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The defining document of the internet is not a hacker’s manifesto or some cyberpunk screed espousing the virtues of anarchy. Instead, it is a permission slip, dotted and signed by the U.S. federal government, entitled Section 230. This portion of the Communication Decency Act, which was enacted in 1996, allowed websites to publish users’ content while not being held legally liable for what those users posted.
It made the internet into anyone’s playground, and what gave rise to today’s social media giants. You could build what you wanted, for whomever you wanted, without worrying about being prosecuted if someone used your platform to commit a crime.
However, it feels like many within the technology sector have retconned the internet years as some sort of laissez faire, who is John Galt, utopia: The government didn’t get involved, and so, innovation flourished. Ergo, if the government simply got out of the way of every other sector in which tech plays a role, America would flourish. You can see this attitude manifest in the celebratory, tech-sector assisted dismantling of the federal government currently underway. The wonton slashing and burning of regulation should clear the way for founders to revitalize America, or so the thinking goes.
It is far beyond the scope of this column to make pronouncements on politics and on whether these people are correct—but I think it is important to examine their belief systems because the sectors that matter the most for the future will be largely determined by whomever occupies 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. AI, nuclear, space, robotics, biotechnology, all will rely on blessings of the federal powers at some point in their journey. With the Trump election, it feels like we have a fairly clear signal for how policy will be conducted on the political right to support (or destroy) the industries of their choice.
However, it has been remarkably difficult to find a clearly articulated vision by the left about our technological future. This week, New York Times opinion columnist Ezra Klein and Atlantic staff writer Derek Thompson co-published a book aimed at remedying that.
Ironically titled Abundance, despite it only being 226 pages of writing partially cribbed from previously published pieces, Klein and Thompson posit that by embracing technology and crafting new policy that encourages more supply-side providers, Democrats can fix America. They argue that most policies spearheaded by Democrats since the 1970s have focused on subsidizing consumer demand, such as offering home loans to disadvantaged buyers. If instead they focused on also encouraging more competition, such as new homebuilding technology, encouraging more construction entrepreneurs, or slashing zoning regulations—Democrats could reduce the price of essential services and the world would be a better place.
Back to Section 230: Regardless of how you feel about the specific shape of the modern internet, the law has been enormously effective—its shielding effect has protected generations of startups from lawsuits. Good regulation does that: it protects what needs to be protected and otherwise allows competition to flourish. Abundance argues that the American left has largely lost sight of what good policy entails, and offers an idea about how to fix that.
The few, the proud, the neoliberal
The authors identify four areas of governance failures in the U.S., and spend much of their book looking into specific problems in California and New York City. These two places act as important case studies because they are centers of Democratic power—the left cannot blame anyone but themselves for governmental shortcomings in these states. The authors get into how those failures have manifested themselves, but one striking feature is that the two states have the highest loss of population due to immigration to other states. Klein and Thompson mostly focus their arguments the things that matter most to quality of life for Americans:
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- How some well-intentioned Democrat-led policies have played out badlyWhat a better path forward could look likeWhy success relies on people with the grit and determination to execute
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