Weāre seeing bold, muscular, global action on competition, regulation and labour, with self-help bringing up the rear. Itās not a moment too soon, because the bad news is enshittification is coming to every industry. If itās got a networked computer in it, the people who made it can run the Darth Vader MBA playbook on it, changing the rules from moment to moment, violating your rights and then saying: āItās OK, we did it with an app.ā
From Mercedes effectively renting you your accelerator pedal by the month to Internet of Things dishwashers that lock you into proprietary dish soap, enshittification is metastasising into every corner of our lives. Software doesnāt eat the world, it just enshittifies it.
Thereās a bright side to all this: if everyone is threatened by enshittification, then everyone has a stake in disenshittification. Just as with privacy law in the US, the potential anti-enshittification coalition is massive. Itās unstoppable.
The cynics among you might be sceptical that this will make a difference. After all, isnāt āenshittificationā the same as ācapitalismā? Well, no.
Iām not going to cape for capitalism. Iām hardly a true believer in markets as the most efficient allocators of resources and arbiters of policy. But the capitalism of 20 years ago made space for a wild and woolly internet, a space where people with disfavoured views could find each other, offer mutual aid and organise. The capitalism of today has produced a global, digital ghost mall, filled with botshit, crap gadgets from companies with consonant-heavy brand names and cryptocurrency scams.
The internet isnāt more important than the climate emergency, gender justice, racial justice, genocide or inequality. But the internet is the terrain weāll fight those fights on. Without a free, fair and open internet, the fight is lost before itās joined.
We can reverse the enshittification of the internet. We can halt the creeping enshittification of every digital device. We can build a better, enshittification-resistant digital nervous system, one that is fit to co-ordinate the mass movements we will need to fight fascism, end genocide, save our planet and our species.
Martin Luther King said: āIt may be true that the law cannot make a man love me, but it can stop him from lynching me, and I think thatās pretty important.ā And it may be true that the law canāt force corporations to conceive of you as a human being entitled to dignity and fair treatment, and not just an ambulatory wallet, a supply of gut bacteria for the immortal colony organism that is a limited liability corporation. But it can make them fear you enough to treat you fairly and afford you dignity ā even if they donāt think you deserve it.
Cory Doctorow is a special adviser to the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a visiting professor of computer science at the Open University. His next book āThe Bezzleā, published by Head of Zeus, is out this month. This piece is adapted from his Marshall McLuhan Lecture, delivered at the Embassy of Canada in Berlin last month
In a digital world, someone else might well say, āYes, but if we do that, 20 per cent of our users will install ad blockers, and our revenue from those users will drop to zero, for ever.ā This means that digital companies are constrained by the fear that some enshittificatory manoeuvre will prompt their users to google, āHow do I disenshittify this?ā
And, finally, workers. Tech workers have very low union density, but that doesnāt mean that tech workers donāt have labour power. The historical ātalent shortageā of the tech sector meant that workers enjoyed a lot of leverage. Workers who disagreed with their bosses could quit and walk across the street and get another, better job.
They knew it and their bosses knew it. Ironically, this made tech workers highly exploitable. Tech workers overwhelmingly saw themselves as founders in waiting, entrepreneurs who were temporarily drawing a salary, heroic figures to be.
Thatās why mottoes such as Googleās āDonāt be evilā and Facebookās āMake the world more open and connectedā mattered; they instilled a sense of mission in workers. Itās what the American academic Fobazi Ettarh calls āvocational aweā or Elon Musk calls being āextremely hardcoreā.
Tech workers had lots of bargaining power, but they didnāt flex it when their bosses demanded that they sacrifice their health, their families, their sleep to meet arbitrary deadlines. So long as their bosses transformed their workplaces into whimsical ācampusesā, with gyms, gourmet cafeterias, laundry service, massages and egg-freezing, workers could tell themselves that they were being pampered, rather than being made to work like government mules.
For bosses, thereās a downside to motivating your workers with appeals to a sense of mission. Namely, your workers will feel a sense of mission. So when you ask them to enshittify the products they ruined their health to ship, workers will experience a sense of profound moral injury, respond with outrage and threaten to quit. Thus tech workers themselves were the final bulwark against enshittification.
The pre-enshittification era wasnāt a time of better leadership. The executives werenāt better. They were constrained. Their worst impulses were checked by competition, regulation, self-help and worker power. So what happened?
One by one, each of these constraints was eroded, leaving the enshittificatory impulse unchecked, ushering in the enshittoscene.
