Deliberate Internet Shutdowns

(schneier.com)

323 points | by WaitWaitWha 6 days ago ago

183 comments

  • stego-tech 3 days ago ago

    The post is mainly just a CTA against further internet centralization and government control of core infrastructure, which is fine. We need more of these, and we need more examples of their harms for folks to draw on. HN often gets distilled down to a singular cause - EU's Chat Control, Elon's shutdown of Starlink over Ukraine, a regional outage of a public cloud provider - but generalized topics like these aren't really discussed all too often I find, or are often flagged for a variety of reasons and shutdown.

    As technologists of multiple stripes and disciplines - programmers, developers, engineers, architects, designers, product managers, etcetera - we need to collaborate more on the direction of our industry as a whole, rather than just specific niches we find appealing. From my specific perspective in IT, the increasing centralization across every vendor category (three major x86 server manufacturers, two CPU vendors, two GPU makers, three global-scale public clouds, ISP mono- and duopolies, a handful of commercial operating systems, a near-monopoly EUVL supplier - the list goes on) is a dire threat to not just the open internet, but open technology in general.

    We need to be better advocates for and champions of the technological future we envision, rather than just blindly celebrate startups and tech fads all the time. Mr. Schneier is merely the latest and largest canary in the proverbial coal mine.

    • mschuster91 2 days ago ago

      > From my specific perspective in IT, the increasing centralization across every vendor category (three major x86 server manufacturers, two CPU vendors, two GPU makers, three global-scale public clouds, ISP mono- and duopolies, a handful of commercial operating systems, a near-monopoly EUVL supplier - the list goes on) is a dire threat to not just the open internet, but open technology in general.

      Part of the reason why we have seen this absurd centralization is complexity. It used to be possible for third parties to tape out an x86-compatible CPU and in fact there were multiple vendors doing this - but it's impossible these days, mostly from a financial viewpoint (you'll probably need a few billion dollars in R&D plus the licensing cost), but also from a technological viewpoint - you'd need to have feature parity with Intel/AMD x86 CPUs and some material improvement actually enticing people to buy your new CPU.

      In the end the "free market" will always lead to such concentration effects and, most importantly, to de facto standards because the dominant actor(s) will always be the cross-section of "offers the most features, is used everywhere else, is affordable".

      The fix requires governmental intervention (be it anti-trust legislation, mandatory sharing of resources/access for dominant entities or whatever), but sadly we can't even do regime changes to get rid of kleptocrats like the Taliban any more...

      • Roark66 2 days ago ago

        Exactly... In fact this realisation has been the main reason why I shifted my views (in my teenage years) from libertarian to more centrist.

        Having grown up in a falling communist state full of state sanctioned monopolies I thought free market will sort it out. Later I realised you need a balance between free market and interventionism, but for the latter to work you need a way to prevent corruption and a good justice system. Things that are very hard to come by in many parts of the world

        • mschuster91 2 days ago ago

          It didn't help that the fall of Yugoslavia and the USSR coincided with Thatcherism/neoliberalism. People widely mistook correlation for causation, although particularly in former pseudo-communist nations that was understandable given how fast progress came in...

          But the nasty awakening? That came crashing hard and painful, once the dust settled, a lot of assets got looted and progress mostly stopped.

      • Daniel_31 2 days ago ago

        [dead]

    • rconti 3 days ago ago

      == Call To Action

      • dcuthbertson 2 days ago ago

        Thank you. There are so many TLAs (Three Letter Acronyms) that they overlap significantly. Maybe the coffee hasn't kicked in yet, but I didn't know what CTA meant in this context. I thought it might be related to PSA (Public Service Announcement), so I searched "CTA announcement" and got Chicago Transit Authority and California Teacher's Association - obviously not helpful.

        • hodgesrm 2 days ago ago

          At the University of Michigan many moons ago CTA stood for Central Tripping Authority, a largely imaginary collective devoted to taking hallucinogens. (Regularly.) There was CTA graffiti all over East Quadrangle dormitory when I lived there. The meaning was well-understood.

          Moral: A good TLA can be surprisingly memorable.

          (edited)

        • blenderob 2 days ago ago

          > Maybe the coffee hasn't kicked in yet

          No, it isn't just you. I didn't get it either. I never understood why some people use obscure acronyms and assume everyone's going to understand that. It's like complete lack of empathy for the reader.

        • Imustaskforhelp 2 days ago ago

          I was really confused too so I had assumed it was related to something written in the article as I had just opened up the comments

          Now that I know CTA means Call to action, its okay but lets be honest that they could have atleast said either CTA (call to action) or just skip the abbreviation itself since I assume a very significant proportion of people were confused so what's exactly the point of an abbreviation like CTA is certainly up to debate and people are definitely debating it so I am waiting for what the overall consensus on the whole thing is :)

      • tchalla 2 days ago ago

        Thanks. I don’t know why people use obscure abbreviations and acronyms.

        • SapporoChris 2 days ago ago

          There is absolutely no issue with using obscure abbreviations or acronyms as long as it is defined in the first use.

          • jhbadger 2 days ago ago

            In scientific papers (where acronyms are common) this is definitely the rule.

          • nervysnail 2 days ago ago

            IA (I agree).

        • tonyedgecombe 2 days ago ago

          They think it makes them sound knowledgable.

          • andruby 2 days ago ago

            I don't think that is necessarily the case. If you use certain words all the time, shortening them makes sense. They might just forget which abbreviations are and aren't common knowledge. You wouldn't get mad if people use PC, CPU, ATM and RAM, right? Even SSD would be fine on HN, but it probably wouldn't be fine outside HN. (neither would using "HN")

            • codeflo 2 days ago ago

              > Even SSD would be fine on HN, but it probably wouldn't be fine outside HN.

              The set of people who know the term "solid state drive" is likely a strict subset of the people (mostly tech enthusiasts of some shape) who know "SSD". Same for "USB" and many other terms that have entered the mainstream primarily as an abbreviation.

              So the question is not whether to use an abbreviation or spell out the full term as a matter of principle; the question is whether it's the abbreviation or the full term that's more commonly known. I'd argue that way fewer people recognize "CTA" than know the term "call to action". I personally have done some front-end development, and didn't know the abbreviation either.

              • 2 days ago ago
                [deleted]
              • Izkata 2 days ago ago

                And "ATM machine" tells me most people think the acronym is the name instead of an acronym.

            • alberto_ol 2 days ago ago

              Without context ATM could be Asynchronous Transfer Mode or automated teller machine.

              • 2 days ago ago
                [deleted]
              • sowbug 2 days ago ago

                At the moment

          • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

            No, they're just not pandering to children who can't help themselves.

          • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

            I don't know why people can't take 0.3 seconds to type "what does CTA stand for?" into their favorite search engine/LLM/text-message-to-a-friend. This is "Hacker" News, yes? What do hackers know how to do? Learn things, yes?

            Oh, and I also don't know why this needs to come up on approximately every single post that has an abbreviation that someone doesn't know.

            • nmz 2 days ago ago

              It stands for "Chicago transit authority". I don't know about you, but search engines have become useless since last year, I'm talking downright unusable.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CTA

              • stockresearcher 2 days ago ago

                The Chicago Transit Authority has existed for only about 70 years despite transit in Chicago being around for 125+ years.

