steadily improving) privacy laws working their way through Congress.
If you sign up for EFFâs mailing list at eff.org, weâll send you an email when these come up so you can call your Congressjerk or Senator and talk to them about it. Or better yet, make an appointment to drop by their offices when theyâre in their districts, and explain to them that youâre not just a registered voter from their district, youâre the kind of elite tech person who goes to Defcon, and then explain the bill to them. That stuff makes a difference.
What about self-help? How are we doing on making interoperability legal again, so hackers can just fix shit without waiting for Congress or a federal agency to act?
All the action here these days is in the state Right to Repair fight. Weâre getting state R2R bills, like the one that passed this year in Oregon that bans parts pairing, where DRM is used to keep a device from using a new part until it gets an authorized technicianâs unlock code.
These bills are pushed by a fantastic group of organizations called the Repair Coalition, at Repair.org, and theyâll email you when one of these laws is going through your statehouse, so you can meet with your state reps and explain to the JV squad the same thing you told your federal reps.
Repair.orgâs prime mover is Ifixit, who are genuine heroes of the repair revolution, and Ifixitâs founder, Kyle Wiens, is here at the con. When you see him, you can shake his hand and tell him thanks, and thatâll be even better if you tell him that youâve signed up to get alerts at repair.org!
Now, on to the final way that we reverse enshittification and build that new, good internet: you, the tech labor force.
For years, your bosses tricked you into thinking you were founders in waiting, temporarily embarrassed entrepreneurs who were only momentarily drawing a salary.
You certainly werenât workers. Your power came from your intrinsic virtue, not like those lazy slobs in unions who have to get their power through that kumbaya solidarity nonsense.
It was a trick. You were scammed. The power you had came from scarcity, and so when the scarcity ended, when the industry started ringing up six-figure annual layoffs, your power went away with it.
The only durable source of power for tech workers is as workers, in a union.
Think about Amazon. Warehouse workers have to piss in bottles and have the highest rate of on-the-job maimings of any competing business. Whereas Amazon coders get to show up for work with facial piercings, green mohawks, and black t-shirts that say things their bosses donât understand. They can piss whenever they want!
Thatâs not because Jeff Bezos or Andy Jassy loves you guys. Itâs because theyâre scared youâll quit, and they donât know how to replace you.
Time for the second obligatory William Gibson quote: âThe future is here, itâs just not evenly distributed.â You know whoâs living in the future? Those Amazon blue-collar workers. They are the bleeding edge.
Drivers whose eyeballs are monitored by AI cameras that do digital phrenology on their faces to figure out whether to dock their pay, warehouse workers whose bodies are ruined in just months.
As tech bosses beef up that reserve army of unemployed, skilled tech workers, then those tech workers – you all – will arrive at the same future as them.
Look, I know that youâve spent your careers explaining in words so small your boss could understand them that you refuse to enshittify the companyâs products, and I thank you for your service.
But if you want to go on fighting for the user, you need power thatâs more durable than scarcity. You need a union. Wanna learn how? Check out the Tech Workers Coalition and Tech Solidarity, and get organized.
Enshittification didnât arise because our bosses changed. They were always that guy.
They were always yankinâ on that enshittification lever in the C-suite.
What changed was the environment, everything that kept that switch from moving.
And thatâs good news, in a bankshot way, because it means we can make good services out of imperfect people. As a wildly imperfect person myself, I find this heartening.
The new, good internet is in our grasp: an internet that has the technological self-determination of the old, good internet, and the greased-skids simplicity of Web 2.0 that let all our normie friends get in on the fun.
Tech bosses want you to think that good UX and enshittification canât ever be separated. Thatâs such a self-serving proposition you can spot it from orbit. We know it, 'cause we built the old good internet, and weâve been fighting a rear-guard action to preserve it for the past two decades.
Itâs time to stop playing defense. It's time to go on the offensive. To restore competition, regulation, interop and tech worker power so that we can create the new, good internet weâll need to fight fascism, the climate emergency, and genocide.
To build a digital nervous system for a 21st century in which our children can thrive and prosper.
