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Transcript of SFP#6 about regulation with Professor Lawrence Lessig

Back to the episode SFP#5

This is a transcript created with the Free Software tool Whisper. For more information and feedback reach out to podcast@fsfe.org

WEBVTT

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Welcome to the fifth episode of the Software Freedom Podcast.

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This podcast is presented to you by the Free Software Foundation Europe.

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We are a charity that empowers users to control technology.

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I'm Matthias Kirschner.

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I'm the President of the Free Software Foundation Europe.

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I'm doing this podcast today with Katarina Nokun.

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Hello.

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We are very happy to welcome today Lauren Slasik.

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He's the inventor of creative comments

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and a former board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

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He was also on the board of our sister organization

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with the Free Software Foundation.

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And he just recently published a new book.

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They don't represent us, we're claiming our democracy.

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And he's the author of the book Code and Adder Laws of Cyberspace from 1999,

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which was for myself the most influential book

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for my thinking about software freedom.

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Nice to have you in our podcast.

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We are very happy to have friends to get a slot with you.

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And we are huge fans.

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We read your books.

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And when we prepare for the podcast or when we prepare for the question,

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I ask myself all those specific moments in your life

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when you realize that software freedom is important to you.

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Well, I don't pretend that I had this insight

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before hearing Richard Stallman talk.

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And so Richard Stallman, when I don't remember exactly whether it was

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I had read something and then saw him speak

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or it saw him speak and then read something.

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But the point is that was the experience

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that forced me to begin to think about the character

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of the infrastructure of this social world

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that was being constructed by technology.

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And so that was the cause, that was the trigger.

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And that then led me to think about a lot of things

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which produced that book and then a bunch of stuff afterwards.

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In this book which is Code and Adder Laws of Cyberspace,

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you explain how individuals are regulated by different mechanisms.

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Though you separate between the market, social norms, law and architecture,

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can you briefly explain how these kinds of regulation

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differ from one another and how they affect us in our daily life?

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Right, so the law is the one that's most intuitive.

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If you have a sense that it says if you speed, you will be penalized

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or if you commit murder, you will be sent to jail.

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So this is an ex-post punishment, punishment after the fact,

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imposed by the state.

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But you can distinguish that from norms.

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So if you're in a society that's governed by significant norms,

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the norms also are subject to punishment.

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If you violate the norms, but their punishment comes from the community,

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it doesn't come from the state.

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So it's decentralized enforcement of that rule.

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So both of them are rules, but ones can force by the state,

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ones in force by our community.

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The market, of course, which itself is constructed by law and norms,

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I don't mean to say that they're not intermixed,

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but the market sets the conditions on you having access to certain things.

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So if I sing, you'll pay me a certain amount.

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If I sing less, you'll pay me more, right?

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Because if I sing, it's just like that.

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But the point is there's a conditionality, which is the price,

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and that's the way the market regulates.

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And then the one that's most important in thinking about the internet

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is the way that architecture can regulate.

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So in real space, we understand that whenever you go over a speed bump,

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speed bump is trying to force you to slow down.

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It's using the physics of automobiles and roads to do that.

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Lecture halls don't typically have beautiful windows

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that you can look at and see what's going on the outside,

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because professor wants you to be focused on the professor.

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Those are uses of architecture in real space,

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but when you think about that and you see the way the net is,

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you can begin to recognize that the net is architected, too.

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It's architected to enable certain things,

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and to disable certain things.

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And when the internet was first architected,

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it was architected to enable innovation.

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It was architected to enable privacy.

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It was architected to enable free speech.

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And the creativity that would create.

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And the point of my book code was to say,

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all of those characteristics were contingent.

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We can imagine the internet being architected

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to take away the opportunity to innovate,

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to take away privacy, to take away the capacity

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to engage in free speech, take away the opportunity

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for creativity on top.

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When I wrote that, people said, oh, no, no, no.

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You're misunderstanding it's the nature of the net.

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It has to protect these things.

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And my point was there's no nature here.

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It's just built.

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It could be built differently.

