It's
a Broadband Life
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
I'm trying
to order a hamburger, medium well, but the cook was involved in
heated argument with the customer who was insisting that DSL is
better and faster than cable for a home internet connection.
"Man, DSL rocks!"
"You are crazy.
DSL ain't nothing. Cable's bandwidth rocks!"
"You are paying
for nothing. You can't download nothing on cable!"
And so on.
A few years
ago, these guys would have been talking about the weather or the
game on tv. Now, they talk about their internet connections, using
a technical language (well, a few technical words) that few people
could understand a few months back.
As I wait for
my burger, which seems to be taking forever, I was able to reflect
on how broadband access is changing the face of middle-class life,
especially domestic life.
Before I tell
the following story, let me say upfront I'm really against it when
police bust down the doors of
a web domain owner and confiscate its servers on grounds that
it might be being used as a conduit for illegal downloads. The report
of this gross abuse against thpiratebay.org is wholly egregious
and a violation of human rights.
On the other
hand, I get my life back. For three or four days, my home internet
connection was running slow as black-strap molasses. It seems that
I found the culprit: a laptop managed by a certain young resident
in my home that was set to download the complete Harry Potter movie
set and a few Disney adventures.
You can set
the software to start a new one the instant the old one finishes,
so there's no telling how many movies were slotted for download.
If I hadn't put a stop to it, my internet connection would have
been clogged for the remainder of the decade.
For those of
you not in the know, PirateBay specialized in BitTorrent
downloads, the newest thing in web downloading that provides
access to movies and videos. BitTorrents are said to account for
35% of internet traffic.
These downloads
take an absurd amount of time. I used to complain about a 45 second
download. For kids these days, a download of half a day, a day and
a half, or even three days is completely normal. They run in the
background and the user hardly notices them.
But everyone
else does notice an extreme bandwidth shortage. I reminded the domestic
culprit in question that there is a reason they are called "torrent"
files, as in (Webster’s) "a tumultuous outpouring," "a violent stream
of a liquid (as water or lava)," "a channel of a mountain stream."
It crushes all before it.
I could see
the future and it looked very much like the dial-up days. Remember
when we used to fight over who got to use the single phone line?
Then we got smart and got two phone lines, made the phone companies
crazy with insane phone number demands boom times for the
baby bells! just before we cancelled not only the new phone
line but the old one too, because we were all switching to high
speed, cell phones, and VOIP.
With BitTorrent,
I would again be stuck yelling upstairs: "Hey, can you pause your
week-long torrent download, so I can check my email?"
So, now there
are strict household rules on BitTorrent. They can only be done
between the hours of 11pm and 5am, or at times when no one else
is home. If there is anymore clogging the connection going on, two
warnings will be delivered. On the third time, there will be no
more. Period.
Now, that's
strict!
Of course all
this could change in a matter of months, given the increased demand
for bandwidth. It doesn't matter how many people are arrested, in
Sweden, Germany, or the US, or how many domains are taken off line.
There will always be another source and another user willing to
take the risk.
The saga of
BitTorrent use and abuse is nicely chronicled at Wikipedia,
which is another venue that was disparaged as ridiculous when it
came out but has since become essential to modern life. Can you
imagine the Oxford English Dictionary trying to keep up with our
vocabularies, which add new words by the day and hour?
After these
endless battles over broadband downloads, it is great to see at
least one company getting smart. Warner Brothers has decided that
if you can't beat them, join them. It will be offering legal torrents
of Star Wars: Revelations, and others are on the way.
We can see
the future here. Just as illegal downloads of music paved the way
for the spectacularly successful iTunes revolution, sites like PirateBay
will deserve credit for alerting mainstream move producers to a
new and licit way to make a profit.
Isn't
it interesting how the "criminal class" is increasingly shining
the light on the direction that praiseworthy web entrepreneurship
will take in the future? This alone shows that there is something
very wrong with copyright law that would lead so many innocents
to be snared while doing something that otherwise seems not the
slightest bit wrong.
Ah! At last
my hamburger is cooked, and served, the old fashioned way.
June
3, 2006
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Jeffrey
Tucker Archives
|