Not 
          Just Another Wireless Utopia: 
          Developing the social protocols of free networking
         
          The discovery of radio waves and their potential use for communication 
          more than 100 years ago stimulated a flurry of competing wireless utopian 
          visions: a commercial boosterist version with worldwide monopolies, 
          pyramidal fraudulent stock market schemes and a great amount of badly 
          informed speculation in the press about the promises of personal communication 
          freedom; the idea that communication fosters democracy and thereby leads 
          to a better and fairer world (liberal, social democratic and socialist 
          versions); ideas of a similar but more utopian mold, such as Tesla’s 
          dream of providing free (wireless) energy (an engineer’s utopia); futuristic 
          visions of poets and artists such as Klebhnikov and Marinetti who thought 
          that radio waves had psychotropic properties and could be used to directly 
          influence the mind (an artistic utopia).
        Most 
          of the futuristic artistic wireless dreams of the early 20th century 
          smacked of the totalitarian systems those artists were associated with. 
          As a member of the elite, the artist is granted access by the state 
          to use the broadcast quality of radio to simultaneously reach out to 
          all citizens. [1] Only a few thinkers saw the one-to-many direction 
          of this communication model as a problem. The German playwright and 
          communist Bertold Brecht thought about radio as a two-way communication 
          medium.
          Walter Benjamin in “The Author As Producer” demanded that writers should 
          help to create mechanisms for others also to become writers.
        It 
          is not difficult to see how 100 years later wireless technology again 
          inspires wild utopianism in the commercial realm. The ICT industry views 
          the introduction of high-speed mobile broadband communication (3G or 
          UMTS) as a potential savior following the extreme suffering the sector 
          underwent following the New Economy crash. Those commercial dreams are 
          challenged by the notion of “Free Networks,” independent wireless community 
          networks built and maintained by their users. Free Networks are an engineer’s 
          utopia minced with ideas that could be described as Internet egalitarianism 
          (a set of values and ideals derived from earlier versions of a pre-privatization 
          internet arcadia) and information ethics (based on “hacker ethics” wherein 
          hacker is a positive term, someone who actively engages with digital 
          technology on the basis of a do-it-yourself philosophy). Artists are 
          discovering
          electromagnetic waves as a material and medium for art and are increasingly 
          switching to the modus operandi that Benjamin suggested. Instead of 
          seeking to express their subjectivity, they are trying to create communication 
          systems and collaborative platforms. [2]
        In 
          between the two wireless bubbles approximately 100 years apart, the 
          world had to come to terms with the introduction of radio, TV and, as 
          the century progressed, an ever more relentless flow of innovation in 
          information processing and transmission technologies. [3] The point 
          here is not to claim that the two wireless bubbles are
          just the same all over again but to see if there are common patterns 
          in their unfolding and to gain a better understanding of this process 
          of how new technologies influence society and how they change under 
          society’s influence. One premise of this article is that we need to 
          move on from speculative media theory and establish a clearer
          language of analysis and description based on the material and structural 
          properties of the “media” we are talking about.
        One 
          of the cornerstones of such a critical framework is to always look at 
          the
          network topology. This term can describe both the physical layout of 
          a network (how its nodes and edges are connected) and a social model 
          of organization (how messages are passed on in a social system, in which 
          power structures, command control and feedback mechanisms are involved). 
          The physical material and technological properties of communication 
          media are another important factor that should be closely studied. This 
          comprises the laws of physics (electromagnetic waves) and informatics 
          (the protocols that govern communication in digital/electronic systems). 
          On this level it makes sense to follow the approach that engineers
          took when creating those networks in the first place and look at them 
          as a layered protocol stack (TCP/IP, OSI referential model [4]). Each 
          layer in the protocol stack has different functions to fulfill – establishing 
          connectivity, transporting bits, forming messages out of bits, aggregating 
          and channeling messages into types of “content” and “media” – and is 
          entangled in a different political economy and social context.