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And the governments in business have an incentive

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to build it differently.

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Governments in business want a world

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where innovation can be controlled in favor of the incumbents.

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Where privacy is gone, because we

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surveil you in no exactly what you think and care about.

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So we can sell things to you or punish you.

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Where speech is conditional, like your freedom to speak,

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can be punished based on what you say.

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And where creativity is regulated

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to control by the creator, maybe the copyright holders

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and the like.

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So that was the point of the recognition

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of the way architecture regulates.

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But the general point, which we continue

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to use outside of the study of cyber law,

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the general point about how they interact

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is the important point here.

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So you want to regulate smoking, which I want to regulate,

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because I think it's a terrible, terrible thing.

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You know, the law could forbid people

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under the age of 18 from smoking

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and in most many places in the states it does.

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The law could try to stigmatize smokers.

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California had an extraordinary campaign

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where they tried to make smokers seem like weak people,

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like pathetic people.

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So it was like rallying norms against smokers.

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You can use the market to regulate smoking.

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You can tax cigarettes.

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Of course, we tax cigarettes and we subsidize tobacco

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in the United States.

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It's a little confused, but the point is,

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you can make it so the price makes it harder to smoke.

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And you can regulate the architecture of cigarettes.

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The FDA for a while was considering

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deeming cigarettes nicotine delivery devices

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so that they would be drugs so that they could regulate

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the quantity of nicotine that was in a cigarette.

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And if you could lower the nicotine,

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you would lower the addictiveness of the cigarettes.

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The point is, regulators kind of think of those things

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together.

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And always get it to say, what's the right mix?

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Like, should I use architecture?

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Should I use law?

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Should I use norms?

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Or how do I bring them all together?

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Do you have other examples of how government

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are regulating with architecture?

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I mean, if software or other architecture as well?

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Well, sure.

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In real space, there are great regulations

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the government makes about architecture.

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For example, the physically disabled

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have enormous freedom now relative to what they had

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50 years ago, because governments have regulated

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literally architecture of buildings to say,

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you can't build a building unless you have ramps

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or you have access for people who are in wheelchairs.

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Or you build it so that ATM so that blind people can use the ATM.

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So those are specific regulations directed at that.

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And the internet context, we're seeing all sorts of eagerness

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to regulate in the context of the emergence of blockchain

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technology, because there's a fear of governments

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that's the opportunity of a generalized

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like Ethereum-like blockchain technology

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could begin to displace a lot of a sovereignty

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or sovereign power of governments.

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And in the context of the war on, quote, war on terror,

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there's significant evidence that the government explicitly

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required technology companies to build technical backdoors

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into their security technologies

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to enable the government to get in, in case there were

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some reason the government had to be in.

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Now, of course, what that did was render

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most of these technologies vulnerable to Chinese hackers.

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So businesses in the United States who believe

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they bought, quote, security software

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have found that they've bought insecurity software

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because it's been architected to be insecure.

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But those are imperfect examples.

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The methodology, though, I think is certainly what we think

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is the future of regulation.

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As a user, I often don't know what a certain software

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exactly does on my computer because the code itself

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is regarded as a business secret.

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Do you think that a such a generous structure

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of how software is built in our society

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and how it is protected by copyright and patents

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also affects the general distribution of power

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in a digitalized society?

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Absolutely.

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So the most obvious troubling example of this

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is, for example, California is contracting out

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with technology companies for AI technologies

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to help decide whether somebody should stay in prison

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or somebody should get parole.

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These algorithms look at a billion different things

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and then you decide you should get out and you should not.

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When civil rights, civil liberties advocates

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have said, what's the algorithm?

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How's the algorithm making that decision?

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Like, what are the factors?

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The companies have said, we're not going to tell you.

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It's a trade secret.

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And astonishingly, so far there's no strong position

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from the government or from the courts to say, you can't do that.

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You can't regulate with secret rules.

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Yet that's effectively what they're doing.

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So I'm not sure I would go so far as saying

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that you should not permit proprietary software.

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I certainly support free software,

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but I'm not sure we should ban proprietary software.