                Legislation the governor signed last week all but guarantees that it won’t see its hundredth birthday except possibly as a sticker on the side of the busses and trains. Within 5 years the agency will only have the duty to plan routes within the city limits, and maybe do some of the driver hiring.

            • ryanjshaw 2 days ago ago

              I googled it and it was defined as a marketing term, so I figured that can’t be the right one in a comment about freedom of speech.

            • kunley 2 days ago ago

              To be exact, it takes more time than 0.3s to type it, even for a fast typer.

              I don't know why people can't not exaggerate things? Doing it is certainly making their message less reliable, not more

            • sowbug 2 days ago ago

              It's nice for writing to be sufficiently self-contained for the reader to get the basic meaning without research. How does it affect your sense of perspicacity when a sentence forces you to consult a dictionary just to keep up?

              • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

                I'm still not sure why this is the author's problem. If a piece of writing is too challenging, you are welcome to disengage from it, and not demand more from the author.

                • sowbug 2 days ago ago

                  You are absolutely right that communication need not be effective.

            • MarkusQ 2 days ago ago

              A search engine can tell you what some people mean by the acronym. It can't tell you what this particular author meant. It's like asking an LLM where you left your car keys, or asking Google what your spouse wants for dinner.

              • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

                I don't see why that's the author's responsibility to manage this for you.

        • matsz 2 days ago ago

          Arguably CTA isn't exactly an obscure acronym. It's multi-disciplinary - quite common in UI/UX design and marketing; and also decently common in any branched of software engineering that interact with these topics, like... web development.

          • crossroadsguy 2 days ago ago

            CTA is very obscure. As a mobile dev I refuse to call CTA as anything other than click or tap to action in which case it should be TPA. Also many folks (esp. PMs confuse CTAs with button clicks). Anyway, CTA in this context didn’t even ring a distant bell either for call or click and I am glad it didn’t.

            • Vinnl 2 days ago ago

              I think in UI design it usually is intended to refer to the main thing you want/expect a user to do in any given situation, i.e. having multiple CTAs is a bit of an oxymoron while having multiple buttons is not.

            • rconti 2 days ago ago

              Wait, the acronym for "Tap To Action" is "TPA"?

              • crossroadsguy 2 days ago ago

                Nah, I meant to type TTA but now that I have mistyped TPA I should make that Tap Pour Action - Tap for Action (I am not trying the double meaning here, just to clarify).

          • xp84 2 days ago ago

            I’ve worked with marketer types for over a decade and had them use the initialism “CTA” hundreds of times, understood it, and yet still in this comment I had no idea that they were referencing that term. If this was a UI diagram I’d have had no problem. This seems to me like a case where using an initialism in a different context than it usually appears confuses readers. It would kind of be like saying “I plan to GTM for a few things after work today.” You may recognize that as Go-To-Market if I said “the GTM team” at work, but it is strange outside that context. Outside a marketing or UI context I don’t think people usually initialize “CTA.”

            • BobbyTables2 2 days ago ago

              What the hell does GTM even mean?

              How many industries can prosper by defining what the customer should get and have an endless stream of demand in response?

              Isn’t GTM just “business 101”? I really don’t understand how people can use the term and not realize they are screaming “we’re going to do the basics of what we should have been doing all along”.

              Imagine if software developers championed a “logic” based approach.

              • xp84 15 hours ago ago

                In a B2B company context, the Go-To-Market or GTM team means the whole sales team, plus everybody else who manages customer accounts. Customer Success, etc. as opposed to the product parts of the company.

              • Izkata 2 days ago ago

                If said like "let's GTM" it usually means getting on a call. Stands for Go-To-Meeting, the main business videoconference software before Zoom took over.

          • immibis 2 days ago ago

            It's specific to marketing and it's a term I've only seen used when you are trying to sell a product. In my mind, CTA means "the button we are trying to make you click on by any means necessary because we make money when you click on it"

          • knorker 2 days ago ago

            I've worked in software engineering on Internet things for decades and I have not once heard or seen this abbreviated before.

          • mc32 2 days ago ago

            “Call to Action” is common. CTA instead of call to action is not common.

          • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 2 days ago ago

            It might not be obscure in an environment that lives on 'social activity', but I can assure you -- and I am saying this as a person, who survives daily barrages of acronyms, CTA is not common.

          • 2 days ago ago
            [deleted]
        • sowbug 2 days ago ago

          The one that sticks in my craw is "ofc," especially when it's buried in a wall of text written by someone evidently capable of typing lots of characters in one sitting.

          I have deduced that it means "of course," but of course since that expression could of course be sprinkled almost anywhere in a sentence without changing its meaning much, it's of course hard to be sure.

        • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

          I really don't know why people refuse to look things up. And I don't understand how the parent's comment isn't off-topic and unnecessary and pedantic and mine apparently is. This place is a goddamn cesspool.

        • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

          [flagged]

          • knorker 2 days ago ago

            They could also write the comment in French, and by the same argument people should need to go out of their way to copy-paste that into google translate.

            Thousands of people are going to read this thing. The writer could spare thousands of people spending tens of seconds (totaling days of human life), by simply spending less than a second spelling out the obscure term.

            • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

              Boy are you going to be surprised when you find out that there is an entire French literary tradition that doesn't concern itself with who does and does not speak the language.

              • knorker a day ago ago

                Is this some snarky reddit comment?

                Yeah, there are literally billions of people in the world who don't speak English. And yet HN is de facto English.

                Do you see many people commenting on HN in French? How's that working out for them? Are they succeeding or failing to communicate?

                It seems that people are, for the most part, succeeding in tailoring their message for their audience.

            • fragmede 2 days ago ago

              Who's going all the way to Google translate to copy and paste? You just select the text and right click/long press and select translate.

              • knorker 2 days ago ago

                I'm not sure what you are attempting to add by being pedantic while not affecting the conclusion in any what whatsoever.

      • CompoundEyes 2 days ago ago

        Call to Arms! ^_^

    • thegrim000 3 days ago ago

      >> Elon's shutdown of Starlink over Ukraine

      "In February 2022, two days after Russia's full-scale invasion, Ukraine requested that the American aerospace company SpaceX activate their Starlink satellite internet service in the country, to replace internet and communication networks degraded or destroyed during the war.[2][3][4] Starlink has since been used by Ukrainian civilians, government and military.[3][5] The satellite service has been employed for humanitarian purposes as well as defense and counterattacks on Russian positions.[6]"

      "In 2022, Elon Musk denied a Ukrainian request to extend Starlink's coverage up to Russian-occupied Crimea during a counterattack on a Crimean port, from which Russia had been launching attacks against Ukrainian civilians; doing so would have violated US sanctions on Russia.[18] This event was widely reported in 2023, erroneously characterizing it as Musk "turning off" Starlink coverage in Crimea.[19][20]"

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starlink_in_the_Russian-Ukrain...