        Certain 
          branches within media discourse have tended to ignore the technical 
          basis and, to some extent, also the political economy of media and now 
          run the danger of paying a bitter price. Since so much of their thought 
          is speculative, focusing on the content layer and its symbolic implications 
          only, it simply becomes irrelevant when the ground underneath them keeps 
          shifting because forces are at work that they have not even tried to 
          understand.
        By 
          political economy in this context I refer to ownership issues and their 
          implications. Following the layered model of network communications, 
          ownership issues apply to the physical layer (who owns the machines 
          and cables), the logical layer (loosely speaking, not strictly OSI: 
          the intellectual property rights concerning programs and standards which 
          facilitate communication) and the application and content layer (who 
          owns the channel? who owns the content?). Another important element 
          of the political economy surrounding communication media is how they 
          are regulated, both internally (self-regulation) and externally (telecommunications 
          laws and regulations, spectrum regulation). Once we have come to understand 
          those layers, we might also move on to more complex social layers – 
          how networks are embedded socially and how we conceptualise technology 
          –, but first we should get the basics right.
        The 
          naivety of the first wireless bubble around 1910 was soon punished when 
          history unfolded. The relative ease with which a broadcast license could 
          be obtained in the United States led to frequency wars after WWI, when 
          commercial radio started to become viable. Stations tried to cancel 
          out their rival stations signal by erecting stronger transmission towers 
          and blasting stronger signals exactly on their
          neighbor’s frequency. This soon forced the state to react and create 
          a system of state regulation of the radio spectrum. [5] The totalitarian 
          streak in wireless utopianism of the 1920s and 1930s came to the fore 
          when the Nazis seized power in Germany and embraced radio as a favorite 
          propaganda medium with Der Volksempfänger. After WWII these two threats, 
          totalitarianism on one hand, wireless free market anarchy on the other, 
          shaped the postwar consensus on the regulation of wireless, which stayed 
          in place for many years, until liberalisation/deregulation began.
        The 
          consensus was that the use of the carrier medium, electromagnetic waves, 
          should be regulated by the state in the public interest. Parts of the 
          spectrum were allocated for exclusive use by state organs (emergency 
          services, the military) or other privileged license holders (state media, 
          radio and TV, air traffic control). The content layer was also regulated 
          following a state sponsored model. Most countries created a semi-independent 
          National Broadcaster – independent enough to resist direct manipulation 
          by the government of the day, but as a public broadcaster, governed 
          in its conduct by rules written by the legislature and broadcast commissions. 
          Personal telecommunication (for a long time synonymous with the telephone) 
          was the exclusive domain of state monopoly companies, which were under 
          a “universal service” obligation.
        The 
          European postwar consensus started to break apart when the neo-liberal 
          policies of “deregulation” were put in place after the oil price shock 
          in the seventies. Private radio and television companies were granted 
          access to the airwaves and state monopoly telephone companies were gradually 
          privatised. The emerging new Duopoly of state and privatised commercial 
          media was attacked from the left by free media movements, which emerged 
          first during the Anti-Vietnam and student protests of the 1960s. When 
          the Internet was opened up for private use in the early 1990s these 
          threads seemed to come together for a moment. The Internet was seen 
          as both a Mecca for non-commercial, political activism and artistic 
          intervention and as the pinnacle of the free market ideology. The crash 
          of the new economy should have destroyed many of the myths and legends 
          surrounding the net but next generation mobile phones have triggered 
          a resurgence of commercial boosterist utopianism, with the “e” replaced 
          with an “m” – from e- to m-commerce.
        In 
          the 1900s wireless (mobile) telephony seemed to be just around the corner, 
          but it did not happen like that. It took until the late nineteen nineties 
          for the mobile phone to become the world’s most cherished icon of consumer 
          capitalism. The upgrade from GSM via GPRS to G3 has triggered a new 
          wireless revolution; a new speculative bubble the industry has been 
          waiting for after much of it had flat growth rates after 2001. The speculative 
          bubble is not just based on economics but also on the expectation that 
          the switch to GPRS and 3G marks something more substantial, the shift 
          to a mobile networking paradigm. Mobile devices are said to be about 
          to become our main way of accessing electronic communication networks. 