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But I would say that if there is software

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that is effectively regulating, especially

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through the government, we need to have a way

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to understand how it's regulating.

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And so whether that's building sophisticated auditing

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structures like we have financial auditing,

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you can imagine technology audits that have a capacity

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for evaluating what's going on or requiring source code

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to be revealed to somebody.

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I don't know exactly how to do it, but I do know the principle.

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There can't be regulation of people in a free society

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that can't justify itself.

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And proprietary software that is being used to determine

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whether you get out of jail or not is regulating us

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without justifying itself, and that can't be allowed.

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I mean, this example of our judges in some US states

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make decisions as Emmy for us Europeans

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is very clear that you should forbid such a thing

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or even you should not allow to do such things.

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But do you think it makes also a general difference of code

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that is used by government institutions

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is proprietary or free software in other contexts?

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So I think it's stupid for governments

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to deploy proprietary code in most important governmental

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function contexts.

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And the reason for that is most of the functions

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that governments perform around the world

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are pretty redundant.

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I mean, you've got welfare systems in every major country.

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They all figure out who's entitled to a welfare who's not.

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How do you distribute it?

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You have social security systems.

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You have systems for checking imports, whatever.

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It would be much better to be in a world

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where you opted into the free software of those systems

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and could build and add to the free software of those systems.

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So that the advantages that are embedded in any place

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that this is being deployed get shared everywhere.

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That would be an ecology that would be

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in the long run better, more robust and cheaper.

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The problem is that too many government policy makers

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don't have any clue about the underlying technologies.

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And it always is the, we used to say, 30 years ago,

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the simplest decision was to choose IBM.

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The simplest decision today is to choose Microsoft.

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Like who could disagree with choosing Microsoft?

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But obviously, there are so many advantages

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to beginning to move in a direction

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that is enabling more competition

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and free software is obviously one of those dimensions.

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When I argue for software freedom,

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some people sometimes say, we don't need more regulation

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because I think it's, I'm talking about regulating

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in this aspect.

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And I think it's a strange aspect

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because there are already lots of regulation

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in favor of proprietary software

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like governments often support keeping the workings

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of software secret by forbidding to analyze

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how it works in publishing results.

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They grant monopolies on long copyright terms on software

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and they allow software to be patented.

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Do you think that we have too much

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or just a wrong kind of regulation in place

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when it comes to software?

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Well, I certainly think that in the context of copyright,

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which is what I know in this field

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of so-called intellectual property,

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obviously Richard Solomon would be very upset

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with that word, but in that field,

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I know a lot about copyright.

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It's certainly the case that copyright is a regulation

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that is wildly more punitive and expansive

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than it needs to be to achieve its own objectives.

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The copyright term now is life of the author

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plus 70 years in the United States

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for 95 years for corporate works.

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There is no corporation that decides whether or not

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to invest in a project based on getting a return

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for 95 years.

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Nobody does that.

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And even worse is where you have countries

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which basically Europe just went through this craziness,

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extending the term for existing copyrights.

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If the purpose of a copyright is to create an incentive

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to produce something, not even the EU parliament

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can create the incentive to do something in the past.

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So no matter what, George Gershwin

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is not going to produce anything more.

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So there's no reason to extend the copyrights

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from the 1920s and 1930s.

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Yet this seems like an automatic thing to policy makers

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because again, they have this image that property is good

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and more property is better.

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That is wrong in a thousand ways

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when we talk about the regulation of called copyright.

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And I think a good dose of libertarian anti-government instinct

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would do a lot of good here, right?

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So if you want to be anti, you know,

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this is where, you know, I'm not a libertarian,

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but I find a lot of allies who are libertarians

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anti-government types about copyright regulation

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because they can see.

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It's just basically crony capitalists

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capturing a corrupted political process

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to leverage their power into protecting

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their own against future competitors.

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And even beyond competition,

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they're protecting against criticism

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or use of their work in ways that they don't like the speech

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component as it relates to them.

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And I just, you know, can't begin to see

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what the justification for that is yet

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we still have governments that do it again and again.