It started with competition. From the Gilded Age until the Reagan years, the purpose of competition law was to promote competition between companies. US antitrust law treated corporate power as dangerous and sought to blunt it. European antitrust laws were modelled on US ones, imported by the architects of the Marshall Plan. But starting in the 1980s, with the rise of neoliberalism, competition authorities all over the world adopted a doctrine called āconsumer welfareā, which essentially held that monopolies were evidence of quality. If everyone was shopping at the same store and buying the same product, that meant that was the best store, selling the best product ā not that anyone was cheating.
Executives werenāt better before. They were constrainedā.ā.ā.āby competition, regulation, self-help and worker power
And so, all over the world, governments stopped enforcing their competition laws. They just ignored them as companies flouted them. Those companies merged with their major competitors, absorbed smaller companies before they could grow to be big threats. They held an orgy of consolidation that produced the most inbred industries imaginable, whole sectors grown so incestuous they developed Habsburg jaws, from eyeglasses to sea freight, glass bottles to payment processing, vitamin C to beer.
Most of our global economy is dominated by five or fewer global companies. If smaller companies refuse to sell themselves to these cartels, the giants have free rein to flout competition law further, with āpredatory pricingā that keeps an independent rival from gaining a foothold. When Diapers.com refused Amazonās acquisition offer, Amazon lit $100mn on fire, selling diapers way below cost for months, until Diapers.com went bust, and Amazon bought them for pennies on the dollar.
Lily Tomlin used to do a character on the TV show Rowan & Martinās Laugh-In, an AT&T telephone operator whoād do commercials for the Bell system. Each one would end with her saying: āWe donāt care. We donāt have to. Weāre the phone company.ā
Todayās giants are not constrained by competition. They donāt care. They donāt have to. Theyāre Google.
Thatās the first constraint gone, and as it slipped away, the second constraint ā regulation ā was also doomed.
When an industry consists of hundreds of small- and medium-sized enterprises, it is a mob, a rabble. Hundreds of companies canāt agree on what to tell Parliament or Congress or the Commission. They canāt even agree on how to cater a meeting where theyād discuss the matter.
But when a sector dwindles to a bare handful of dominant firms, it ceases to be a rabble and it becomes a cartel. Five companies, or four, or three, or two or just one company can easily converge on a single message for their regulators, and without āwasteful competitionā eroding their profits, they have plenty of cash to spread around.
This is why competition matters: itās not just because competition makes companies work harder and share value with customers and workers; itās because competition keeps companies from becoming too big to fail, and too big to jail.
Now, there are plenty of things we donāt want improved through competition, like privacy invasions. After the EU passed its landmark privacy law, the GDPR, there was a mass-extinction event for small EU ad-tech companies. These companies disappeared en masse and thatās a good thing. They were even more invasive and reckless than US-based Big Tech companies. We donāt want to produce increasing efficiency in violating our human rights.
But: Google and Facebook have been unscathed by European privacy law. Thatās not because they donāt violate the GDPR. Itās because they pretend they are headquartered in Ireland, one of the EUās most notorious corporate crime havens. And Ireland competes with the EUās other crime havens ā Malta, Luxembourg, Cyprus and, sometimes, the Netherlands ā to see which country can offer the most hospitable environment.
The Irish Data Protection Commission rules on very few cases, and more than two-thirds of its rulings are overturned by the EU courts, even though Ireland is the nominal home to the most privacy-invasive companies on the continent. So Google and Facebook get to act as though they are immune to privacy law, because they violate the law with an app.
This is where that third constraint, self-help, would surely come in handy. If you donāt want your privacy violated, you donāt need to wait for the Irish privacy regulator to act, you can just install an ad blocker.
More than half of all web users are blocking ads. But the web is an open platform, developed in the age when tech was hundreds of companies at each otherās throats, unable to capture their regulators. Today, the web is being devoured by apps, and apps are ripe for enshittification. Regulatory capture isnāt just the ability to flout regulation, itās also the ability to co-opt regulation, to wield regulation against your adversaries.
Todayās tech giants got big by exploiting self-help measures. When Facebook was telling MySpace users they needed to escape Murdochās crapulent Australian social media panopticon, it didnāt just say to those Myspacers, āScrew your friends, come to Facebook and just hang out looking at the cool privacy policy until they get here.ā It gave them a bot. You fed the bot your MySpace username and password, and it would login to MySpace and pretend to be you, scraping everything waiting in your inbox and copying it to your Facebook inbox.
