Targeted censorship and inept enforcement of terms of service are pouring fuel on the factional fire and driving millions of people to alternative platforms.

Scott Bicheno

January 18, 2021

4 Min Read
The megalomania of US tech oligarchs is balkanising the internet

Targeted censorship and inept enforcement of terms of service are pouring fuel on the factional fire and driving millions of people to alternative platforms.

A week is a long time in tech. It’s just seven days since Amazon Web Services denied service to Parler, a social networking platform found guilty of upsetting a few activist Amazon employees. Their complaint concerned Parler’s alleged failure to remove posts inciting violence, but there was no equivalent complaint against the giant social media incumbents, despite widespread criticism of the role they played in facilitating the Capitol riot in question.

The AWS move, combined with the apparently coordinated decisions by other Silicon Valley giants to both attack Parler and exclude the US President from their platform, seem likely to mark an inflection point in the public perception of them. While many people found previously untapped reserves of laissez-faire sentiment by insisting that the tech giants are free to do whatever they want with their platforms, regardless of the wider societal consequences, it seems others have become alerted to the dangers presented by their unregulated, unaccountable power over the digital world.

Balkanization is a term used to describe the process of breaking something up into smaller, often mutually hostile parts. It’s derived from the country once known as Yugoslavia, which has a historical tendency towards separatist movements and consequent conflict. The term increasingly applies to the global community that is the internet, thanks mostly to the tendency of its largest companies to place their thumb on the scales when it comes to its policing.

The decisions by social media giants and now even infrastructure providers to exclude significant proportions of the world from the environments they control, thanks to claimed breaches of their constantly changing terms of service, couldn’t be better designed to fracture the internet. They may have succeeded in squashing Parler for now, but that has simply led to a surge in popularity for other alternatives, such as Gab. Even alternative search engines are enjoying surging popularity.

Meanwhile Facebook brilliantly managed to compound the alienation of many of its users by apparently making the long-anticipated announcement that it WhatsApp users must share their data with the mothership. As a result, and thanks in part to an endorsement from the richest man in the world, privacy-focused messaging app Signal experienced such a surge in demand that it crashed late last week.

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In a free society censorship and suppression are at best a game of whack-a-mole, in which those silenced immediately seek other ways to speak. Another WhatsApp alternative is Telegram, which has also faced a recent surge in use, so the establishment now has that app in its crosshairs. Even podcasts, as a general concept, are being primed for censorship.

Thus we hear from Revolution Populi, an organisation focused on ‘returning digital power to the people’. It’s headed-up by Yale Professor of Computer Science Dr David Gelernter who, in a recent interview with ZDNet, said “Whether you are right or left, the blatant arrogance with which people like Zuckerberg and Dorsey have stepped into the political world is a shock to people who trusted these guys to be fair-mind, neutral messengers.”

Revolution Populi is all about the blockchain, which they reckon can be used to create a decentralized social media in which individuals have control over their own data. “Three or four guys have colonized the Internet, and it’s wrong,” said CEO Rob Rosenthal. “The model is broken: you can’t have a neutral public square and have one guy determine what can be said.”

The balkanization is also becoming literal, with countries and regions pushing back on the prospect of having their public square policed by a few megalomaniacal American geeks. The EU launched the Digital Services Act last month with the aim of creating ‘a safer and more open digital space, with European values at its centre.’

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Poland is set to take this a step further, with a new law designed to prevent social media platforms deleting content or banning users who do not break Polish laws. National law has always been the natural limit of the jurisdiction of internet platforms over their users and the further they stray from it the more they expose themselves.

Something’s got to give. The Ugandan President recently tried to ban social media due to his resentment of its alleged meddling in Uganda’s internal politics. Whatever the reason, the unelected rulers of the internet are voting themselves new powers over the rest of the digital world every day. There will be a reckoning and the history books may reflect that early 2021 represented their high-water mark.

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About the Author(s)

Scott Bicheno

As the Editorial Director of Telecoms.com, Scott oversees all editorial activity on the site and also manages the Telecoms.com Intelligence arm, which focuses on analysis and bespoke content.
Scott has been covering the mobile phone and broader technology industries for over ten years. Prior to Telecoms.com Scott was the primary smartphone specialist at industry analyst Strategy Analytics’. Before that Scott was a technology journalist, covering the PC and telecoms sectors from a business perspective.
Follow him @scottbicheno

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