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In your recent work,

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you often address the problem of lobbying and corruption.

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And would you say that without the lobbying efforts

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of companies such as Disney, me, today might have

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a totally different copyright regime as we have now?

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Of course we would.

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And the evidence for that is that, you know,

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until there was the heavy lobbying

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in the United States around copyright extension

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in the mid-1970s, the general view,

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the general length of copyright and the general view

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about copyright was very balanced.

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It was not, there was no extremists like you have today.

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And the extremism was built by this incredibly powerful

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industry which spent an enormous amount of money

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basically buying off members of Congress,

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not in a crude corrupt way, nobody bribes anybody.

15:58.720 --> 16:00.400
But just by creating this atmosphere

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where it just seems obvious that you would support

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massive protections called copyright.

16:06.560 --> 16:09.120
And I think that, you know, what we have to do

16:09.120 --> 16:12.240
is to build obviousness in the other way

16:12.240 --> 16:16.720
and force them to justify their regulations on my speech.

16:16.720 --> 16:19.280
You begin to see this back and forth

16:19.280 --> 16:21.960
developing in a productive way around YouTube.

16:21.960 --> 16:25.800
So for example, you know, YouTube develops

16:25.800 --> 16:29.840
and the copyright extremists are angry at YouTube

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because there's so many copyright violations

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they say going on on YouTube.

16:33.600 --> 16:37.000
So YouTube and Google developed this technology content ID

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that is basically able to take fingerprints of

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copyrighted music and then compare it to any content

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that's uploaded on YouTube.

16:45.800 --> 16:48.400
And then give a notice to the person who uploads

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the copyrighted content that, you know,

16:50.640 --> 16:52.320
we're gonna take your stuff down

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or we're gonna monetize your stuff

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because you violate the copyrights.

16:55.360 --> 16:59.600
Okay, so, you know, I've had many fights

16:59.600 --> 17:01.680
where I will upload a lecture,

17:01.680 --> 17:04.320
where in the middle of a lecture I will do a demonstration

17:04.320 --> 17:06.520
of like some point I'm making about copyright

17:06.520 --> 17:08.160
and I will use a snippet of a song

17:08.160 --> 17:11.320
and that snippet will be caught by content ID

17:11.320 --> 17:13.120
and they'll say we're gonna take your lecture down.

17:13.120 --> 17:15.120
It happens in Germany all the time.

17:15.120 --> 17:19.120
Germany is the most extreme, outrageous black box copyright.

17:20.400 --> 17:22.520
I can't use the word fascist in Germany

17:22.520 --> 17:24.360
but, you know, the point is that's what we would call it

17:24.360 --> 17:25.880
in the United States.

17:25.880 --> 17:27.240
But it happens in Germany all the time

17:27.240 --> 17:30.200
and it seems natural to them, that's the way it should be.

17:30.200 --> 17:31.920
Now, for me, you know, it doesn't matter

17:31.920 --> 17:35.040
because my livelihood does not depend on YouTube.

17:35.040 --> 17:37.240
I don't get money for my stuff being put up there

17:37.240 --> 17:39.640
and run ads against my stuff, so that's fine.

17:39.640 --> 17:42.480
But there are these creators who are building YouTube channels.

17:42.480 --> 17:44.440
There was a really great one recently

17:44.440 --> 17:47.280
where this guy who basically teaches guitar lessons

17:47.280 --> 17:50.560
on using YouTube and he'll do these demonstrations

17:50.560 --> 17:53.560
of techniques and, you know, he's very careful

17:53.560 --> 17:57.240
not to copy songs, but he'll do like four or five bars

17:57.240 --> 17:58.520
to show a certain technique.

17:58.520 --> 18:01.680
And those four or five bars will then be attributed

18:01.680 --> 18:04.120
to some copyright owner and then he's informed

18:04.120 --> 18:06.960
that all of the advertising rammative from his videos

18:06.960 --> 18:10.000
will be given to the collective who then just,

18:10.000 --> 18:12.760
and of course, that means as he can't produce,

18:12.760 --> 18:16.160
he can't be a creator and what good is coming from this?