When Facebook, Apple and Google were doing this adversarial interoperability, it was progress. If you try to do it to them, itās piracy
When Microsoft was choking off Appleās market oxygen by refusing to ship a functional version of Microsoft Office for the Mac in the 1990s ā so that offices were throwing away their designersā Macs and giving them PCs with upgraded graphics cards and Windows versions of Photoshop and Illustrator ā Steve Jobs didnāt beg Bill Gates to update Mac Office. He got his technologists to reverse-engineer Microsoft Office and make a compatible suite, the iWork Suite, whose apps, Pages, Numbers and Keynote could read and write Microsoftās Word, Excel and PowerPoint files.
When Google entered the market, it sent its crawler to every web server on earth, where it presented itself as a web-user: āHi! Hello! Do you have any web pages? Thanks! How about some more? How about more?ā
But every pirate wants to be an admiral. When Facebook, Apple and Google were doing this adversarial interoperability, that was progress. If you try to do it to them, thatās piracy.
Try to make an alternative client for Facebook and theyāll say you violated US laws such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and EU laws like Article 6 of the EU Copyright Directive. Try to make an Android program that can run iPhone apps and play back the data from Appleās media stores and theyād bomb you until the rubble bounced. Try to scrape all of Google and theyāll nuke you until you glow.
Techās regulatory capture is mind-boggling. Take that law I mentioned earlier, Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act or DMCA. Bill Clinton signed it in 1998, and the EU imported it as Article 6 of the EUCD in 2001. It is a blanket prohibition on removing any kind of encryption that restricts access to a copyrighted work ā things such as ripping DVDs or jailbreaking a phone ā with penalties of a five-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine for a first offence. This law has been so broadened that it can be used to imprison creators for granting access to their own creations. Hereās how that works: In 2008, Amazon bought Audible, an audiobook platform. Today, Audible is a monopolist with more than 90 per cent of the audiobook market. Audible requires that all creators on its platform sell with Amazonās ādigital rights managementā, which locks it to Amazonās apps.
So say I write a book, then I read it into a mic, then I pay a director and an engineer thousands of dollars to turn that into an audiobook, and sell it to you on the monopoly platform, Audible, that controls more than 90 per cent of the market. If I later decide to leave Amazon and want to let you come with me to a rival platform, I am out of luck. If I supply you with a tool to remove Amazonās encryption from my audiobook, so you can play it in another app, I commit a felony, punishable by a five-year sentence and a half-million-dollar fine, for a first offence.
Thatās a stiffer penalty than you would face if you simply pirated the audiobook from a torrent site. But itās also harsher than the punishment youād get for shoplifting the audiobook on CD from a truck stop. Itās harsher than the sentence youād get for hijacking the truck that delivered the CD.
Think of our ad blockers again. Fifty per cent of web users are running ad blockers. Zero per cent of app users are running ad blockers, because adding a blocker to an app requires that you first remove its encryption, and thatās a felony. (Jay Freeman, the American businessman and engineer, calls this āfelony contempt of business-modelā.)
So when someone in a boardroom says, āLetās make our ads 20 per cent more obnoxious and get a 2 per cent revenue increase,ā no one objects that this might prompt users to google, āHow do I block ads?ā After all, the answer is, you canāt. Indeed, itās more likely that someone in that boardroom will say, āLetās make our ads 100 per cent more obnoxious and get a 10 per cent revenue increase.ā (This is why every company wants you to install an app instead of using its website.)
Thereās no reason that gig workers who are facing algorithmic wage discrimination couldnāt install a counter-app that co-ordinated among all the Uber drivers to reject all jobs unless they reach a certain pay threshold. No reason except felony contempt of business model, the threat that the toolsmiths who built that counter-app would go broke or land in prison, for violating DMCA 1201, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, trademark, copyright, patent, contract, trade secrecy, nondisclosure and noncompete or, in other words, āIP lawā.
IP isnāt just short for intellectual property. Itās a euphemism for āa law that lets me reach beyond the walls of my company and control the conduct of my critics, competitors and customersā. And āappā is just a euphemism for āa web page wrapped in enough IP to make it a felony to mod it, to protect the labour, consumer and privacy rights of its userā.
We donāt care. We donāt have to. Weāre the phone company.
What about that fourth constraint: workers? For decades, tech workersā bargaining power and vocational awe put a ceiling on enshittification. Even after the tech sector shrank to a handful of giants. Even after they captured their regulators. Even after āfelony contempt of business modelā and extinguished self-help for tech users. Tech was still constrained by their workersā sense of moral injury in the face of the imperative to enshittify.