          This would imply a shift away from the Internet paradigm and its egalitarian 
          and participatory ideas, towards a much more tightly controlled mobile 
          paradigm, which is based on proprietary control of a centralised network 
          topology. As Internet access provided through wires is upgraded to so-called 
          “broadband,” changes in the ownership structure and provider landscape 
          mean that the freedom which the net once promised and in a way still 
          facilitates is under threat.
        It 
          is worth noting here that “freedom,” one of the worlds most abused concepts, 
          is meant to be understood in this context not as a metaphysical concept 
          and not even on the level of political philosophy, but on a very pragmatic 
          level as a hacker type of freedom – the freedom to access and use communication 
          networks under a minimum of restrictions, empowering individuals and 
          communities to make the best use of those networks as they see fit. 
          The radical libertarianism of this approach may be limited in its value 
          as a political ideology but still separates this idea clearly enough 
          from the two dominant models – the declining state ownership model and 
          the still expanding private corporate “empire building” model. [6]
        Over 
          the last few years loosely connected groups all over the world have 
          started to build free networks, networks which are owned and maintained 
          by their users and are largely free of state and corporate influence. 
          This fledgling free network
          movement is not one coherent group, campaign or strategy, but another 
          one of those multitudes, a free association of individuals who work 
          together for a common goal under a loose umbrella of a few principles 
          and with a lot of enthusiasm. Free
          networks try to build large-scale networks following a bottom-up grassroots 
          approach by using DIY technology (homemade antennas, second-hand hardware, 
          free software) and promoting decentralised self-organisation as the 
          preferred organisational model. There is no single entity that plans 
          and builds the network. Instead groups encourage people to share bandwidth 
          and organically grow a network by (wirelessly) connecting their local 
          nodes.
        This 
          can be achieved by means of a number of technologies, but recently the 
          technology of choice became 802.11, a family of wireless Ethernet standards 
          developed by the IEEE, which is incorporated into many mass market networking 
          products, such as WLAN network cards and chipsets. Hardware prices have 
          fallen dramatically over the last few years thanks to the commercial 
          boom in wireless (powered by Apple Airport and Intel Centrino, among 
          other players). Radio Networking brings together two powerful technologies, 
          innovative wireless transmission technologies such as spread spectrum 
          and computer networking technology. 802.11 is based on open standards, 
          which is an important advantage for the free network movement. It means 
          that free software can run on most proprietary hardware platforms as 
          long as the protocol has been properly implemented. It also works well 
          with embedded Linux chips and with older computers running some Unix 
          version. Networking across different platforms but based on open standards 
          has been the success formula of the Internet, a story repeating itself 
          with 802.11.
        The 
          802.11 technologies were originally considered a substitute for cable 
          based local networks in homes and offices. Wireless access points or 
          hotspots create a Local Area Network (LAN), which can be accessed by 
          any device within range with an 802.11 radio card or chipset; usually 
          an access point also provides or is connected to a gateway to the internet. 
          This type of node (access point plus gateway) sits at the center of 
          a star topology; it is the master of all communications in the local 
          net, while then connecting to the next higher level on the internet, 
          for example via an ADSL connection. Such a set-up is called a hotspot 
          in the commercial world.
        The 
          vision of Free Networks as expressed by Consume [7], London, one of 
          the ideologically most influential groups, is to apply the peer-to-peer 
          principle known from file sharing networks to the underlying physical 
          material layer of network communications. Consume proposed in 2000 that 
          a wireless “meshed network” should be built, a highly distributed network 
          where each node is connected to many other nodes and no node is in a 
          central or privileged position. The owners of nodes are legally independent 
          of each other and arrange the traffic of data across the net by following 
          the minimal requirements of the Pico Peering Agreement – a framework 
          for owners of nodes regarding establishing connections and formulating 
          the rules that govern them.