18:16.160 --> 18:17.520
I mean, it's not even copying.

18:17.520 --> 18:19.240
He's not even saying, here's the Beatles.

18:19.240 --> 18:20.640
Let me tell you how the Beatles play.

18:20.640 --> 18:23.880
It's, here's an opening of blah, blah, blah that, you know,

18:23.880 --> 18:26.960
every single artist in history of guitar has used,

18:26.960 --> 18:30.200
but just because it now is in the content ID database,

18:30.200 --> 18:33.080
he can't do it or do it and make any money from it.

18:33.080 --> 18:37.000
This is stifling new creators to benefit

18:37.000 --> 18:39.240
these collecting rights societies or to benefit

18:39.240 --> 18:42.240
these old monopolists and there's no justification for it.

18:42.240 --> 18:47.440
When we transform this debate to the whole free software debate,

18:47.440 --> 18:50.240
some people argue that we need software patents

18:50.240 --> 18:52.560
in order to protect products from being copied

18:52.560 --> 18:56.080
and that the current system encourages investments

18:56.080 --> 18:57.480
in innovation.

18:57.480 --> 18:59.920
What do you think about this argument?

18:59.920 --> 19:03.240
Well, it's a theoretically good argument

19:03.240 --> 19:05.120
in the sense that it fits the form

19:05.120 --> 19:06.960
of why we would want patents.

19:06.960 --> 19:09.680
You know, we want patents where it's creating

19:09.680 --> 19:12.520
an incentive to invest that otherwise wouldn't be there.

19:12.520 --> 19:14.360
So this fits the form.

19:14.360 --> 19:16.360
It turns out not to be true though, right?

19:16.360 --> 19:18.800
You don't need patents in the context of software

19:18.800 --> 19:21.040
to create the incentive to make the software.

19:21.040 --> 19:25.320
And we don't have an absence of software innovation

19:25.320 --> 19:27.480
where we have an absence of software patents.

19:27.480 --> 19:29.360
In fact, it's to the contrary,

19:29.360 --> 19:32.360
where you've got a field of software patents.

19:32.360 --> 19:35.320
What that does is concentrate software innovation

19:35.320 --> 19:37.960
in companies that can afford the lawyers necessary

19:37.960 --> 19:40.200
to defend against the patent claims.

19:40.200 --> 19:42.000
And we've seen this not just in software,

19:42.000 --> 19:44.480
we've seen this in agribusiness, for example.

19:44.520 --> 19:49.440
As you've created patents on agricultural innovations,

19:49.440 --> 19:52.480
the only companies that can afford to be in the business

19:52.480 --> 19:57.040
are companies that can aggregate all these patent portfolios

19:57.040 --> 19:58.160
so that when they're in a fight,

19:58.160 --> 20:01.520
they have like 10,000 patents to launch against

20:01.520 --> 20:04.200
your 2,000 patents and you'll have to give into them.

20:04.200 --> 20:08.920
It's all a game of consolidation and support

20:08.920 --> 20:12.200
for these big businesses that want to stifle the opportunity

20:12.200 --> 20:13.280
for new innovators.

20:13.280 --> 20:15.280
So we imagine the internet was going to be the space

20:15.280 --> 20:17.720
where anybody anywhere could become a coder.

20:17.720 --> 20:21.040
Well, until you code something, that's worth something,

20:21.040 --> 20:22.800
and then you've got to confront the patents

20:22.800 --> 20:24.080
that are running on this code.

20:24.080 --> 20:27.560
And it's not that you've copied anything from anybody

20:27.560 --> 20:29.640
because patent law doesn't require you copy,

20:29.640 --> 20:32.680
a copy readily, you have to affirmatively copy something.

20:32.680 --> 20:34.320
But patent law, if you just are practicing

20:34.320 --> 20:36.720
the same invention that somebody else has patented,

20:36.720 --> 20:38.120
even if you came up with it yourself,

20:38.120 --> 20:39.760
you still are violating the patent.