      • noja 2 days ago ago

        “ According to three people familiar with the command, Musk told a senior engineer at the California offices of SpaceX, the Musk venture that controls Starlink, to cut coverage in areas including Kherson, a strategic region north of the Black Sea that Ukraine was trying to reclaim.” — https://www.reuters.com/investigations/musk-ordered-shutdown...

      • 2 days ago ago
        [deleted]
      • szundi 2 days ago ago

        [dead]

      • throw93039r88 2 days ago ago

        I am sure it is against Terms of Service to use Starlink to bomb people!

        Last time starlink was used to sank tanker near Turkey. It was miracle tanker was empty, and there was no ecological catastrophe!

        • OKRainbowKid 2 days ago ago

          IIRC, that tanker was chosen preciselybecause it was empty and would not cause an ecological disaster. Not much of a miracle.

        • callc 2 days ago ago

          “It is a crime to commit crimes using our product or service”

          Yeah… crimes are crimes.

        • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 2 days ago ago

          It is a fascinating thought. War being against TOS. And enforced thusly. As an abstract idea that is not connected to reality on the ground it offers a.. view into today's mind and what it can be compelled with.

          • gmdrigipo 2 days ago ago

            If Starlink does not enforce its TOS, it is a weapon used in the war (guidance system for drones), and its satellites are legitimate targets for air defence.

            West uses the same logic to bomb neutral tankers, because they may carry weapon or stuff!

            • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 2 days ago ago

              My relatively mild amusement comes from war being against TOS, where war is effectively ultimate break of local level TOS. The only reason it is even discussed in this way is because, as war goes, it is contained. 'Real wars have no terms of service' is my subtle point.

              edit: I accept I am a somewhat horrible person to even be able to articulate those thoughts.

              • sedawkgrep 2 days ago ago

                > accept I am a somewhat horrible person to even be able to articulate those thoughts.

                No, you’re simply thoughtful and a realist. To acknowledge something doesn’t mean you agree with or endorse it.

    • vcliberal 2 days ago ago

      > From my specific perspective in IT, the increasing centralization across every vendor category (three major x86 server manufacturers, two CPU vendors, two GPU makers, three global-scale public clouds, ISP mono- and duopolies, a handful of commercial operating systems, a near-monopoly EUVL supplier - the list goes on) is a dire threat to not just the open internet, but open technology in general.

      > We need to be better advocates for and champions of the technological future we envision, rather than just blindly celebrate startups and tech fads all the time.

      There are already groups for these things (W3C, ICANN, IEEE, etc.), so how I interpret what you’re saying is that we need to abandon large corporations and go with... what exactly?

      I’m not going rally behind a government administration that seeks dictatorial power over everything. That’s much worse than power spread over FAANG.

      • alecco 2 days ago ago

        Most of those groups were co-opted by Big Tech. I can tell from personal experience 20 years ago. In my case Microsoft and Cisco put people dedicated to the standard and we actual coders lost just out of ballooning time required for meetings and pointless complexity.

        You can probably say the same for most of STEM academia. That's why I respect the Berkeley people. They are often insane far-far-left zealots, but they are the least corrupted by corporations. That's why you can see great open things like RISC-V come out of "The People's Republic of Berkeley".

        • abc123abc123 2 days ago ago

          Yep. For instance, the linux foundation is just a shadow of its former self, full of CV-stuffing people from global corporations.

          Look no further than to corona times, when the LF wanted to develop a global digital vaccine passport. That's basically helping authoritarians, and completely against the open source and decentralization spirit.

          A new foudation needs to be laid, banning global corporations from participating. If not, after a few years, due to their power, money and influence, they will have taken over (again).

          • goku12 2 days ago ago

            > A new foudation needs to be laid, banning global corporations from participating. If not, after a few years, due to their power, money and influence, they will have taken over

            No amount of ban or rules will prevent those corporations from carrying out a coup on any foundation or even the society itself. They have enough power, money and influence to find loopholes around them and exploit them.

            The only way to stop them is to be eternally vigilant, actively recognize their sleazy tactics and push back together as a determined team. That can be achieved only by a smart population whose basic instincts cannot be easily predicted and manipulated by those corporations.

            Take the example of the web. When the bigtech hijacked it and went on their bloat-up rampage, the rest of the community should have just forked the standards, cut out the excess fat and extended it with sane, light and orthogonal designs. Instead, we foolishly let chrome extend their monopoly in web development, market share and future designs of the web.

            But the rot extends much deeper. Modern educational system teaches us just enough values and advanced knowledge to be the obedient and productive slaves to these corporations, but never enough to question their motives. It misleads us into believing that we and the world economy owe them our survival. It glorifies personal achievements and hyper-individualism to the extend that we suffer major emotional trauma as a result. Yet, are we even compensated appropriately in return for prioritizing our careers? They programmed us to sacrifice our happiness and relationships to enrich some remorseless and obscenely wealthy strangers.

      • FatherOfCurses 2 days ago ago

        How passionately do you feel about that position every time AWS us-east-1 goes down?

    • CodingJeebus 3 days ago ago

      It’s hard to be a better advocate without diving into the politics of why we’re in the situation we are, which also doesn’t address the amount of political power you and I have relative to the interests that want said technological consolidation to exist.

      And given that the tech community trends towards political philosophies like libertarianism, which is inherently anti-organization and anti-collectivist, I’m not sure how you begin to scratch the surface of what a real solution looks like.

      • nradov 3 days ago ago

        Politics are a factor but economics is a bigger one. With any technology, each successive generation inevitably requires larger and larger capital investments. Ideally governments should do more to preserve competition but when it costs >$10B to develop a new microchip manufacturing process that inherently limits how many players the market can support. And if one company bets on the wrong technology or gets the timing wrong that can leave them too financially weak to survive.

        • AnthonyMouse 3 days ago ago

          > when it costs >$10B to develop a new microchip manufacturing process that inherently limits how many players the market can support.

          Does it though? TSMC's market cap is over a trillion dollars. Likewise Nvidia. What's $10B compared to these numbers? Less than 1%. Maybe we couldn't have a thousand of them, but why couldn't we have ten?

          Not only that, this technology isn't a single invention, so why does it have to be a single company? Couldn't some companies make the fabs and other ones operate them, causing them each to require less capital and be easier to compete with on its own? Couldn't the various pieces of equipment in the fabs each be developed by a separate company?

          "It costs >$10B to do this as a vertically integrated conglomerate" is bad, so maybe don't have that.

          • ksclk 2 days ago ago

            I assume it's cheaper to own the whole vertical slice at this scale, so you can control everything. Given that there's the financial incentive to do it, how would you prevent companies from growing vertically? If you declared a legal limit, how would you prevent a single entity from forming a chain of companies, effectively producing one huge vertical company as well?

            • AnthonyMouse 2 days ago ago

              > I assume it's cheaper to own the whole vertical slice at this scale, so you can control everything.

              In general it's the opposite: Internal politics destroys value and a single point of failure is a business risk even if you own it because failure is rarely intentional.

              As an example of the first, Kodak invented digital cameras but then failed to capitalize on them because it would have cannibalized their film business, and now their film business is dead anyway but so is the entire company. As an example of the second, Intel has vertically integrated fabs but now that their fabs are behind it's sinking the rest of the company. You could tell a similar story about AMD a decade and a half ago and spinning off their fabs is a big part of what saved them. IBM was also a big vertically integrated monster back in the day and they got out-competed by, well, everybody, and now they're a hollowed out consultancy.

