The internet doesn’t have a flag, but if it did the black-and-gold flag of anarcho-capitalism would seem appropriate. The internet isn’t an entirely unregulated space, of course. The long arm of the law can reach into the furthest recesses of the dark web (if it can be bothered). But if anywhere comes close to the borderless, buccaneering, voluntarist ideals of pure libertarianism, it is cyberspace.
Except that the origins of the internet are deeply statist. Indeed, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) – which created the internet in its original form – can be described as an arm of America’s ‘deep state’.
ARPANET on the one hand, Minitel on the other
On UnHerd this week, Nigel Cameron provides an account of how DARPA developed ARPANET, which evolved into the internet we know today. He goes on to describe how it also serves as Exhibit A in Mariana Mazzucato’s1 case for an entrepreneurial state. And no wonder, the internet’s story provides powerful support for all three parts of her argument: firstly, that the state plays a vital role in scientific progress and innovation; secondly, that the state has a special role to play in creating the shared infrastructure that supports private enterprise; and, thirdly, the state should itself be much more entrepreneurial – not least in capturing (and reinvesting) a fair share of the private sector profits enabled by its inventions.
There’s a great deal in Mazzucatoism that I support. However, it’s vital that we go into this with our eyes open. The entrepreneurial state doesn’t always get it right – and when it gets it wrong it can do so on a scale and with a degree of bloody-mindedness that the private sector would be hard-pressed to match.
So while the example of ARPANET should inform public policy – and a shift to a more entrepreneurial state – it needs to be considered alongside the great counter-example: Minitel.
But before I get on to that bittersweet tale, some historical context.
When did you first encounter the internet? If you’re old enough to recall the information Stone Age, there must have been some point at which you realised that a new age was dawning. For me it was the early 1990s, when, on a visit to Goldsmiths college, a member of faculty showed me a system that allowed academics to exchange knowledge online. This was my first glimpse of the internet. Ironically, the chap was a communist – a nice one as it happened, but seemingly oblivious to the hyper-commercialised behemoth the internet would become.
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