        The 
          WLAN standard 802.11b has two modes, the infrastructural mode (for Access 
          Points) and the ad-hoc mode (also called peer-to-peer or computer-to-computer 
          mode, depending on the hardware/software vendor). When a wireless network 
          is set-up in the second way, each node can connect to each other node 
          as long as they are within range of their radio signals. Since there 
          is no privileged place in the network, each node carries out the functions 
          of switching data packets around and acting as a router and Internet 
          gateway. Since every node shares this task of switching packets around, 
          the overlapping radio coverage of all nodes together forms a single 
          wireless cloud. Computers located within this cloud can communicate 
          at high data rates while the cloud is connected at a number of points 
          at its edges with the Internet. By “unwiring” the edges of the commercial 
          Internet, the owners/users in a free network cloud are reclaiming their 
          right to self-define how they carry out their telecommunication.
        The 
          Consume idea of a large free data cloud over London has not succeeded 
          (yet). Currently, what we have got is hundreds of wireless community 
          networks in the UK and thousands more worldwide. Most of them operate 
          on a local scale, forming little wireless clusters where people can 
          at least share files, play games or watch videos without any outside 
          interference. At the pragmatic end of the argument, such networks allow 
          the sharing of the cost of bandwidth efficiently between a greater number 
          of users. At the visionary end this should only be the beginning. The 
          small free network islands should grow together and “unwire” ever-growing 
          parts of a city, region, country, and the world. By becoming bigger, 
          the community networks could gain leverage in peering negotiations with 
          commercial bandwidth providers and gain cheaper access to global networks. 
          In the long-term, bandwidth might become free or reasonably cheap. And, 
          more importantly, free networking might completely change the way telecommunication 
          is provided.
        Meshed 
          networking – not as the description of a network topology but as a specific 
          technology [8] – has generated a kind of geeky buzz around “mobile ad-hoc 
          networking.” Bleeding edge, i.e. extremely cutting edge, mobile ad-hoc 
          networking protocols are seen as the key to a bottom-up wireless utopia. 
          If ad-hoc network technology becomes implemented in mass-market mobile 
          devices (handsets, PDAs), everyone who carries such a device becomes 
          a walking personal telco. Dynamic, self-healing routing software and 
          computer-controlled radio would always find the nearest working node 
          within range and use it to pass on information. If this approach gains 
          enough support it could in the end lead to a world without telecommunications 
          providers and the people would truly become the network. [9]
        The 
          free network paradigm and the mobile broadband paradigm as proposed 
          by the mobile telcos are at opposing ends of the spectrum with regard 
          to all major factors – the network topology, the political economy, 
          their regulation and the social context: they could not be more different.
        For 
          instance, free networks don’t “meter” traffic, they usually do not measure 
          the volume of data exchanged because the network is built by mutual 
          consent on allowing “free transit.” Mobile phone networks meter just 
          about everything, the volume of data, the time spent online, the location, 
          calls made and received, etc. Mobile phone networks have the classic 
          star network topology inherited from the age of monopoly telcos. The 
          switching stations at the centers of connections have total control 
          over every aspect of the network. The old way of thinking in the Post, 
          Telephone and Telegraph (PTT's) offices' manner, which is still the 
          mobile network owners’ credo, reduces users of a network to being consumers. 
          There is a network, which is theirs, because they own and maintain it, 
          and users are sold access to this network. Probably deep down inside 
          they even think that they are generous in letting anybody use their 
          network. The consumer is considered to be a leaf at the thin end of 
          the tree structure of the network, as someone who mainly wants to download 
          things.
        In 
          the free network scenario this is radically turned around. The user 
          is not considered a dead end street, someone just sucking away somebody 
          else’s bandwidth, but is seen as a node that is fully integrated into 
          the network and contributes to the value of the network as a bandwidth 
          and content provider. Every connection is two-way and symmetrical, which 
          means that the data rates for uploading and downloading are the same. 