              The way out of this for a large conglomerate is to not take internal dependencies. So for example, Samsung makes both DRAM and devices, and they typically use their own DRAM in their own devices. But it's industry standard DRAM that they sell to anyone who is willing to pay them for it, and if Samsung's DRAM fabs all got destroyed by a natural disaster or their technology fell behind for some reason, their device units could immediately switch to a competitor until their DRAM unit got their house back in order. Likewise, if their consumer devices became uncompetitive their DRAM unit could still sell to the rest of the market because they're not fully beholden to a single internal customer. And having that serves as a canary; Intel didn't have external fab customers so it didn't notice them switching to TSMC, which would otherwise have been a red flag.

              The "problem" is that you need to have some foresight. Everything's great until it isn't. If a company waits until one of the internal units has a problem before realizing that it's a single point of failure for other business units, it's too late to redesign the ship after you've already hit the iceberg.

            • schubidubiduba 2 days ago ago

              By enforcing antitrust laws, like it has been done many times in history?

        • mlsu 2 days ago ago

          Mostly the reason that these things are so capital intensive is due to market consolidation. If you want to do something useful and stay small, you have 2 choices: get crushed by a bigco or get absorbed.

          That's politics.

        • immibis 2 days ago ago

          Economics (allocation of scarce resources) is mostly defined by politics. For instance how you said that companies have to shut down if they take one bad risk and they don't get another chance - there was an explicit political decision that companies should work that way.

      • Forgeties79 3 days ago ago

        This piece could be infinitely long trying to address every single angle that is relevant, big or small. Or it could just cut to the heart of the matter and ask us all to fill in the rest. I’m fine with the latter, personally, as the “why” is not really what they’re debating. Whatever the cause(s), the end result is currently undesirable and necessitates action. We can unpack the “why” as we try to fix it.

    • runlaszlorun 2 days ago ago

      I'll admit that my early morning eyes saw "CYA". Which I'll admit had me scratching my head...

    • stego-tech 2 days ago ago

      Replying to myself probably breaks some sort of rule somewhere (ye olde double-posting), but I think it's warranted here given the volume of responses this comment of mine has received.

      I deliberately left out specific guidance because I wanted exactly the kind of responses we've seen here: a healthy mixture of takes from different backgrounds and perspectives, as well as the opportunity for fatalists to out themselves with the well-tread "just how it is"/"nothing we can do" schtick these sorts of posts tend to encourage. The discussion was the point, and I love seeing the back-and-forth folks have engaged with here over a very broad opinion of mine.

      What I'll leave everyone here with is something that's kept me afloat during my own dark times, far, far darker times than we see now:

      Just because everything works that way today, doesn't mean it'll work that way tomorrow. None of today was inevitable yesterday, and none of tomorrow is written in stone today. One individual can't fix the world, but enough of us together, focused on a glut of smaller changes, targeting specific problems, acting in concert despite being individuals? That is what drives meaningful change. That is what defines tomorrow.

      Don't fret that you can't overturn colossal problems alone. Stop worrying that things have grown too complicated to fix easily. Focus instead on building a community, a movement, an orchestra of change towards causes you believe in. Build more things and share them with others. Do things specifically because you find value in them, even - and especially - if "free markets" or VCs don't. The more you build that you can share, the wider the audience you can reach with your passions, the easier it is to change things for the better.

      Immiseration, complexity, monopoly, centralization: they're choices, not inevitabilities.

    • mxkopy 3 days ago ago

      Do unions work against corporate mergers? I’d imagine they do as they tend to work against corporate interests in general but I’m not that well versed in this sort of history.

      • venturecruelty 2 days ago ago

        Antitrust law does. That requires a government that cares to enforce the law.

      • gbear605 2 days ago ago

        It probably depends on the corporations. If a merger would result in all of the union’s employees being laid off, of course the union would fight it.

      • kruffalon 2 days ago ago

        Unions tend to work for people.

        If you think that working for people is against corporate interests then I think we should just be dine with corporations.

        I like people!

      • devilbunny 2 days ago ago

        Depends on the union and the laws under which they operate.

    • observationist 2 days ago ago

      We should require adherence to US regulatory policy at a minimum for any country that wants to connect to the US internet, and any attempt to circumvent, restrict, or infringe on that will result in a hard disconnect with that state for some period, like a weeklong blackout after each instance of overreach.

      Imagine the political revolutions if the petty tyrants take away the circuses.

    • 3 days ago ago
      [deleted]
    • Imustaskforhelp 2 days ago ago

      I wrote a really long post and pardon me for that if so may be and so I decided to have the tldr on the top of my comment rather than the bottom. I sometimes write long to give people an prospect into my thinking process so I am not sure but just read the TLDR too perhaps and if someone finds long posts enjoyful then buckle up!

      TLDR: There are movements like clippy and projects like scaleway and so so many others with forums like lowendtalks etc. to give value on the fact that there are alternatives with open source softwares so we need people who have the knowledge to spark that knowledge in a way understandable by the normal people and that is okay because normal people cant be expected to be all techie like us for the same reason I or you cant be expected to know all about ping pong.

      https://www.scaleway.com/en/news/scaleway-launches-its-risc-...

      > Featuring the T-HEAD TH1520 SoC, 16GB RAM and 128GB storage at a price of €15.99 per month, Elastic Metal RV1 is accessible to all budgets

      Scaleway :- a non three global-scale public clouds offering riscv from a custom manufacturer from a list might be something of your interest then :)

      Sir, I understand that the world is getting centralized since that is the fact but I have started to frequent more on https://vpspricetracker.com/ , https://serverdeals.cc/ , https://serververify.com/ , https://lowendtalk.com/ etc. (sorry for sending more links but I have a whole list of awesome stuff on a yopad/etherpad instance)

      Most of these websites come from Lowendtalk culture and most/some of these cloud providers were themselves users (I talked to one owner of a vps provider) / power users

      Let me try to be clear as to what I am saying here: The issue is convenience. Choosing these three global scale public scales, so if something falls down, its convenient/easy to put the blame on AWS for falling down. Nobody would get fired for picking AWS whereas something can definitely be said if they were other providers aside from these three

      Now you can read my other comments where people say that there are not enough offerings and yes there are and please read those comments in sake of not repeating contents.

      So basically the issues are incentives/convenience and other issues which can be fixed

      If you really want you can colocate on datacenters.

      This may not be the comment you might want and even now after saying this, the fact still stands that AWS contains a huge traffic and half the internet basically goes down when US-East-1 falls

      But what does CTA mean? CTA in my opinion means giving business to other than these few restricted companies. To be honest, there really isn't a reason for having on them in my opinion both in terms of pricing and many other things.

      I long have this opinion that your wallet decides the CTA. Who you fund etc. can be the easiest way to generate momentum and CTA. If you are referring to something like a political agitation/movement, these sound nice (and maybe we should have it) but they suffer from plethora of issues.