Remember when tech workers dreamt of working for a big company for a few years, before striking out on their own to start their own company that would knock that tech giant over? That dream shrank to: work for a giant for a few years, quit, do a fake start-up, get āacqui-hiredā by your old employer, as a complicated way of getting a bonus and a promotion. Then the dream shrank further: work for a tech giant for your whole life, get free kombucha and massages on Wednesdays.
And now, the dream is over. All thatās left is: work for a tech giant until they fire you, like those 12,000 Googlers who got fired last year, eight months after a stock buyback that would have paid their salaries for the next 27 years.
Workers are no longer a check on their bossesā worst impulses. Today, the response to āI refuse to make this product worseā is āturn in your badge and donāt let the door hit you in the ass on the way outā.
I get that this is all a little depressing. OK, really depressing. But hear me out! Weāve identified the disease. Weāve identified its underlying mechanism. Now we can get to work on a cure.
There are four constraints that prevent enshittification: competition, regulation, self-help and labour. To reverse enshittification and guard against its re-emergence, we must restore and strengthen each of these.
On competition, itās actually looking pretty good. The EU, the UK, the US, Canada, Australia, Japan and China are all doing more on competition than they have in two generations. Theyāre blocking mergers, unwinding existing ones, taking action on predatory pricing and other sleazy tactics. Remember, in the US and Europe, we already have the laws to do this; we just stopped enforcing them.
Iāve been fighting these fights with the Electronic Frontier Foundation for 22 years now, and Iāve never seen a more hopeful moment for sound, informed tech policy.
My big hope here is that Steinās Law will take hold: anything that canāt go on for ever will eventually stop
Now, the enshittifiers arenāt taking this lying down. Take Lina Khan, the brilliant head of the US Federal Trade Commission, who has done more in three years on antitrust than the combined efforts of all her predecessors over the past 40 years. The Wall Street Journalās editorial page has run more than 80 pieces trashing Khan, insisting that sheās an ineffectual ideologue who canāt get anything done. Sure, thatās why you ran 80 editorials about her. Because she canāt get anything done.
Reagan and Thatcher put antitrust law in a coma in the 1980s. But itās awake, itās back and itās pissed off.
What about regulation? How will we get tech companies to stop doing that one weird trick of adding āwith an appā to escape enforcement?
Well, here in the EU, theyāre starting to figure it out. Recently, the main body of the Digital Markets Act and the Digital Services Act went into effect, and they let people who get screwed by tech companies go straight to the European courts, bypassing the toothless watchdogs in places like Ireland.
In the US, they might finally get a digital privacy law. You probably have no idea how backwards US privacy law is. The last time the US Congress enacted a broadly applicable privacy law was in 1988. The Video Privacy Protection Act makes it a crime for video-store clerks to leak your video-rental history. It was passed after a rightwing judge who was up for the Supreme Court had his rentals published in a DC newspaper. The rentals werenāt even all that embarrassing.
Sure, that judge, Robert Bork, wasnāt confirmed for the Supreme Court, but that was because he was a virulent loudmouth who served as Nixonās solicitor-general. Still, Congress got the idea that their own video records might be next, freaked out and passed the VPPA. That was the last time Americans got a big, national privacy law. And the thing is, there are a lot of people who are angry about it. Worried that Facebook turned Grampy into a QAnon? That Insta made your teen anorexic? That TikTok is brainwashing Gen Z into quoting Osama bin Laden?
Or that cops are rolling up the identities of everyone at a Black Lives Matter protest or the Jan 6 riots by getting location data from Google?
Or that red state attorneys-general are tracking teen girls to out-of-state abortion clinics?
Or that Black people are being discriminated against by online lending or hiring platforms?
Or that someone is making AI deepfake porn of you?
Having a federal privacy law with a private right of action ā which means that individuals can sue companies that violate their privacy ā would go a long way to rectifying all of these problems. Thereās a big coalition for that kind of privacy law.
What about self-help? Thatās a lot farther away, alas. The EUās DMA will force tech companies to open up their walled gardens for interoperation. Youāll be able to use WhatsApp to message people on iMessage, or quit Facebook and move to Mastodon, but still send messages to the people left behind. But if you want to reverse-engineer one of those Big Tech products and mod it to work for you, not them, the EUās got nothing for you. This is an area ripe for improvement. My big hope here is that Steinās Law will take hold: anything that canāt go on forever will eventually stop.
Finally, thereās labour. Here in Europe, thereās much higher union density than in the US, which American tech barons are learning the hard way. There is nothing more satisfying in the daily news than the recent salvo by Nordic unions against that Tesla guy. But even in the US, thereās a massive surge in tech unions. Tech workers have realised theyāre not founders-in-waiting. In Seattle, Amazonās tech workers walked out in sympathy with Amazonās warehouse workers, because theyāre all workers.