          The free network movement says that if we do things the right way we 
          could create abundance – a maximum of bandwidth available at a minimum 
          of price; scarcity of bandwidth is, according to some activists [10], 
          a fiction upheld by the industry so as not to let their markets collapse.
        One 
          main reason why free networks could be so successful is that they operate 
          in a band of the spectrum which is license exempt in most industrialised 
          countries. That means that certain frequencies can be used without needing 
          to ask the authorities. The success of spectrum deregulation of the 
          frequencies used by 802.11 inspired an “open spectrum” movement, which 
          demands that more parts of the spectrum become license exempt. New software 
          controlled radio technology (spread spectrum, ultra-wideband) will allow 
          micro-regulation to happen on a local scale without the strong arm of 
          the government being needed, according to open spectrum activists. [11] 
          The problem of interference that dogged radio in the 1920s can be avoided 
          with those new techniques and therefore we should completely rethink 
          the way spectrum is regulated.
        The 
          mobile telephony industry has been crippled by the high license fees 
          companies had to pay when spectrum was auctioned off at the height of 
          the new economy boom. The auctioning of spectrum marked a very different 
          approach in that spectrum was sold as a commodity to the highest bidder. 
          With the launch of 3G in many European countries already delayed, commercial 
          pressure on companies is piling up. The name of the game is maximizing 
          the ARPU, the average revenue per user. Mobile business is frontier 
          capitalism bending over backwards to micro-tune itself to every whim 
          and whiff of the consumer. Many different models, services and price 
          plans target the public’s tastes, priorities, preferences, incomes, 
          and life-styles. In this race to increase the ARPU phones are becoming 
          gizmoed up to the eyeballs, with phones that can play “true tone” ring-tones, 
          download, store and play music, shoot pictures and even video. Part 
          of this campaign for the purse of the user is that mobile telcos have 
          started to believe they must become “content providers” and offer music 
          and video files for download as well as news, sport and soft porn.
        Accessing 
          the Internet via mobile phones is probably the most expensive way
          of doing so on a bit per penny ratio. Behind the glossy brochures and
          consumerist promises looms a brave new wireless reality. The centralised 
          command and control model flies in the face of ideas of communication 
          freedom. The
          upgrading of phones will soon provide even more opportunities for social 
          control. With the new generation of picture phones the whole (connected) 
          world becomes a panopticon, a world of permanent observers and the permanently 
          observed, where public and private, intimate social spaces and global 
          networks are from now on permanently intertwined. As the mobile phone 
          incorporates ever more functions such as being used as an electronic 
          purse and in the context of emerging technologies such as biometry, 
          it could become the preferred way of confirming ones identity – purse 
          and passport all in one, managed by your corporate multinational of 
          choice.
        Another 
          worrying factor in this respect is that mobile phones have proprietary 
          system architectures. Linux and other free versions of Unix have liberated 
          the operating systems of PCs. Paying the price of having to do a bit 
          more installation and maintenance work than the average Windows or Apple 
          user, the Linux community enjoys the freedom to configure their machines 
          exactly the way they want. With mobile phones we are back in the closed 
          world of proprietary systems, the secrecy of corporate research and 
          development laboratories and ever present Non-Disclosure Agreements 
          (NDAs). Many of the freedoms that we just started to enjoy with the 
          combination of the Internet and freely programmable personal computers 
          are threatened by the switch to mobile networks. The mobile urgently 
          needs to become open sourced.
        The 
          Internet facilitated a gift economy where millions engaged in the exchange 
          of communications without any financial remuneration. From the personal 
          homepage to communication in mailing lists and web-fora people worldwide 
          embraced this opportunity to communicate in ways which were open ended, 
          and not directly goal oriented, not serving a specific purpose. Whenever 
          communicative action becomes subject to metering and billing, a gift 
          economy is hard to sustain.