      There are two ways of going through, either convincing the masses to have political voting and then create laws which try to protect their consumers only for nothing to quite happen on that front (germany has some of the highest protection laws but I am not sure how that prevents the fact that even now AWS exists and the triopoly of cloud for most websites)

      These companies have malicious compliance and they have billions of dollars for every loophole so they always move faster than the speed of laws/ their revisions.

      A personal movement where we try to shame companies is good but in the end if businesses/people still use them, then there exactly isn't a point of it then, do they?

      So basically a movement where awareness is raised about corporations doing good deeds and giving them business seems the best way moving forward.

      But there is a fault where I don't really want to associate with Scaleway (as the example I gave) but rather the idea of similar possibilities (hetzner,netcup,contabo,ovh,upcloud,reliablesite I can go all day long :) )

      So in my opinion the best call to action is giving people the notion/possibilities that there are other options

      Edit: I think that homelabbing genuinely helps, in a way I see all of these communites, VPS hosting, these hosting providers themselves and homelabbing to even homelabbing some raspberry pi's to homelabbing over that old pc that is scraping dust to even Saas providers who run on vercel all on a spectrum of varying degrees

      In my opinion, there are some solid software available too and I had thought about compiling my own list of niche softwares/services/knowledge I know about but the thing is, most people aren't interested exactly per se and with the recent ram price increase, I am kind of left out so I am probably going to be hosting stuff on a VPS but the market is thinking of raising prices too so the barrier to entry in these markets might increase. One of the reasons I am unable to tinker with a rasp pi is that although its cheap, I live in third world country and I still need to genuinely think through it as an investment and so I just ran termux on an android tab lying around or even my phone for somedays but having to constantly power them

      The point I am trying to make is that somehow if you want call to action, you want to convince the masses and I have seen this happen but it needs to happen effectively with the message and not have to mess with the details within which I constantly see happen here and I am guilty of it because my comment here has a high noise:signal ratio but I hope that people are able to make effective slogans/things which stick with people about it

      Admittedly, the Clippy Movement by rouis lossman is the only one of such "movements" which has gotten movement and I still see clippy heads (lmao) and I have found that basically clippy heads and I and potentially you and other people reading this on hackernews too.

      I don't think that we should seperate movements/spin many tho, that seems antithetical to me personally and I am an idealist in many cases so If the new movements get so detached from average person it can be hard to gain base/support in the first place so movements like clippy are good enough to spread our messages too

      I was a clippy head on discord and many places but I slowly removed it from discord but I still have it on YT but I think that there are ways to really condense a lot of information for the average clippy protestor / helping them install linux and many other things

      There is no catharsis of the whole situation if you want me to have. The world both looks good and bad at the same time and its mixed.

      I think that the only thing we can do is be a realist and still try because we must live and trying is the only thing we can do but I (try?) but sometimes we live in our own bubbles so detached from reality and this is something I am going to work on (on how to communicate to the normal population like jeff geerling is a really good example at it too for homelab nerds, hi jeff if you are reading this)

    • NooneAtAll3 3 days ago ago

      [flagged]

      • viraptor 3 days ago ago

        One of these things is not like the others..

      • kreetx 2 days ago ago

        Little of Russia's mass consumption internet is actual free opinion though. While I do prefer freedom, free speech and people making up their own minds, then if the state is not democratic and if it's propaganda by that it produces, perhaps there is basis to block it?

        • NooneAtAll3 5 hours ago ago

          > if the state is not democratic and if it's propaganda by that it produces, perhaps there is basis to block it?

          how do I block ukrainian propaganda then?

        • crazybonkersai 2 days ago ago

          How convenient is to label opinion you do not agree with as propaganda and ban it in the name of free speech. Hypocrisy and narrow-mindedness of so called liberal crowd never ceases to amaze me.

          Guess what, by large Russian media is no different to any Western media in terms of propaganda and the "us good, them bad" narrative. Russian media advances Russian interests, American media advances American interests and so on. Take any media openly hostile to the state's foreign policy and it will prosecuted no matter the country. Wikileaks, The Intercept, Junge Welt to name a few.

          • crazybonkersai 2 days ago ago

            Yes, this is really my opinion. And unlike yourself, I am well familiar with Russian media first hand and not the distilled version presented by Western propaganda.

          • immibis 2 days ago ago

            How convenient it is to label troll-farm propaganda as "opinions you do not agree with"

            Is it really your opinion if you're paid to pretend to hold it?

      • 3 days ago ago
        [deleted]
  • yoan9224 2 days ago ago

    The normalization of internet shutdowns as a "riot control" tool is deeply concerning, especially given how technically unsophisticated most implementations are. In many cases, governments aren't doing surgical BGP manipulation - they're literally ordering ISPs to turn off infrastructure or block DNS at the national level. This is the equivalent of cutting power to an entire city to stop a protest in one neighborhood.

    What's particularly insidious is the asymmetry: governments can coordinate offline through military/police radio while citizens lose all communication infrastructure. The $1.5B average economic impact cited in the article is conservative - it doesn't account for destroyed business relationships, lost international contracts, or long-term reputation damage from being seen as "internet shutdown country."

    The technical countermeasures are evolving but limited. Mesh networks like Briar or Bridgefy work peer-to-peer over Bluetooth but have tiny range. Satellite internet (Starlink) requires hardware that's easy to detect/confiscate. eSIM switching only works if neighboring countries' towers reach across borders. The hardest problem is the "last mile" - even if you can get data out via satellite/mesh, how do you distribute it locally when cellular is down?

    We need international frameworks treating internet access as critical infrastructure with humanitarian protections, similar to water/electricity during conflicts. The ITU could mandate technical transparency - requiring governments to publicly log shutdown orders with specific geographic/temporal scope rather than blanket national blackouts. That wouldn't prevent shutdowns but would create accountability records.

  • modeless 3 days ago ago

    I thought this would be advocating "chaos monkey" style intentional shutdown to test institutions for resiliency in an outage situation. Might not be a bad idea. Maybe once every four years on leap day or something.

    • flakes 3 days ago ago

      > Maybe once every four years on leap day or something.

      Advantage: You no longer need to fix that leap day bug on your website.

      • dylan604 3 days ago ago

        would it be better to start the intentional shutdown at say a couple of minutes before midnight so you know the shutdown wasn't perhaps caused by the leap day bug?

    • ansgri 2 days ago ago

      In general I agree, but too much resilience can lead to worse infrastructure. Where I live, a couple hours of unannounced electricity outage every week is a non-event, so wires are patched in more and more points. And there's little motivation to invest significant money and time once to replace them by something more robust.

    • tonyedgecombe 2 days ago ago

      It would leave most developed countries in chaos, people would die because of it.

      • ema 2 days ago ago

        Centralized infrastructure is fragile and to the extent that the internet has become centralized unscheduled Internet shutdowns are bound to happen. The benefit of scheduled Internet shutdown is that people can prepare for it while at the same time gaining experience which helps with dealing with an unscheduled Internet shutdown.

        • xmprt 2 days ago ago

          On the other hand, if we force all systems to be resilient to an internet shutdown then we'd end up regressing society by a lot. Think about how much more work a single doctor is able to handle more efficiently by having internet access (eg. charts, patient history, access to all the world's libraries) that would be lost without the internet.

