Cory Doctorow, Premature Internet Activists
Posted on February 13, 2025

"Premature antifacist" was a sarcastic term used by leftists caught up in the 
Red Scare to describe themselves, as they came under ideological suspicion for 
having traveled to Spain to fight against Franco's fascists before the US 
entered WWII and declared war against the business-friendly, anticommunist 
fascist Axis powers of Italy, Spain, Greece, and, of course, Germany:

https://www.google.com/books/edition/In_Denial/fBSbKS1FlegC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=%22premature+anti-fascist%22&pg=PA277&printsec=frontcover

The joke was that opposing fascism made you an enemy of America – unless you 
did so after the rest of America had woken up to the existential threat of a 
global fascist takeover. What's more, if you were a "premature antifascist," 
you got no credit for fighting fascism early on. Quite the contrary: fighting 
fascism before the rest of the US caught up with you didn't make you prescient 
– it made you a pariah.

I've been thinking a lot about premature antifascism these days, as literal 
fascists use the internet to coordinate a global authoritarian takeover that 
represents an existential threat to a habitable planet and human thriving. In 
light of that, it's hard to argue that the internet is politically irrelevant, 
and that fights over the regulation, governance, and structure of the internet 
are somehow unserious.

And yet, it wasn't very long ago that tech policy was widely derided as a 
frivolous pursuit, and that tech organizing was dismissed as "slacktivism":

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/10/04/small-change-malcolm-gladwell

Elevating concerns about the internet's destiny to the level of human rights 
struggle was delusional, a glorified argument about the rules for forums where 
sad nerds argued about Star Trek. If you worried that Napster-era copyright 
battles would make it easy to remove online content by claiming that it 
infringed copyright, you were just carrying water for music pirates. If you 
thought that legalizing and universalizing encryption technology would 
safeguard human rights, you were a fool who had no idea that real human rights 
battles involved confronting Bull Connor in the streets, not suing the NSA in a 
federal courtroom.

And now here we are. Congress has failed to update consumer privacy law since 
1988 (when they banned video store clerks from blabbing about your VHS 
rentals). Mass surveillance enables everything from ransomware, pig butchering 
and identity theft to state surveillance of "domestic enemies," from trans 
people to immigrants. What's more, the commercial and state surveillance 
apparatus are, in fact, as single institution: states protect corporations from 
privacy law so that corporations can create and maintain population-scale 
nonconsensual dossiers on all the intimate facts of our lives, which 
governments raid at will, treating them as an off-the-books surveillance 
dragnet:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/16/the-second-best-time-is-now/#the-point-of-a-system-is-what-it-does

Our speech forums have been captured by billionaires who censor anti-oligarchic 
political speech, and who spy on dissident users in order to aid in political 
repression. Bogus copyright claims are used to remove or suppress disfavorable 
news reports of elite rapists, thieves, war criminals and murderers:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/27/nuke-first/#ask-questions-never

You'd be hard pressed to find someone who'd describe the fights over tech 
governance in 2025 as frivolous or disconnected from "real politics"

This is where the premature antifascist stuff comes in. An emerging revisionist 
history of internet activism would have you believe that the first generation 
of tech liberation activists weren't fighting for a free, open internet – we 
were just shilling for tech companies. The P2P wars weren't about speech, 
privacy and decentralization – they were just a way to help the tech sector 
fight the entertainment industry. DRM fights weren't about preserving your 
right to repair, to privacy, and to accessibility – they were just about making 
it easy to upload movies to Kazaa. Fighting for universal access to encryption 
wasn't about defending everyday people from corporate and state surveillance – 
it was just a way to help terrorists and child abusers stay out of sight of 
cops.

Of course, now these fights are all about real things. Now we need to worry 
about centralization, interoperability, lock-in, surveillance, speech, and 
repair. But the people – like me – who've been fighting over this stuff for a 
quarter-century? We've gone from "unserious fools who mistook tech battles for 
human rights fights" to "useful idiots for tech companies" in an eyeblink.

"Premature Internet Activists," in other words.

This isn't merely ironic or frustrating – it's dangerous. Approaching tech 
activism without a historical foundation can lead people badly astray. For 
example, many modern tech critics think that Section 230 of the Communications 
Decency Act (which makes internet users liable for illegal speech acts, while 
immunizing entities that host that speech) is a "giveaway to Big Tech" and want 
to see it abolished.