Weāre seeing bold, muscular, global action on competition, regulation and labour, with self-help bringing up the rear. Itās not a moment too soon, because the bad news is enshittification is coming to every industry. If itās got a networked computer in it, the people who made it can run the Darth Vader MBA playbook on it, changing the rules from moment to moment, violating your rights and then saying: āItās OK, we did it with an app.ā
From Mercedes effectively renting you your accelerator pedal by the month to Internet of Things dishwashers that lock you into proprietary dish soap, enshittification is metastasising into every corner of our lives. Software doesnāt eat the world, it just enshittifies it.
Thereās a bright side to all this: if everyone is threatened by enshittification, then everyone has a stake in disenshittification. Just as with privacy law in the US, the potential anti-enshittification coalition is massive. Itās unstoppable.
The cynics among you might be sceptical that this will make a difference. After all, isnāt āenshittificationā the same as ācapitalismā? Well, no.
Iām not going to cape for capitalism. Iām hardly a true believer in markets as the most efficient allocators of resources and arbiters of policy. But the capitalism of 20 years ago made space for a wild and woolly internet, a space where people with disfavoured views could find each other, offer mutual aid and organise. The capitalism of today has produced a global, digital ghost mall, filled with botshit, crap gadgets from companies with consonant-heavy brand names and cryptocurrency scams.
The internet isnāt more important than the climate emergency, gender justice, racial justice, genocide or inequality. But the internet is the terrain weāll fight those fights on. Without a free, fair and open internet, the fight is lost before itās joined.
We can reverse the enshittification of the internet. We can halt the creeping enshittification of every digital device. We can build a better, enshittification-resistant digital nervous system, one that is fit to co-ordinate the mass movements we will need to fight fascism, end genocide, save our planet and our species.
Martin Luther King said: āIt may be true that the law cannot make a man love me, but it can stop him from lynching me, and I think thatās pretty important.ā And it may be true that the law canāt force corporations to conceive of you as a human being entitled to dignity and fair treatment, and not just an ambulatory wallet, a supply of gut bacteria for the immortal colony organism that is a limited liability corporation. But it can make them fear you enough to treat you fairly and afford you dignity ā even if they donāt think you deserve it.
Cory Doctorow is a special adviser to the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a visiting professor of computer science at the Open University. His next book āThe Bezzleā, published by Head of Zeus, is out this month. This piece is adapted from his Marshall McLuhan Lecture, delivered at the Embassy of Canada in Berlin last month
-
Article is titled āāEnshittificationā is coming for absolutely everythingā
-
Article is paywalled
One of my many de-enshittification addons has defeated the paywall, so here:
āEnshittificationā is coming for absolutely everything The term describes the slow decay of online platforms such as Facebook. But what if weāve entered the āenshittoceneā?
Cory Doctorow yesterday
Last year, I coined the term āenshittificationā to describe the way that platforms decay. That obscene little word did big numbers; it really hit the zeitgeist.
The American Dialect Society made it its Word of the Year for 2023 (which, I suppose, means that now Iām definitely getting a poop emoji on my tombstone).
So whatās enshittification and why did it catch fire? Itās my theory explaining how the internet was colonised by platforms, why all those platforms are degrading so quickly and thoroughly, why it matters and what we can do about it. Weāre all living through a great enshittening, in which the services that matter to us, that we rely on, are turning into giant piles of shit. Itās frustrating. Itās demoralising. Itās even terrifying.
I think that the enshittification framework goes a long way to explaining it, moving us out of the mysterious realm of the āgreat forces of historyā, and into the material world of specific decisions made by real people; decisions we can reverse and people whose names and pitchfork sizes we can learn.
Enshittification names the problem and proposes a solution. Itās not just a way to say āthings are getting worseā, though, of course, itās fine with me if you want to use it that way. (Itās an English word. We donāt have ein Rat fĆ¼r englische Rechtschreibung. English is a free-for-all. Go nuts, meine Kerle.) But in case you want to be more precise, letās examine how enshittification works. Itās a three-stage process: first, platforms are good to their users. Then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers. Finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, there is a fourth stage: they die.
Letās do a case study. What could be better than Facebook?