          • MarkusQ 2 days ago ago

            If we don't force critical systems to be resilient to an internet shutdown, we'll be doing the meme. Specifically:

            Weinberg’s 2nd Law:

            If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization.

      • hnben 2 days ago ago

        we do annual unannounced firedrills and now one dies as a consequence.

        • soerxpso 2 days ago ago

          That's because the unannounced firedrills don't involve setting the building on fire. A "drill" equivalent would be if we all pretended the internet is down sometimes, and in some cases that still might be impossible to do without negative consequences.

          • modeless 2 days ago ago

            Fire drills do involve denying access, though. We wouldn't need to bomb the datacenters but we would need to make them inaccessible.

  • bdcravens 3 days ago ago

    While it may not be practical from a technical perspective, the current US president has suggested shutting down parts of the Internet to ostensibly combat terrorist recruiting.

    https://time.com/4150891/republican-debate-donald-trump-inte...

    • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 2 days ago ago

      Lets be honest about it. There is no political power on this planet that does not see information flow as a vector that needs to be controlled ( and if they don't, sadly, they likely will not remain in power for long.. ). If true, we are just very lucky, it did not happen sooner. In a weird sense, it helps that corporate interests prevent it.

      • goku12 2 days ago ago

        > In a weird sense, it helps that corporate interests prevent it.

        As you may be well aware, Arpanet - the original internet - was designed to be resilient against the deliberate targeting of any of its infrastructure nodes. Of course, it had a military objective. But that design was actually useful to the broader humanity too. We could have sticked to a uniformly resilient multilevel mesh design for the entire internet.

        I'm sure that many people will object to this notion with multiple potential problems and several anecdotes. This is something that the corporate world always does. They choose and popularize inferior or suboptimal designs that serve their interests and then insist that it is the only way to do it. But we have numerous individual experiments and projects that demonstrate how effective the original mesh design was - bittorrent, wireless meshnets, IPv6 overlay networks, etc. We just had to put enough effort into it to create a singular cohesive resilient network.

        We inherited the current mess that we call the internet because several layers of it were centralized to satisfy corporate interests. They are responsible for our current predicament in the first place.

        • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 2 days ago ago

          You are right. I am not trying to rewrite history, but I also wonder if, had the planners thought the internet would become as big as it is, would they allow it to be as unrestrained as it was at the beginning?

          << We inherited the current mess that we call the internet because several layers of it were centralized to satisfy corporate interests. They are responsible for our current predicament in the first place.

          Separately, it does open an interesting question. Right now the push is to centralize, BUT lets speculate if they would push for decentralization if it meant it became useful for a different purpose ( solar system internet -- assuming private space exploration takes off). I wonder if they would try to cooperate vs force 'their' satellite ( I am assuming a lot now ) communication standard.

          • goku12 2 days ago ago

            > had the planners thought the internet would become as big as it is, would they allow it to be as unrestrained as it was at the beginning?

            Interesting question. I think that the arpanet took that design because it started as a research project. The corporations today are unlikely to have ever adopted such a design. I don't know how the corporations back in the day were. And as for the actual planners, the relevant question is if they had any reason to believe that it wouldn't grow so big so fast. We know so many examples where research labs and academia came up with products that are revolutionary. Perhaps they did imagine the possibility and were generous enough?

            > Right now the push is to centralize, BUT lets speculate if they would push for decentralization if it meant it became useful for a different purpose. I wonder if they would try to cooperate vs force 'their' satellite communication standard.

            That's a very tricky question too. Here's what I think. They would probably cooperate and create an open standard - but only because they want to compete with the dominant player with the first-mover advantage. And that standard would also be so complex that it defeats the purpose of being open, and only they can practically setup anything with it. This is trend that we see widely today - the web standards, kubernetes, bios (or equivalent) firmware, many parts of the Linux software ecosystem, etc. They don't go for the simplest, most logical, orthogonal and easy-to-implement designs, ever.

    • immibis 2 days ago ago

      They succeeded. You're linking to something from 2015 so it was about "ISIS", but in 2025 he did manage to censor TikTok so people wouldn't be "recruited" to "Hamas".

  • wereHamster 2 days ago ago

    I just recently learned of Meshtastic (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meshtastic) and MeshCore (https://meshcore.nz/), which provide a platform for private and group messaging over P2P LoRa. They don't depend on internet, rely on the community to provide routing nodes, and thus harder to block for governments. It's gaining steam in Europe and can already be used for messaging across wide distances. It's slow though, so forget streaming videos or images. It can only carry messages. But that's often enough to coordinate or spread news.

    • alnwlsn 2 days ago ago

      In my area there are now just enough Meshtastic nodes that I can (somewhat unreliably) talk between my office and home, about 5 miles.

      However, it does heavily relay on the internet for setup and distribution (app stores, or else lots of pip install, git clone, pnpm install, etc.)

      I've been working on a virtual machine with all the dependencies preinstalled just so I'll have offline access, and it's surprisingly difficult (though I'm not super familiar with typical webdev stuff). I'd have to think a regular user who really needs to rely on it doesn't stand a chance, which doesn't seem to mesh(ha) that well given how loudly the "off gridness" of it is touted.

      Then again, you probably need the internet to be able to obtain the hardware in the first place, but that's another problem.

    • gzalo 2 days ago ago

      The bad part is that it cannot create a world wide mesh, as has a low max hop limit (7), and the nodes need lines of sight. So more than 200 km in a mostly flat city is almost imposible.

      I wish we had an HF ISM band that could be used for this purposes without needing a license, combined with LoRa radios would yield great results

  • stogot 3 days ago ago

    Its become clear that the axiom “The Net Interprets Censorship As Damage and Routes Around It” as no longer true. It hasnt been since before 2010 anecdotely but the data Schneier presents here is undeniable

    • cyberax 3 days ago ago

      This is still somewhat true. For example, Russia is now frequently shutting down mobile Internet. Ostensibly for protection against drone attacks, but even it had to relent a bit and allow at least some whitelisted services to work.

      So immediately local VPN companies started providing the unrestricted access through proxies at these services.

    • hulitu 2 days ago ago

      It hasn't been true since 9/11 when the US name servers were "shut down" and traffic was dropped ftom level3 nodes.

      • stogot 2 days ago ago

        What name server / level3 event was this?

  • indigo945 2 days ago ago

    It's strange to read so many countries listed in an article about deliberate internet shutdowns, and even India called out as the world's shutdown capitol, and not one mention of China. Internet shutdowns during important political events, or even just national holidays, are common practice in China, have been for decades, and this is widely known. How is it not China that wins the great prize here?

  • ursAxZA 3 days ago ago

    If anything, this just highlights the need for Starlink-style connectivity and off-grid power.

    Of course, once jamming enters the picture, even that lifeline disappears.

    • jedimastert 3 days ago ago

      > Starlink-style connectivity

      Note that one of the higher-profile deliberate internet shutdowns was Starlink itself shutting down internet connectivity in Ukraine.

      • ursAxZA 3 days ago ago

        Ultimately it just becomes a question of where you want the choke point to live — in a state actor, or in a private operator.

