This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2012/121112-bradner.html
Reminiscences of another Internet transition
year
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
December 11, 2012 10:40 AM ET
A good (or was it bad) chunk of 2012 in Internet-land was
spent dreading and getting ready for the ITU World Conference on International
Telecommunications (WCIT) in Dubai that will conclude about the time this
column is published. (See "The
Internet has escaped the ax, at least in the US, at least for now";
"When
does free mean none?"; "The
non-Internet that never was but might be"; "US
Congress passes another resolution opposing UN Internet takeover.")
But the year was not all focused on the spectre of a United Nations takeover of
the Internet.
2012 was yet another year in which the Hollywood-based
copyright industry wielded undue influence over the rule makers in Washington
and other national capitals around the world. For example, there is no rational
world in which a trade agreement like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) could
be seen as a good thing for Internet users except in that of policy-makers
managed by Hollywood. Money-wise Hollywood is, at best, a round-off error in
Internet commerce. The relative importance of Hollywood can be seen by the fact
that a single video game ("Call of Duty: Black Ops II") outdid the
biggest Hollywood movie in history ("Avatar") in reaching $1 billion
in sales and in the last month has had more franchise revenue than the 10 top
movies if 2012, combined.
2012 was also another year of Wall Street weirdness.
Facebook, the hype magnet of the year, opened at an unsupportable price, which
produced a lot of money for Facebook's bank account, then Wall Street seemed to
panic. Reality had little to do with either the pre-IPO hype or post-IPO panic.
Reality also seems to have little to do with the price of Apple
stock. Wall Street had established Apple as the most valuable company in the
world by mid-year but seemed to start having second thoughts shortly afterward.
It seems strange to worry about Apple with a price earning ratio of about 12
and not about Amazon with a P/E
of more than 2,700. If Apple's stock was priced with the same logic as
Amazon's it would be worth more than $100,000 per share with a market cap of
$6.4 trillion. You will get no explanation from me, but Forbes gives
it a try.
The United States continued to treat its citizens as second,
or maybe third, class when it came to privacy even as Europe's
stronger Internet privacy rules went into effect. This is yet another
reflection of Washington fully understanding where campaign contributions come
from.
Speaking of campaigns. I sure would not want to have the Romney
Project ORCA get-out-the-vote app-based system on my resume -- an almost
perfect example of how to mess up a major project.
On the other hand, there were a few outstanding examples of
knowing what you are doing, including The New York Times' Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight polling
aggregation website and blog.
We will know soon what impact the results of the
aforementioned WCIT party in Dubai will have on the Internet of 2013 -- I can
hardly wait.
Disclaimer:
Harvard has hundreds of years of learning how to wait and is quite good at it
by now, but the above review is mine and the University had no input on it.
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