(Image: Marco Silva, @fak3r@mastodon.social, CC BY 4.0, cropped)
Hey look at this (permalink)
- Itâs the Land, Stupid: How the Homebuilder Cartel Drives High Housing Prices https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/its-the-land-stupid-how-the-homebuilder
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2 Fast 2 Legal: How EFF Helped a Security Researcher During DEF CON 32 https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/08/2-fast-2-legal-how-eff-helped-security-researcher-during-def-con-32
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Matt Yglesias Is Wrong About Lina Khanâs Record https://therevolvingdoorproject.org/matt-yglesias-is-wrong-about-lina-khans-record/
This day in history (permalink)
#15yrsago Campaign to get UK government to apologise for hounding Alan Turing to his death https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/campaign-to-win-official-apology-for-alan-927356
#10yrsago NYPD arrest NY gubernatorial challenger for videoing street-arrest https://web.archive.org/web/20140817215021/http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2014/08/14/new-york-governor-candidate-arrested-recording-aggressive-police-behavior/
#10yrsago EFF guide to cell phone use for US protesters https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/08/cell-phone-guide-protesters-updated-2014-edition
#10yrsago Life-sized nude sculpture made from typewriter parts https://cargocollective.com/jeremymayer
#10yrsago Paranoid Paul: get notified of silent, sneaky terms of service updates https://www.paranoidpaul.com
#10yrsago Microsoft wants to rename Internet Explorer to shed negative associations https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2014/08/microsoft-considered-renaming-internet-explorer-to-escape-its-checkered-past/
#10yrsago FBI and AG sued by American muslims over no-fly list https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2014/08/five-american-muslims-sue-fbi-attorney-general-over-travel-watchlist/
#5yrsago Amazon pays happy warehouse workers to tweet about how happy they are whenever someone complains about warehouse conditions https://twitter.com/surasshu/status/1161916352468176896
#5yrsago Wework loses $5200/customer, lost $1.3B in H1/2019 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/wework-ipo-office-sharing-prospectus-s-1-shows-losses/
#5yrsago Googlers circulate petition demanding a moratorium on contracts with US border agencies https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-08-14/google-workers-demand-company-not-work-with-u-s-border-agencies
#5yrsago Defeating Appleâs Faceidâs proof-of-life by putting tape over glassesâ lenses https://threatpost.com/researchers-bypass-apple-faceid-using-biometrics-achilles-heel/147109/
#5yrsago The guy who figured out Bernie Madoffâs scam now says GE is about to go bankrupt https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/16/investing/ge-harry-markopolos-interview/index.html
#5yrsago Announcement of Tumblrâs sale to WordPress classified as pornography by Tumblrâs notorious âadult contentâ filter https://memex.craphound.com/2019/08/16/announcement-of-tumblrs-sale-to-wordpress-classified-as-pornography-by-tumblrs-notorious-adult-content-filter/
#5yrsago Judge orders the State of Georgia to be prepared for pen-and-paper balloting by March 2020 https://apnews.com/article/primary-elections-us-news-ap-top-news-voting-voting-machines-abd2949881514e42a50f2025595c9c2a
#5yrsago Art Spiegelman pulled his Marvel Folio Society intro after Disney demanded that he not criticize Trump https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/aug/16/art-spiegelmans-marvel-essay-refused-publication-for-orange-skull-trump-dig
#5yrsago Major corporations blacklist ads on news stories that include the words âTrump,â âracism,â âgun,â âBrexit,â âsuicideâ and more https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2019/08/advertisers-blacklisting-news-other-stories-with-controversial-words-like-trump.html
#5yrsago In California, the 2020 elections will feature an epic battle to allow cities to reinstate property taxes https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2019/08/2020-property-tax-battle-in-california-could-be-epic.html
#5yrsago 1000fps video reveals the underlying action of a stinging antâs venom injection for the very first time https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jygY-ZHPxQ
#1yrago At long last, a meaningful step to protect Americans' privacy https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/16/the-second-best-time-is-now/#the-point-of-a-system-is-what-it-does
Upcoming appearances (permalink)
- Disenshittify or die! (Burning Man, Palenque Norte, 7&E), Aug 27, 13h
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Talking caterpillar Q&A (Burning Man, Liminal Labs, 830&C), Aug 28, 12h
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Albacon (Albany/remote), Sep 13-15
https://albacon.org/2024/ -
TusCon (Tucson), Nov 8-10
https://tusconscificon.com/
Recent appearances (permalink)
- Tech Rights & The Future of Privacy (Synthetic Minds)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD5iAV1YmO4 -
Enzittification with Ed Zitron & Brian Merchant
https://omny.fm/shows/better-offline/enzittification-with-cory-doctorow-brian-merchant -
The Paradigm Shift
https://paradigm-shift-on-4zzz.pinecast.co/episode/dbf12eaf/tech-criticism-with-cory-doctorow
Latest books (permalink)
- The Bezzle: a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (the-bezzle.org). Signed, personalized copies at Dark Delicacies (https://www.darkdel.com/store/p3062/Available_Feb_20th%3A_The_Bezzle_HB.html#/).
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"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org). Signed, personalized copies at Dark Delicacies (https://www.darkdel.com/store/p3007/Pre-Order_Signed_Copies%3A_The_Lost_Cause_HB.html#/)
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"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
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"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com. Signed copies at Dark Delicacies (US): and Forbidden Planet (UK): https://forbiddenplanet.com/385004-red-team-blues-signed-edition-hardcover/.
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"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
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"Attack Surface": The third Little Brother novel, a standalone technothriller for adults. The Washington Post called it "a political cyberthriller, vigorous, bold and savvy about the limits of revolution and resistance." Order signed, personalized copies from Dark Delicacies https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1840/Available_Now%3A_Attack_Surface.html
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"How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism": an anti-monopoly pamphlet analyzing the true harms of surveillance capitalism and proposing a solution. https://onezero.medium.com/how-to-destroy-surveillance-capitalism-8135e6744d59?sk=f6cd10e54e20a07d4c6d0f3ac011af6b) (signed copies: https://www.darkdel.com/store/p2024/Available_Now%3A__How_to_Destroy_Surveillance_Capitalism.html)
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"Little Brother/Homeland": A reissue omnibus edition with a new introduction by Edward Snowden: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250774583; personalized/signed copies here: https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1750/July%3A__Little_Brother_%26_Homeland.html
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"Poesy the Monster Slayer" a picture book about monsters, bedtime, gender, and kicking ass. Order here: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781626723627. Get a personalized, signed copy here: https://www.darkdel.com/store/p2682/Corey_Doctorow%3A_Poesy_the_Monster_Slayer_HB.html#/.
Upcoming books (permalink)
- Picks and Shovels: a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books, February 2025
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Unauthorized Bread: a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2025
Colophon (permalink)
Today's top sources:
Currently writing:
- Enshittification: a nonfiction book about platform decay. Saturday's progress: 759 words (39641 words total).
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A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING
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Picks and Shovels, a Martin Hench noir thriller about the heroic era of the PC. FORTHCOMING TOR BOOKS JAN 2025
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Vigilant, Little Brother short story about remote invigilation. FORTHCOMING ON TOR.COM
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Spill, a Little Brother short story about pipeline protests. FORTHCOMING ON TOR.COM
Latest podcast: AI's productivity theater https://craphound.com/news/2024/08/04/ais-productivity-theater/
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