        Neither option is risk-free; the failure modes simply differ.

        A government can shut you off for political reasons, a corporation can shut you off for contractual or geopolitical ones.

        As long as the system assumes centralized stewardship for safety or reliability, someone will inevitably hold the switch — the only variable is who.

        • dylan604 3 days ago ago

          > in a state actor, or in a private operator.

          multiple satellite operators are coming on line. what are the odds all of them coordinate to shut down in one region invalidating using the other providers as fail over?

          • ursAxZA 2 days ago ago

            I might be mistaken, but as far as I know there is currently no other LEO broadband provider that is meaningfully comparable at a global scale.

            Starlink is often treated as the reference point not because it is perfect or fully resilient, but because there is no second network at a similar scale that could realistically serve as a failover today.

            If we imagine a hypothetical future where three mature operators exist, then yes — absent coordinated political or geopolitical action, at least one network might remain online.

            However, even that surviving operator would not necessarily provide full coverage of the affected region. Global redundancy is extremely hard in practice, because maintaining continuous, worldwide LEO coverage is not free — it requires massive capex and opex, ground stations, regulatory permissions, and local political approval.

            True worldwide failover remains more of a theoretical construct than an operational reality.

            • Thorrez a day ago ago

              What about failing over from LEO to geosynchronous? E.g. Viasat?

              • dylan604 a day ago ago

                Is anyone left doing network from GEO? Places like HughesNet were soooo slow that I can't imagine their users have not all switched to Starlink.

            • Hackbraten 2 days ago ago

              == Low Earth Orbit

        • 2 days ago ago
          [deleted]
      • onethumb 2 days ago ago

        Is that true? This comment suggests otherwise, with citations. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46351511

      • try_the_bass 2 days ago ago

        Notably absent from TFA...

        Probably because it's not actually a truthful characterization of what happened! I know it's popular to find every possible reason to bag on Musk, but you don't need to resort to disinformation to do it.

        • tenuousemphasis 2 days ago ago

          Are you trying to argue that Starlink isn't cut off Ukrainian access? Because they did and it was well documented.

        • decremental 2 days ago ago

          [dead]

    • easyThrowaway 2 days ago ago

      Can't talk for the USA, but it's widely acknowledged that the spread of broadband in Europe was driven by P2P and tools like Emule/eDonkey or BitTorrent.

      We need some similar killer application for satellite connectivity and mesh networking. Something that makes the technology so requested and so ubiquitous in such a short time that it couldn't be banned even if they tried.

    • symbogra 2 days ago ago

      In Tanzania they went around to hotels during the ban to make sure they didn't have starlink. It's illegal here but many have it. During that time some enterprising individuals charged tourists to access theirs.

    • nradov 2 days ago ago

      The beam forming used by Starlink (and Starshield) is highly resistant to jamming. But Starlink doesn't offer service in some countries. And the ground terminals can be detected.

  • ezoe 2 days ago ago

    > In the US, for example, shutdowns would be hard to enforce.

    Is that really? US government has tanks, bombers, missiles and tactical nukes while "a well regulated Militia" have petty rifles and motolovs.

    It's very easy for US government to cause state-wide power blackout, effectively shutdown Internet.

    • Thorrez a day ago ago

      The quote has nothing to do with a well regulated militia. It's about whether the technical ability for internet shutdowns has been built or not.

      >A country’s ability to shut down the internet depends a lot on its infrastructure. In the US, for example, shutdowns would be hard to enforce. As we saw when discussions about a potential TikTok ban ramped up two years ago, the complex and multifaceted nature of our internet makes it very difficult to achieve. However, as we’ve seen with total nationwide shutdowns around the world, the ripple effects in all aspects of life are immense. (Remember the effects of just a small outage—CrowdStrike in 2024—which crippled 8.5 million computers and cancelled 2,200 flights in the US alone?)

      >The more centralized the internet infrastructure, the easier it is to implement a shutdown. If a country has just one cellphone provider, or only two fiber optic cables connecting the nation to the rest of the world, shutting them down is easy.

      Nukes and tanks weren't built for internet shutdowns, and it's a ridiculous idea that if the US government decided to do an internet shutdown that they would decide to use a nuke for that.

    • immibis 2 days ago ago

      The US hasn't really won any war for the long term since WW2. It turns out it's hard to change people's opinion by bombing them. Equipment is good at destroying the other sides's factories, and making people afraid of you (though even that's usually done with on-the-ground police boots) but it can't actually make people agree with your side, and in fact, seems to usually have the opposite effect. They can only hold control temporarily as long as they apply massive military pressure. As soon as they let up the pressure, they lose.

      It probably has something to do with the strict top-down control structure. It's a Linux vs Microsoft situation. Large organisations, regardless of type, cannot innovate.

    • amelius 2 days ago ago

      Tactical nukes are a big no-go, so don't expect them to be ever used for something like this.

      • goku12 2 days ago ago

        Oh! You don't need any of those. I'm sure that they have enough tactical EMP devices to do the job.

        PS: ElectroMagnetic Pulse weapons for the TLA-haters here.

    • 2 days ago ago
      [deleted]
  • donohoe 2 days ago ago

    Its been happening a lot and its becoming more prevalent. This coverage from 2022 is still highly relevant and digs into some details:

    https://restofworld.org/2022/blackouts/

  • sowbug 2 days ago ago

    The recently released One Battle After Another reinforces the impotence of legal rights against a corrupt government entity. In the situations Schneier envisions, corruption will almost certainly be at play.

  • BLKNSLVR 3 days ago ago

    Which reminds me that I've let my connection to this group lapse for... about a decade: https://air-stream.org/

    Covering Adelaide, South Australia. Such communities should exist in most cities.

  • loweritnow a day ago ago

    I am going to be the odd one out here and say that internet should be cut off during protests and other unrests. It might even slow down colour revolutions and give the state some breathing space to manage public sentiment.

  • IceHegel 2 days ago ago

    I’m against internet shutdowns, but I cringe at the phrase “international community.” Who does that even include?

  • 8bitsrule 2 days ago ago

    According to Gigazine (Osaka, est. 2000), "In 2024, there were 296 internet shutdowns in 54 countries around the world, with Myanmar, India, Pakistan and Russia accounting for about 70% of the total."

    https://gigazine.net/gsc_news/en/20250228-internet-shutdowns...

  • g947o 2 days ago ago

    Related: this is an interesting case study https://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/15/world/asia/15china.html

  • bschne 2 days ago ago

    fun anecdote about Ethiopia doing this to prevent cheating in national exams --- https://x.com/benkuhn/status/1339016975494811649?s=20

  • vivzkestrel 3 days ago ago

    did you see the data i posted earlier on how many shutdowns have happened this year across the world? https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/zach.rosson/viz/STOP_...

    • vjay15 3 days ago ago

      its really crazy how much internet shutdowns india has done

      • crossroadsguy 2 days ago ago

        India doesn’t do any of this. This is all propaganda by CIA, Ford Foundation, and George Soros. India is the biggest democracy and we had autonomous and conscious flying air-things when the world barely even existed in this form i.e. millennia ago. This is the best UNESCO certified country in the world led by a non-biological (in His own words) head of state. Now, bow!