Facebook arose from a website developed to rate the fuckability of Harvard undergrads, and it only got worse after that. When Facebook started off, it was only open to US college and high-school kids with .edu and K-12.us addresses. But in 2006, it opened up to the general public. It effectively told them: Yes, I know youāre all using MySpace. But MySpace is owned by a billionaire who spies on you with every hour that God sends. Sign up with Facebook and we will never spy on you. Come and tell us who matters to you in this world.
That was stage one. Facebook had a surplus ā its investorsā cash ā and it allocated that surplus to its end users. Those end users proceeded to lock themselves into Facebook. Facebook, like most tech businesses, had network effects on its side. A product or service enjoys network effects when it improves as more people sign up to use it. You joined Facebook because your friends were there, and then others signed up because you were there.
But Facebook didnāt just have high network effects, it had high switching costs. Switching costs are everything you have to give up when you leave a product or service. In Facebookās case, it was all the friends there that you followed and who followed you. In theory, you could have all just left for somewhere else; in practice, you were hamstrung by the collective action problem.
Itās hard to get lots of people to do the same thing at the same time. So Facebookās end users engaged in a mutual hostage-taking that kept them glued to the platform. Then Facebook exploited that hostage situation, withdrawing the surplus from end users and allocating it to two groups of business customers: advertisers and publishers.
To the advertisers, Facebook said: Remember when we told those rubes we wouldnāt spy on them? Well, we do. And we will sell you access to that data in the form of fine-grained ad-targeting. Your ads are dirt cheap to serve, and weāll spare no expense to make sure that when you pay for an ad, a real human sees it.
To the publishers, Facebook said: Remember when we told those rubes we would only show them the things they asked to see? Ha! Upload short excerpts from your website, append a link and we will cram it into the eyeballs of users who never asked to see it. We are offering you a free traffic funnel that will drive millions of users to your website to monetise as you please. And so advertisers and publishers became stuck to the platform, too.
Users, advertisers, publishers ā everyone was locked in. Which meant it was time for the third stage of enshittification: withdrawing surplus from everyone and handing it to Facebookās shareholders.
For the users, that meant dialling down the share of content from accounts you followed to a homeopathic dose, and filling the resulting void with ads and pay-to-boost content from publishers. For advertisers, that meant jacking up prices and drawing down anti-fraud enforcement, so advertisers paid much more for ads that were far less likely to be seen. For publishers, this meant algorithmically suppressing the reach of their posts unless they included an ever-larger share of their articles in the excerpt. And then Facebook started to punish publishers for including a link back to their own sites, so they were corralled into posting full text feeds with no links, meaning they became commodity suppliers to Facebook, entirely dependent on the company both for reach and for monetisation.
When any of these groups squawked, Facebook just repeated the lesson that every tech executive learnt in the Darth Vader MBA:
āI have altered the deal. Pray I donāt alter it any further.ā
Facebook now enters the most dangerous phase of enshittification. It wants to withdraw all available surplus and leave just enough residual value in the service to keep end users stuck to each other, and business customers stuck to end users, without leaving anything extra on the table, so that every extractable penny is drawn out and returned to its shareholders. (This continued last week, when the company announced a quarterly dividend of 50 cents per share and that it would increase share buybacks by $50bn. The stock jumped.)
But thatās a very brittle equilibrium, because the difference between āI hate this service, but I canāt bring myself to quit,ā and āJesus Christ, why did I wait so long to quit?ā is razor-thin.
All it takes is one Cambridge Analytica scandal, one whistleblower, one livestreamed mass-shooting, and users bolt for the exits, and then Facebook discovers that network effects are a double-edged sword. If users canāt leave because everyone else is staying, when everyone starts to leave, thereās no reason not to go. Thatās terminal enshittification.
This phase is usually accompanied by panic, which tech euphemistically calls āpivotingā. Which is how we get pivots such as: In the future, all internet users will be transformed into legless, sexless, low-polygon, heavily surveilled cartoon characters in a virtual world called the āmetaverseā.
Thatās the procession of enshittification. But that doesnāt tell you why everything is enshittifying right now and, without those details, we canāt know what to do about it. What is it about this moment that led to the Great Enshittening? Was it the end of the zero-interest rate policy (ZIRP)? Was it a change in leadership at the tech giants?
Is Mercury in retrograde?
Nope.
The period of free Fed money certainly led to tech companies having a lot of surplus to toss around. But Facebook started enshittifying long before ZIRP ended, so did Amazon, Microsoft and Google. Some of the tech giants got new leaders. But Googleās enshittification got worse when the founders came back to oversee the companyās AI panic ā excuse me, AI pivot. And it canāt be Mercury in retrograde, because Iām a Cancer, and as everyone knows, Cancers donāt believe in astrology.
