Left behind. (Political Booknotes).THE INTERNET POST-MORTEMS are coming fast and furious nowadays, from John Cassidy's trifling Dot.con to James Ledbetter's forthcoming Starving to Death on $200 Million a Year, a tell-all about The Industry Standard's fleeting hey-day. So far, this literature of failure has portrayed the technology boom as a madcap adventure, and the subsequent bust as little more than a sitcom comeuppance come·up·pance n. A punishment or retribution that one deserves; one's just deserts: "It's a chance to strike back at the critical brotherhood and give each his comeuppance for evaluative sins of the past" for a handful of arrogant louts The Louts, is a left tributary of the Adour, in Aquitaine, in the Southwest of France. Name The name Louts could be related to the Basque cognate lohizun 'marsh'. It is documented in medieval Latin as Fluvius qui dicitur Lossium[1]. . Sure, a couple billion dollars got lost in the shuffle, and some twenty-somethings had to move back in with mom and dad for a spell. But no real harm done. Nathan Newman, a union lawyer and author of Net Loss: Internet Prophets, Private Profits, and the Costs to Community, isn't so dismissive of the New Econ omy's toll. His victims are not the dot-com employees whose options evaporated, nor the mom-and-pop investors who let Junior's college fund ride on the NASDAQ NASDAQ in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on 100. Newman's big losers are the low-wage workers who spent the last decade falling further and further behind a techno-elite indifferent to local communities. The Internet, Newman argues, has made it easier for corporations to deal with global actors one-on-one, and thus to bypass unions, public-interest groups, and other pesky members of the left. The lack of an effective online tax scheme has robbed municipal governments of billions, leading to slashed services for poor urban residents. And the chasm between knowledge workers (i.e., geeks) and blue-collar stiffs has grown to the point where mobility between the two classes is almost nonexistent non·ex·is·tence n. 1. The condition of not existing. 2. Something that does not exist. non . Newman's depiction of the Internet as an engine of inequality is Net Loss' most intriguing thread. If only he'd stopped there instead of stuffing the book's 300-plus pages with half-baked takes on globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation , privacy, and "the marketization Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details. of fixed capital." Newman's sharp lefty treatment of the Internet's labor-unfriendly effects often gets lost amidst the jumble of ideas. Though Net Loss makes for a nice counterweight coun·ter·weight n. 1. A weight used as a counterbalance. 2. A force or influence equally counteracting another. coun to the vast body of post-bubble fluff, it's far too ambitious for its own good. The book's barest stretch is its first third, a blow-by-blow retelling of the government's tole tole also tôle n. A lacquered or enameled metalware, usually gilded and elaborately painted. [French tôle, sheet metal, variant of table, table, slab in creating the Internet. There are few surprises here, as this ground's been covered countless times before. Only the greenest of newbies will be surprised to learn of the Pentagon's involvement in funding ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency NETwork) The research network funded by the U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). The software was developed by Bolt, Beranek and Newman (BBN), and Honeywell 516 minicomputers were the first hardware used as , the Internet's precursor. Newman is an academic, not a journalist; Net Loss is actually a slightly tweaked version of his doctoral dissertation, so there's little original reporting to speak of. He borrows liberally (albeit with detailed footnotes) from more impressive histories, like Steven Levy's Hackers: HNet Loss is at its best when Newman trains his eye on Silicon Valley, where he worked as a labor organizer throughout the 1990s. The experience gave him a keen understanding of how the majority of that region's residents were kept off the digital gravy train. Newman gripes gripe v. griped, grip·ing, gripes v.intr. 1. Informal To complain naggingly or petulantly; grumble. 2. To have sharp pains in the bowels. v.tr. 1. that high-tech companies have been poor corporate citizens, reluctant to pay equitable taxes, and eager to outsource jobs to bargain-rate foreign workers. "The public policy promoted by the industry in the region increasingly serves only the upper core of professionals," he writes. "The rest are left behind as even the physical geography of the region is reshaped in a new politics of abandonment." Clearly influenced by Lawrence Lessig's 1999 dissection of the "cybefiibertarian myth" in Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace, Newman points out that the industry's wealth is dependent on a government invention, the Internet. Doesn't that extraordinary gift oblige the private sector to act less selfishly? The tech sector is not the only culprit singled out in Newman's polemic. Banks get a lashing for rejiggering their business models for the Internet Age. They'd rather sell money-market funds to clients thousands of miles away, Newman contends' than offer low-margin home loans to local families. Deregulated phone companies are itching to peddle DSL DSL in full Digital Subscriber Line Broadband digital communications connection that operates over standard copper telephone wires. It requires a DSL modem, which splits transmissions into two frequency bands: the lower frequencies for voice (ordinary to wealthy households, but their commitment to affordable universal service has wavered. Yet Newman scores points too sporadically. Promising themes are overwhelmed by long, incongruous meditations on the electricity market or computing standards, which he unconvincingly links to the central thesis. Perhaps unavoidably, several sections are already laughably outmoded, such as the gloom-and-doom forecast about a WorldCom empire or the naysaying nay·say tr.v. nay·said , nay·say·ing, nay·says To oppose, deny, or take a pessimistic or negative view of: They will naysay any policy that raises taxes. over DVDs. Then there ate the crusty sentiments lifted straight from The Nation circa 1985, like Newman's horror that (gasp!) chain stores are squeezing out local merchants. The book's other major glitch is Newman's graceless prose, which is riddled with annoying grad-speak. Not every academic is such a shambling sham·ble intr.v. sham·bled, sham·bling, sham·bles To walk in an awkward, lazy, or unsteady manner, shuffling the feet. n. A shuffling gait. writer, City of Quartz author Mike Davis an obvious Newman idol--being the prime example. But people who've spent years locked away in musty stacks usually lose some wit in the process. At times, Net Loss reads like a recent Onion parody of a Harvard Ph.D. candidate deconstructing a Mexican take-out menu ("Menu reflects the problematic reliance on systemized binary opposition"). When the word "hierarchies" make three appearances in a single paragraph, you know you're nowhere near the realm of a good beach read. There's certainly a fine labor-oriented critique of Internet mania somewhere in Newman's head. Snippets of it made their way into Net Loss, but not enough to save this debut from a messy fate. Somebody get this man an editor. BRENDAN I. KOERNER is a Markle fellow at the New America Foundation The New America Foundation is a non-profit public policy institute and think tank located in Washington, D.C. that promotes innovative political solutions transcending conventional party lines -- what they call radical centrist politics. . |
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