        PS. Don’t forget the zero! You still owe us that much.

        • goku12 2 days ago ago

          I was confused for a minute after reading this, until I remembered that I'm on HN.

  • ffuxlpff 3 days ago ago

    One more reason to resist the fragile lifestyle that requires constant internet access. Even if you don't live in a totalitarian country where shutting down the net would be easy and probable.

    Some time ago someone posted in Twitter a letter of Theodore Kaczynski giving life advice, one point being not to use internet for more than one hour a day. Too bad I couldn't find it anymore.

    • zzo38computer 2 days ago ago

      I also think that you should be able to do stuff without requiring internet access, and also should be able to do stuff without requiring electrical power, etc. You should not be overly reliance on technology. They can be useful (in many ways), but should not be mandatory to rely on, and furthermore should avoid damaging the natural environments for such technology, and also avoid damaging the possibility of working without them.

    • dijit 3 days ago ago

      why is this flagged? (maybe Theo? I don’t know this person).

      Its absolutely a good argument against fragile IoT devices that have no local/offline mode and the ever increasing lurch of internet requirements for our daily life.

      I’m not sure my phone does much of anything without an internet connection. Yet it is my primary banking and authentication method (via BankID).

      EDIT: Theodore Kaczynski is the unabomber… well, thats an odd name to drop and maybe not an ideal candidate for life advice.

      • IAmGraydon 3 days ago ago

        It's getting downvoted because (1) this person is suggesting the answer to governments taking away our ability to freely communicate is to stop freely communicating (2) he's giving life advice from a terrorist mass murderer.

        Yes, you're not at risk from being cut off from the world if you're not connected to it in the first place. That's not a state most of us want to exist in. Ted Kaczynski lived in a small cabin in the woods away from humanity.

        • ffuxlpff 2 days ago ago

          The solutions requiring constant internet connection are pushed by states and companies because they help cutting costs and gathering information. However, the users are often more vulnerable to the risks if the technology fails but have relatively little say.

          The solutions that do much the same but require internet connection only once a day or even once an hour would be much more resilient and safe but currently there are few incentives for providers to develop and offer them.

          The extreme situations like war or dictatorship are good awakening calls but it is easy to see there are lots of risks involved even if things would go rather smoothly otherwise.

        • blueflow 2 days ago ago

          > this person is suggesting the answer to governments taking away our ability to freely communicate is to stop freely communicating

          You equate comms with internet. Maybe you should talk to people IRL more often.

          • IAmGraydon 2 days ago ago

            No one in their right mind believes that you can accomplish widespread, high speed communication via "talking to people IRL" like you can with the internet. It has become a very important way that we share information broadly, deal with emergencies, and stay informed. Going back to the stone age is not a good option at this point. But you know that, and you're just posting nonsense to have an argument.

            • blueflow 2 days ago ago

              > No one in their right mind believes that you can accomplish widespread, high speed communication via "talking to people IRL" like you can with the internet.

              Nobody claimed that. I'm not sure whether this sort of comms is meaningful at all or whether "staying informed" is just the dopamine thing in effect.

              > Going back to the stone age

              Its actually 20 years ago. That's less than the median age.

              • IAmGraydon 2 days ago ago

                You think the internet started in 2005? Are you sure you belong here?

                • blueflow 20 hours ago ago

                  Third straw-man in a row. get lost, troll.

    • noident 3 days ago ago

      Ted has some interesting ideas but I personally would not accept any life advice from him

    • iberator 2 days ago ago

      Living without the Internet is still doable. Just a little bit harder.

      You gonna lose some time and money (buying bus tickets physically and not buying cheap junk over the internet, BUT you're gonna gain like literally 6h per day :)

      Been there, done that. Its net positive experience. Just like going back to 1999.

      • krior 2 days ago ago

        You are aware of the fact that a lot of the payment infrastructure relies on the internet today?

        • goku12 2 days ago ago

          We used to carry paper pieces called 'bank notes' or 'bills' and round metal disks called 'coins' in a small leather pouch in our pockets called wallets. They were pretty effective for payments without much of an infrastructure. Even banks worked using paper documents and books.

          I know this sounds a bit too condescending. But that's honestly not my intention. I just couldn't help it! Jokes aside, it's true that we often forget that these things can be done and were done without the internet. But more importantly, there are 2 dangerous implications for our over reliance on the internet for our financial activities. The first is that the government or a non-state actor can easily disrupt our commercial and personal activity unintentionally or as a retribution. We have effectively surrendered our financial autonomy to multiple powerful players.

          The second major problem is if we ever face a post-apocalyptic situation with regards to modern technology. We already have only a few fabs that can meet the global demand for advanced ICs. We have already seen our vulnerability to one of them when a flood there caused supply chain disruptions and a slump in even automobile markets. HDD and SSD manufacturers have similar weaknesses. Meanwhile, DRAM manufacturers are placing all their (gambling) chips in the AI hyperscaler market, threatening to disrupt every market from smartphones, laptops and consumer appliances to military and commercial jets, ATC, shipping, railway signalling, telecom infrastructure, etc. The technology apocalypse isn't that farfetched and we are extremely vulnerable to it.

        • Bender 2 days ago ago

          Depends where one lives. In my location there is zero dependency on the internet. It's just a convenience thing and the growing number of miscreants on the internet is negating that balance for me personally. Sooner than later I am going back to a landline and ditching the cell phone.

        • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 2 days ago ago

          Sure, but it does not mean it is not possible as OP notes.

          More to your point though, even if it does, maybe it should not realy on it.

  • hannukahharry 2 days ago ago

    This is concerning in the comments:

    > I suspect most can guess where this mess will end up, and it’s not good.

    What I read from this is going to sound conspiratorial, but I think it’s a valid “read between the lines” of an insider. I think they’re saying that they’re alarmed that Silicon Valley is supporting the current U.S. administration assuming he’s doing what’s best for their welfare, while it’s clear based on the activities of Iran and others that are practicing working without internet that they are planning on losing internet, which could either be because Iran, Russia, China, or the U.S. itself may plan to sever or disable internet connections (while unsure what would be isolated or disabled) as an act of war or extreme and dangerously naive nationalism.

  • karel-3d 3 days ago ago

    Ahh I just wanted to host my website in Afghanistan.

    (there are actual web hosting companies in Kabul, and it seems its not illegal to send money there)

  • krautburglar 3 days ago ago

    Worship of the eternal steady-state. Whoever speaks against any intervention to preserve it is a heretic, and must be excommunicated.

    Whether it’s ML training, pentesting, or old-fashioned engineering, we have to throw the occasional curve-ball at our systems in order to improve them. Surprise internet shutdowns are good, even if the ostensible reasons for them are dumb. Maybe people will host more information offline, and become less dependent on cloud services…

    • BLKNSLVR 3 days ago ago

      > Surprise internet shutdowns are good

      I'll correct that to: Surprise internet outages are good

      For the same outcomes though. More and varied methods of contingency.

  • kallo 2 days ago ago

    Ha

  • temptemptemp111 3 days ago ago

    [dead]