When a whole bunch of independent entities all change in the same way at once, thatās a sign that the environment has changed, and thatās what happened to tech. Tech companies, like all companies, have conflicting imperatives. On the one hand, they want to make money. On the other hand, making money involves hiring and motivating competent staff, and making products that customers want to buy. The more value a company permits its employees and customers to carve off, the less value it can give to its shareholders.
The equilibrium in which companies produce things we like in honourable ways at a fair price is one in which charging more, worsening quality and harming workers costs more than the company would make by playing dirty.
There are four forces that discipline companies, serving as constraints on their enshittificatory impulses:
Competition. Companies that fear you will take your business elsewhere are cautious about worsening quality or raising prices.
Regulation. Companies that fear a regulator will fine them more than they expect to make from cheating, will cheat less.
These two forces affect all industries, but the next two are far more tech-specific.
Self-help. Computers are extremely flexible and so are the digital products and services we make from them. The only computer we know how to make is the Turing-Complete Von Neumann Machine, a computer that can run every valid program.
That means that users can always avail themselves of programs that undo the anti-features that shift value from them to a companyās shareholders. Think of a boardroom table where someone says, āIāve calculated that making our ads 20 per cent more invasive will net us 2 per cent more revenue per user.ā
(continued in reply)
In a digital world, someone else might well say, āYes, but if we do that, 20 per cent of our users will install ad blockers, and our revenue from those users will drop to zero, for ever.ā This means that digital companies are constrained by the fear that some enshittificatory manoeuvre will prompt their users to google, āHow do I disenshittify this?ā
And, finally, workers. Tech workers have very low union density, but that doesnāt mean that tech workers donāt have labour power. The historical ātalent shortageā of the tech sector meant that workers enjoyed a lot of leverage. Workers who disagreed with their bosses could quit and walk across the street and get another, better job.
They knew it and their bosses knew it. Ironically, this made tech workers highly exploitable. Tech workers overwhelmingly saw themselves as founders in waiting, entrepreneurs who were temporarily drawing a salary, heroic figures to be.
Thatās why mottoes such as Googleās āDonāt be evilā and Facebookās āMake the world more open and connectedā mattered; they instilled a sense of mission in workers. Itās what the American academic Fobazi Ettarh calls āvocational aweā or Elon Musk calls being āextremely hardcoreā.
Tech workers had lots of bargaining power, but they didnāt flex it when their bosses demanded that they sacrifice their health, their families, their sleep to meet arbitrary deadlines. So long as their bosses transformed their workplaces into whimsical ācampusesā, with gyms, gourmet cafeterias, laundry service, massages and egg-freezing, workers could tell themselves that they were being pampered, rather than being made to work like government mules.
For bosses, thereās a downside to motivating your workers with appeals to a sense of mission. Namely, your workers will feel a sense of mission. So when you ask them to enshittify the products they ruined their health to ship, workers will experience a sense of profound moral injury, respond with outrage and threaten to quit. Thus tech workers themselves were the final bulwark against enshittification.
The pre-enshittification era wasnāt a time of better leadership. The executives werenāt better. They were constrained. Their worst impulses were checked by competition, regulation, self-help and worker power. So what happened?
One by one, each of these constraints was eroded, leaving the enshittificatory impulse unchecked, ushering in the enshittoscene.
It started with competition. From the Gilded Age until the Reagan years, the purpose of competition law was to promote competition between companies. US antitrust law treated corporate power as dangerous and sought to blunt it. European antitrust laws were modelled on US ones, imported by the architects of the Marshall Plan. But starting in the 1980s, with the rise of neoliberalism, competition authorities all over the world adopted a doctrine called āconsumer welfareā, which essentially held that monopolies were evidence of quality. If everyone was shopping at the same store and buying the same product, that meant that was the best store, selling the best product ā not that anyone was cheating.
Executives werenāt better before. They were constrainedā.ā.ā.āby competition, regulation, self-help and worker power
And so, all over the world, governments stopped enforcing their competition laws. They just ignored them as companies flouted them. Those companies merged with their major competitors, absorbed smaller companies before they could grow to be big threats. They held an orgy of consolidation that produced the most inbred industries imaginable, whole sectors grown so incestuous they developed Habsburg jaws, from eyeglasses to sea freight, glass bottles to payment processing, vitamin C to beer.
Most of our global economy is dominated by five or fewer global companies. If smaller companies refuse to sell themselves to these cartels, the giants have free rein to flout competition law further, with āpredatory pricingā that keeps an independent rival from gaining a foothold. When Diapers.com refused Amazonās acquisition offer, Amazon lit $100mn on fire, selling diapers way below cost for months, until Diapers.com went bust, and Amazon bought them for pennies on the dollar.