20:39.760 --> 20:41.920
So you come up with a great new technology,

20:41.920 --> 20:42.840
you want to deploy it,

20:42.840 --> 20:45.080
you then have to hire a patent firm

20:45.080 --> 20:46.520
to be able to clear the patents.

20:46.520 --> 20:48.920
If there are other patents reading on your invention,

20:48.920 --> 20:50.840
then you've got to negotiate for the right to do that.

20:50.840 --> 20:53.000
Well, if you're just a software developer,

20:53.000 --> 20:54.400
you can't negotiate.

20:54.400 --> 20:55.760
You don't have any leverage.

20:55.760 --> 20:57.560
So you have to sell it to a company

20:57.560 --> 21:00.880
who then can leverage because they have their own patents.

21:00.880 --> 21:03.080
Who is this benefiting?

21:03.080 --> 21:04.520
It's not benefiting innovation.

21:04.520 --> 21:06.320
It's just benefiting the opportunity

21:06.320 --> 21:08.760
to consolidate these large companies

21:08.760 --> 21:12.800
as the Uber innovators.

21:12.800 --> 21:15.160
And obviously, I think that stifles

21:15.160 --> 21:17.160
the opportunity for innovation.

21:17.160 --> 21:20.080
Then one last question from my side.

21:20.080 --> 21:21.600
How would a society look like

21:21.600 --> 21:23.760
when we don't have those software patents

21:23.760 --> 21:26.240
and all the code out there regulating people

21:26.240 --> 21:28.040
would be free software?

21:28.040 --> 21:30.800
Well, I think if you didn't have a software patents,

21:30.800 --> 21:33.560
you'd have an opportunity for a wider range of innovators.

21:33.560 --> 21:36.200
I just think intuitively more innovation

21:36.200 --> 21:38.080
is better in this space.

21:38.080 --> 21:40.680
If it were free software that were regulating people,

21:40.680 --> 21:45.160
the opportunity to surface the improper regulations

21:45.160 --> 21:46.120
would be greater.

21:46.120 --> 21:48.800
The opportunity to challenge regulations

21:48.800 --> 21:50.360
that were improper would be greater.

21:50.360 --> 21:54.760
And you would feed an industry of kind of lawyer types

21:54.760 --> 21:58.720
who could begin to test whether this type of software regulation

21:58.720 --> 22:01.800
is consistent with the values of a society.

22:01.800 --> 22:05.000
Now, fortunately now we have many more lawyers

22:05.000 --> 22:08.680
who are actually technologists, too, actually coders as well.

22:08.680 --> 22:13.200
If we had a platform open for them to investigate

22:13.200 --> 22:14.520
the way they can go investigate

22:14.520 --> 22:17.160
whether a bureaucracy is following the law,

22:17.160 --> 22:20.600
I think we could begin to force the infrastructure

22:20.600 --> 22:24.640
of regulation called code to conform more fundamentally

22:24.640 --> 22:27.000
to the values that we say are fundamental

22:27.000 --> 22:29.640
values of a society.

22:29.640 --> 22:31.320
So now my last question.

22:31.320 --> 22:33.480
Imagine you could travel back in time

22:33.480 --> 22:36.720
and change history, in which time would you travel

22:36.720 --> 22:38.840
and what would you like to change?

22:41.920 --> 22:46.640
Well, you know that since 2007, since Anne Aaron Swartz

22:46.640 --> 22:49.280
sort of forced me to give up my work on copyright

22:49.280 --> 22:52.600
and the internet and take up this corruption work

22:52.600 --> 22:54.280
at a corruption of our democracy.

22:54.280 --> 22:56.120
That's been my obsession.

22:56.120 --> 22:59.480
So it's about a dozen years now that this is what I've been

22:59.480 --> 23:00.920
thinking about every day I wake up.

23:00.960 --> 23:04.640
I'm publishing my sixth book about this year.

23:04.640 --> 23:06.080
So I want to solve that problem

23:06.080 --> 23:08.200
because I'm tired of fighting it.

23:08.200 --> 23:09.800
So what would I do to solve it?

