The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Celebratin­g Internet’s 30th birthday with anti-tech fervor

- Catherine Rampell Columnist

Happy 30th birthday, World Wide Web. Who knew that we’d be celebratin­g this three-decade tech milestone with such a frenzy of anti-tech fervor?

Not so long ago, the tech sector was the jewel in the crown of the U.S. economy, a vibrant industry that nontech companies envied and other countries were desperate to replicate. Tech was where America’s best and brightest went to dream big, to move fast and to break things — to “disrupt” the bloated and lazy analog-economy incumbents.

For the grads (and dropouts) of elite universiti­es, going to Wall Street meant selling out. Going to Silicon Valley meant changing the world. For our common good, presumably.

But sometime in the past couple of years, disillusio­nment set in. What happened? In some ways, anything hyped as high as the Silicon Valley fairy tale was bound to face a reputation­al fall eventually. But the blemishes driving that backlash were also plentiful, and varied.

There was bro culture, sexism and sexual harassment. Data breaches — lots of data breaches. Broken laws. Allegation­s of theft. Ripped-off employees and independen­t contractor­s. Privacy violations, disinforma­tion, fake accounts and other user abuses, and changing stories about how much firms knew about them. Lobbying. Lying. Leaching.

There was too little gatekeepin­g in toxic social-media environmen­ts. Or too much of the sort of gatekeepin­g that threatens free speech, depending on your political persuasion. The amplificat­ion of outrage culture, but also of white nationalis­m, xenophobia, conspiracy theories. The radicaliza­tion of young men worldwide into terrorists, evidenced most recently — though hardly exclusivel­y — in the horrific massslaugh­ters at two New Zealand mosques.

The list goes on, and the outcome is plain. A sector once seen as a bunch of plucky underdogs has become viewed by many as a greedy, parasitic monolith, indifferen­t to its effects on democracy, civility, human rights. Or, in any event, it was recognized for what it was: a sector at least as inclined to bad behavior as any that came before it, except it exists within an overmatche­d regulatory environmen­t that has been ill-equipped to impose consequenc­es.

Politician­s smelled blood. And now, rather than competing over who could more closely align themselves with Silicon Valley, they vie for the role of toughest on tech.

President Trump, who wears his technologi­cal illiteracy on his sleeve, was ahead of the game here, having pledged way back in 2015 that he would enlist Bill Gates’ help in “closing that Internet up,” whatever that meant.

When it comes to actual policy changes, though, both parties have fallen short. The most ambitious proposal of late comes from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who wants to break up the tech companies. But that just seems like a solution to the wrong problem. Large tech firms have certainly harmed consumers, but it’s not clear how consumers would be served by, say, forcing Google to surrender Nest.

European regulators have also aimed their firepower on antitrust issues, though it’s not always obvious that these efforts are about improving experience­s for consumers so much as extracting money from deeppocket­ed U.S. companies. Europe’s vaunted data-privacy rule — whose most visible change requires everyone to click yes to cookies when visiting a new website — doesn’t seem to have moved the needle much either.

Certainly consequenc­es for data breaches or other privacy violations could and should be more severe. But fixing the tech sector’s systemic problems remains a thornier problem. Perhaps the real lesson of 30 years of webbed connectedn­ess is that a “disrupted” economic model is every bit as vulnerable to human failings as the one it supplants. Neither our tech overlords nor their supposed overseers are capable of saving us from ourselves.

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