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Home Broadband

Dyson Fears

by Dana Blankenhorn
March 27, 2006
in Broadband, Broadband Gap, Communications Policy, Current Affairs, Internet, law, spam
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Esther_dyson
Readers here may recall I had a colloquy last week with Esther Dyson (right) over the AOL-Goodmail deal. She pointed me to a statement from the CEO of Goodmail, and defended the company’s actions so-far.

Frankly, I take her words seriously. I am an Esther Dyson fan.

Esther is the daughter of the physicist Freeman Dyson, the sister of the scientific historian George Dyson and the granddaughter of the famed English musician, also named George Dyson.  I could find no relationship between her and James Dyson, the vacuum cleaner inventor.

When I saw my first ad for that vacuum cleaner, in fact, I was certain that James Dyson said it was the first vacuum cleaner that "doesn’t use suction." In fact, he said that the Dyson vacuum doesn’t lose suction.

Misunderstandings are easy.

Esther feels Goodmail has been misunderstood. As she later wrote:

Goodmail has its own long-term success to consider.  It’s not resting its
business case on technicalities, but rather on satisfied customers
long-term.  You many not believe that, and indeed, they do have to prove it
over time.

For my part, I do believe it, and I certainly follow the
principle of  innocent until/unless proven guilty.
(Emphasis mine.)

Dyson’s role as founding chair of ICANN illustrates this point well, and identifies what I consider a common character flaw among liberals. She never saw the possibility of evil in the domain name game until it was, frankly, too late. She did not see Stratton Sclavos, for instance, as evil until he had completely outmanuevered her and rendered ICANN useless. And even afterwards she refused to give these machinations the kind of condemnation they deserved, at a time when such condemnation might have been helpful.

I think Esther found her role at ICANN as a judicial one, not a
political one, certainly not a moralistic one. She would recoil
from words like  evil, calling them imprecise, absolute, and judgmental.

In politics, at times like these, the word for this is naivete.

In the battle between a political thesis and its antithesis,
corruption is the whole point of excess. What happens is that the
original thesis — say Reaganism — is used as a cudgel, to selfish
ends, by people who care only for power, and for the wielding of power.
Power corrupts naturally.

This is what makes democracy, rigorously applied, so powerful and important.
Having two different responsible groups to whom power can be entrusted
means that the halls of power are flushed regularly. This is what makes
creative destruction so powerful, what makes social mobility so necessary. Think of it as evolution in action.

But no one, especially when they are in a seat of power and see the
coming threat, goes willingly. No matter that their rhetoric is all
about freedom and democracy, they will act politically.
They will disguise their motives. They will be ruthless. And it is this
ruthlessness that proves, more than anything, what they are, and why
they must be tossed.

Given this natural progression, it is absolutely incumbent on those who
wield power with clean hands to always be on their guard.  Guilty until proven innocent, and even then suspect.  In the case
of ICANN, Dyson was not. In the case of Goodmail, she may not be.
Innocent until proven guilty is not the right standard when guilt means
so much. We must all be more suspicious than that. Or we’re lambs led
to slaughter.

Tags: Esther DysonGoodmail
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    I think there is a difference between being concerned over someone’s motives and the possible outcomes of their actions. A person does not have to be evil or have evil intent to do something harmful. Perhaps it would be better if our cynacism were kept at the level of actions and not motives.

    Reply
  2. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    I think there is a difference between being concerned over someone’s motives and the possible outcomes of their actions. A person does not have to be evil or have evil intent to do something harmful. Perhaps it would be better if our cynacism were kept at the level of actions and not motives.

    Reply

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