Boy is this dangerous. CDA 230 is necessary for anyone who wants to offer a 
place for people to meet and discuss anything. Without CDA 230, no one could 
safely host a Mastodon server, or set up the long-elusive federated Bluesky 
servers. Hell, you couldn't even host a group-chat or message board:

https://www.techdirt.com/2020/06/23/hello-youve-been-referred-here-because-youre-wrong-about-section-230-communications-decency-act/

Getting rid of CDA 230 won't get rid of Facebook or make it clean up its act. 
It will just make it impossible for anyone to offer an alternative to Facebook, 
permanently enshrining Zuck's dominance over our digital future. That's why 
Mark Zuckerberg wants to kill Section 230:

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/zuckerberg-calls-changes-techs-section-230-protections-rcna486

Defending policies that make it easier to host speech isn't the same thing as 
defending tech companies' profits, though these do sometimes overlap. When tech 
platforms have their users' back – even for self-serving reasons – they create 
legal precedents and strong norms that protect everyone. Like when Apple stood 
up to the FBI on refusing to break its encryption:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple%E2%80%93FBI_encryption_dispute

If Apple had caved on that one, it would be far harder for, say, Signal to 
stand up to demands that it weaken its privacy guarantees. I'm no fan of Apple, 
and I would never mistake Tim Cook – who owes his CEOhood to his role in moving 
Apple production to Chinese sweatshops that are so brutal they had to install 
suicide nets – for a human rights defender. But I cheered on Apple in its fight 
against the FBI, and I will cheer them again, if they stand up to the UK 
government's demand to break their encryption:

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c20g288yldko

This doesn't make me a shill for Apple. I don't care if Apple makes or loses 
another dime. I care about Apple's users and their privacy. That's why I 
criticize Apple when they compromise their users' privacy for profit:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/12/youre-holding-it-wrong/#if-dishwashers-were-iphones

The same goes for fights over scraping. I hate AI companies as much as anyone, 
but boy is it a mistake to support calls to ban scraping in the name of 
fighting AI:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/17/how-to-think-about-scraping/

It's scraping that lets us track paid political disinformation on Facebook 
(Facebook isn't going to tell us about it):

https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/05/comprehensive-sex-ed/#quis-custodiet-ipsos-zuck

And it's scraping that let us rescue all the CDC and NIH data that Musk's 
broccoli-hair brownshirts deleted on behalf of DOGE:

https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/how-to-access-important-health-info-thats-been-scrubbed-from-the-cdc-site/

It's such a huge mistake to assume that anything corporations want is bad for 
the internet. There are many times when commercial interests dovetail with 
online human rights. That's not a defense of capitalism, it's a critique of 
capitalism that acknowledges that profits do sometimes coincide with the public 
interest, an argument that Marx and Engels devote Chapter One of The Communist 
Manifesto to:

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/31/books/review/a-spectre-haunting-china-mieville.html

In the early 1990s, Al Gore led the "National Information Infrastructure" 
hearings, better known as the "Information Superhighway" hearings. Gore's 
objective was to transfer control over the internet from the military to 
civilian institutions. It's true that these institutions were largely (but not 
exclusively) commercial entities seeking to make a buck on the internet. It's 
also true that much of that transfer could have been to public institutions 
rather than private hands.

But I've lately – and repeatedly – heard this moment described (by my fellow 
leftists) as the "privatization" of the internet. This is strictly true, but 
it's even more true to say that it was the demilitarization of the internet. In 
other words, corporations didn't take over functions performed by, say, the FCC 
– they took over from the Pentagon. Leftists have no business pining for the 
days when the internet was controlled by the Department of Defense.

Caring about the technological dimension of human rights 30 years ago – or 
hell, 40 years ago – doesn't make you a corporate stooge who wanted to launch a 
thousand investment bubbles. It makes you someone who understood, from the 
start, that digital rights are human rights, that cyberspace would inevitably 
evert into meatspace, and that the rules, norms and infrastructure we built for 
the net would someday be as consequential as any other political decision.

I'm proud to be a Premature Internet Activist. I just celebrated my 23rd year 
with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and yesterday, we sued Elon Musk and 
DOGE:

https://www.eff.org/press/releases/eff-sues-opm-doge-and-musk-endangering-privacy-millions


<https://pluralistic.net/2025/02/13/digital-rights/#are-human-rights>

Reply via email to