        What 
          fascinated us about the net first time round, that it was non-locative, 
          a non-space, where it did not matter where you were, as long as you 
          had access to the net, is being reversed. With mobile phones, as with 
          a range of other devices which are location sensitive, the information 
          sphere becomes connected with geographical space. Every user can be 
          pinned down geographically, which opens a wealth of possibilities for 
          surveillance and intrusive business propositions (location based Spam). 
          [12]
        As 
          Myerson observes in “Heidegger, Habermas and the mobile phone”[13] our
          concept of “communication” has already changed and is undergoing further 
          change. We are now likely to accept that it is an act of communication 
          when two machines connect. Our personal motivation to use those connections 
          is to satisfy needs or “wants,” or at least that is what the industry 
          is selling: personal freedom to get what we want. There is no other 
          human required in many of these “communications,” we are accessing information, 
          retrieving data. This is not “the great conversation” imagined by neo-liberal 
          Internet guru JP Barlow. It is also very different from Habermas’ idea 
          of the “public domain.” But we have to be careful here. Many narrations 
          about new media speak of loss, decline, etc (email ruins our grammar 
          and spelling, and texting is the last nail in the coffin of the written 
          language, according to cultural conservatives’ pessimistic outlook)[14]. 
          But as far as I understand him, Myerson is up to something else, he 
          is concerned with how we conceptualise communication. This goes far 
          beyond the narrow angle of cultural conservative concerns and leads 
          to the main thrust of this article.
        When 
          we speak of new media or communication technologies, what matters is
          not just the technology – its cool naked efficiency – but how it is 
          embedded
          in society. The free network proposition is to rethink our relation 
          to technology and to reconceptualise technological systems based on 
          them being grounded in communities which are actively involved in shaping 
          them. Technologies of
          the future are developed now in our collective social imaginary; and 
          the
          technologies that we have now have been shaped by the imaginary futures 
          of the past [15]. In the case of mobile telcos, we are promised a consumer 
          bonanza based on Cold War style command and control architecture. Their 
          networks are technological expressions of schizophrenia and paranoia. 
          The free network proposition is to generate alternative future technologies 
          based on ideas along the lines of a grassroots movement or the “multitudes.” 
          It is a utopia (if we even have to use this word) on the plane of immanence, 
          where control is handed over to a distributed many-to-many architecture. 
          Shaping future technologies becomes a job where everybody can and should 
          be involved.
        Within 
          only a few years the wireless community and free network idea has
          come a long way. It has been recognized that there is an intrinsic connection
          between free networks, free software and free hardware [16]. They mutually 
          depend on each other to guarantee their survival in the long term. Providing 
          a
          liberated infrastructure for communication, these movements protect 
          freedom of speech and other communication rights. This interdependency 
          has recently been
          described by the term “network commons.” The network commons does not 
          just comprise the physical network itself but also the protocols that 
          run it and the content
          that is being carried. The network commons re-defines our understanding 
          of the
          public domain in electronic communication.
        What 
          is still missing is the social glue that binds all this together, the 
          social protocol of sustainable network self-provision and self-organisation. 
          There are efforts underway with the Pico Peering Agreement to provide 
          such social glue between network owners. Other open source developers 
          are working with FOAF, RDF and other social network techniques, which 
          can help to bring together like-minded people. These efforts have so 
          far failed to gain mass appeal. The free network movement has been carried 
          forward by nerd enthusiasm. To grow beyond these isolated free network 
          islands built by a handful of nerds and establish a viable network commons, 
          more people of different backgrounds need to join and together develop 
          the social protocols of networking. This implies that we finally overcome 
          the totalitarianism inherent in the wireless utopias of then and now. 
          Free Networks are (hopefully) not just another wireless utopia but a 
          practical proposition for slowly changing the world by introducing a 
          different relationship with the technical means of communication.