23:09.800 --> 23:13.360
Well, you know, we could go back in any number of places

23:13.360 --> 23:17.800
and talk about inserting into our constitution

23:17.800 --> 23:19.800
something I think the framers of our constitution

23:19.800 --> 23:24.080
took for granted, which is that everyone is an equal citizen

23:24.080 --> 23:26.560
with equal political rights.

23:26.560 --> 23:29.080
Because every problem with the American democracy right now

23:29.080 --> 23:31.160
is a problem of equality.

23:31.160 --> 23:36.400
So the way we fund campaigns with a tiny fraction

23:36.400 --> 23:40.520
of the 1% funding the campaigns that candidates gather

23:40.520 --> 23:45.320
to get to office is in inequality of political power.

23:45.320 --> 23:47.040
The way that systems are gerrymandered

23:47.040 --> 23:49.720
is in equality of political inequality of political power.

23:49.720 --> 23:52.640
The way votes get suppressed if you happen to be black

23:52.640 --> 23:54.760
or if you happen to be a Democrat and a Republican state

23:54.760 --> 23:57.120
is in inequality in political power.

23:57.160 --> 24:00.280
These are all ways that we've allowed a core promise

24:00.280 --> 24:04.480
of a representative democracy that it is equal to be corrupted.

24:04.480 --> 24:06.440
So I would at any number of points,

24:06.440 --> 24:10.360
we could say I have a 1787 or 1936

24:10.360 --> 24:12.440
or when the 14th Amendment was passed,

24:12.440 --> 24:16.080
I would just add three or four words into those texts

24:16.080 --> 24:19.840
that would have made this fundamental point enforceable

24:19.840 --> 24:22.680
so that we wouldn't live in this deeply corrupted

24:22.680 --> 24:24.640
so-called democracy that still pretends

24:24.640 --> 24:26.360
like it's the greatest democracy in the world

24:26.360 --> 24:31.360
yet is corrupted the core commitment of a democracy.

24:32.640 --> 24:34.000
Larry, thank you very much.

24:34.000 --> 24:34.720
Thank you for your time.

24:34.720 --> 24:35.720
Thank you for your work.

24:35.720 --> 24:39.520
I am such an admirer of the work of the Free Software Foundation

24:39.520 --> 24:42.120
especially the work in Europe of what you've been doing,

24:42.120 --> 24:45.160
building here and I've admired the fight against software

24:45.160 --> 24:46.520
patents when you were winning it

24:46.520 --> 24:48.360
and I've been sad at the moments

24:48.360 --> 24:51.520
where it seems like the other side has mustard more power

24:51.520 --> 24:52.360
than you.

24:52.360 --> 24:53.360
Thank you, Derry.

24:53.400 --> 24:57.400
This was the fifth episode of the Software Freedom Podcast.

24:57.400 --> 25:00.440
If you liked this episode, please recommend it to your friends

25:00.440 --> 25:04.240
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25:09.320 --> 25:10.920
This podcast is presented to you

25:10.920 --> 25:13.000
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25:13.000 --> 25:16.000
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25:16.000 --> 25:17.440
If you like our work,

25:17.440 --> 25:19.680
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You find more information on your FSFE.org slash the net.

25:23.720 --> 25:25.000
Thank you for your support.

25:25.000 --> 25:26.320
See you next time, bye.

25:26.320 --> 25:27.160
Bye bye.

25:27.160 --> 25:45.160
Here's another voice from our large community.

25:45.160 --> 25:46.440
Hi, I'm Bjorn Schiesler.

25:46.440 --> 25:49.760
I came to the FSFE 13 years ago as a volunteer

25:49.760 --> 25:51.440
where I started translating the web page

25:51.440 --> 25:53.680
and stayed as a volunteer since then.

25:53.680 --> 25:55.600
I think FSFE is really important

25:55.600 --> 25:57.960
to have an independent voice in Europe

25:57.960 --> 25:59.440
to talk about free software costs.

25:59.440 --> 26:01.760
It becomes more and more important in a digital society.

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