        
          1 On the notion of totalitarianism in wireless futurism, see, for
          example, Gregory Whitehead: Out of the Dark: Notes on the Nobodies of 
          Radio Art
          http://www.somewhere.org/NAR/writings/critical/whitehead/main.htm
         
          2 This sentence refers to the second part of this article, which has 
          not been
          written yet and which deals with the work of wireless artists and
          activists such as Marko Peljhan and Shu Lea Cheang. The publication 
          “Dive” by
          Kingdom of Piracy provides an introduction into copy left culture and 
          collaborative
          platforms. http://kop.fact.co.uk
         
          3 Basically the whole electromagnetic spectrum can be used for
          communication from very low to very high frequencies. Our understanding 
          of spectrum is often obscured by language. “Radio” is just one application 
          that we have found useful. It operates at the lower end of the spectrum. 
          While heat and
          visible light are the only parts of the spectrum we can perceive through 
          our senses,
          scientific progress has helped to make use of the spectrum, which we 
          did not
          even know existed 100 years ago. We can now “look” at things very small 
          and
          very far away, which means we are also looking back in time. See for
          instance "Hubble’s Deep View into the Cosmos."
          http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3546803.stm
        4 
          OSI stands for Open Systems Interconnections model, developed as 
          a reference model for telecommunications by the International 
          Organisation for Standardization in 1984.
         
          5 How the spectrum has been divided up can best be understood by looking
          at a frequency allocation map such as this one:
          http://www.ntia.doc.gov/osmhome/allochrt.pdf
         
          6 For a more coherent explanation of the “free” in free networks see
          my lecture notes for a presentation at the Open Culture Conference, 
          Vienna
          June 2003: http://twenteenthcentury.com/uo/index.php/OpenCultures
         
          7 Consume http://consume.net
         
          8 Meshed networking technology was first developed in a military context 
          and is now carried forward by a special working group at the IETF, the 
          mobile ad-hoc networking group (MANET); protocol specifications are 
          published as RFC's and implementations released as open source.
         
          9 At the time of writing, mesh networking has been successful in small 
          experimental settings (of up to 30 laptops running, for instance, the 
          mobile mesh protocol) but has not been tested on a mass scale.
        10 
          Malcolm Matson, co-founder of the Access to Broadband Campaign and a
          telecommunications insider for 20 years, claims that if the market really
          was free, bandwidth would cost nothing nowadays.
        11 
          A very useful briefing on open spectrum issues: Open Spectrum, New
          America Foundation http://www.newamerica.net/index.cfm?pg=article&pubID=1002
        12 
          A group of programmers, writers and artists is trying to introduce a
          more productive viewpoint on location based “services” by re-naming 
          it
          “locative media”: http://locative.net/
        13 
          Myerson, George, “Heidegger, Habermas and the Mobile Phone,” 2001.
        14 
          Maybe there is actually a decline in standards of language use, maybe
          we can no longer uphold the values of the classic era of the book. But 
          even
          if that may be the case, there is a dialectical trade-off that comes 
          with such, as
          was already described by Benjamin in the 1920s, in that we will increasingly 
          see the benefits of widening participation: move over Joyce and Musil, 
          here comes everybody. The Internet, regularly accused by cultural conservatives 
          of consisting of 99 percent trash, has stimulated unprecedented amounts 
          of text production. For example with the public diary keeping of “bloggers” 
          or “web-loggers”, amateur publishing is an ongoing success story as 
          never before.
        15 
          Barbrook, Richard, “Imaginary Futures,” Chapter One, 2004 (forthcoming).
        16 
          Eben Moglen at Open Cultures, Vienna 2003: http://opencultures.t0.or.at/oc/participants/mogle
          
          (This article is based on a series of lectures I have given under the 
          title “Wireless Utopia” in Novi Sad, Zagreb, Basel, Berlin and Plymouth.)
        The 
          images in the article are from Armin Medosch’s new book: Freie Netze 
          Geschichte, Politik und Kultur offener WLAN-Netze (Telepolis), Verlag 
          Heinz Heise 2003. 
        