Lily Tomlin used to do a character on the TV show Rowan & Martinās Laugh-In, an AT&T telephone operator whoād do commercials for the Bell system. Each one would end with her saying: āWe donāt care. We donāt have to. Weāre the phone company.ā
Todayās giants are not constrained by competition. They donāt care. They donāt have to. Theyāre Google.
Thatās the first constraint gone, and as it slipped away, the second constraint ā regulation ā was also doomed.
When an industry consists of hundreds of small- and medium-sized enterprises, it is a mob, a rabble. Hundreds of companies canāt agree on what to tell Parliament or Congress or the Commission. They canāt even agree on how to cater a meeting where theyād discuss the matter.
But when a sector dwindles to a bare handful of dominant firms, it ceases to be a rabble and it becomes a cartel. Five companies, or four, or three, or two or just one company can easily converge on a single message for their regulators, and without āwasteful competitionā eroding their profits, they have plenty of cash to spread around.
This is why competition matters: itās not just because competition makes companies work harder and share value with customers and workers; itās because competition keeps companies from becoming too big to fail, and too big to jail.
Now, there are plenty of things we donāt want improved through competition, like privacy invasions. After the EU passed its landmark privacy law, the GDPR, there was a mass-extinction event for small EU ad-tech companies. These companies disappeared en masse and thatās a good thing. They were even more invasive and reckless than US-based Big Tech companies. We donāt want to produce increasing efficiency in violating our human rights.
But: Google and Facebook have been unscathed by European privacy law. Thatās not because they donāt violate the GDPR. Itās because they pretend they are headquartered in Ireland, one of the EUās most notorious corporate crime havens. And Ireland competes with the EUās other crime havens ā Malta, Luxembourg, Cyprus and, sometimes, the Netherlands ā to see which country can offer the most hospitable environment.
The Irish Data Protection Commission rules on very few cases, and more than two-thirds of its rulings are overturned by the EU courts, even though Ireland is the nominal home to the most privacy-invasive companies on the continent. So Google and Facebook get to act as though they are immune to privacy law, because they violate the law with an app.
This is where that third constraint, self-help, would surely come in handy. If you donāt want your privacy violated, you donāt need to wait for the Irish privacy regulator to act, you can just install an ad blocker.
More than half of all web users are blocking ads. But the web is an open platform, developed in the age when tech was hundreds of companies at each otherās throats, unable to capture their regulators. Today, the web is being devoured by apps, and apps are ripe for enshittification. Regulatory capture isnāt just the ability to flout regulation, itās also the ability to co-opt regulation, to wield regulation against your adversaries.
Todayās tech giants got big by exploiting self-help measures. When Facebook was telling MySpace users they needed to escape Murdochās crapulent Australian social media panopticon, it didnāt just say to those Myspacers, āScrew your friends, come to Facebook and just hang out looking at the cool privacy policy until they get here.ā It gave them a bot. You fed the bot your MySpace username and password, and it would login to MySpace and pretend to be you, scraping everything waiting in your inbox and copying it to your Facebook inbox.
When Facebook, Apple and Google were doing this adversarial interoperability, it was progress. If you try to do it to them, itās piracy
When Microsoft was choking off Appleās market oxygen by refusing to ship a functional version of Microsoft Office for the Mac in the 1990s ā so that offices were throwing away their designersā Macs and giving them PCs with upgraded graphics cards and Windows versions of Photoshop and Illustrator ā Steve Jobs didnāt beg Bill Gates to update Mac Office. He got his technologists to reverse-engineer Microsoft Office and make a compatible suite, the iWork Suite, whose apps, Pages, Numbers and Keynote could read and write Microsoftās Word, Excel and PowerPoint files.
When Google entered the market, it sent its crawler to every web server on earth, where it presented itself as a web-user: āHi! Hello! Do you have any web pages? Thanks! How about some more? How about more?ā
But every pirate wants to be an admiral. When Facebook, Apple and Google were doing this adversarial interoperability, that was progress. If you try to do it to them, thatās piracy.
Try to make an alternative client for Facebook and theyāll say you violated US laws such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and EU laws like Article 6 of the EU Copyright Directive. Try to make an Android program that can run iPhone apps and play back the data from Appleās media stores and theyād bomb you until the rubble bounced. Try to scrape all of Google and theyāll nuke you until you glow.
(continued in reply)
Techās regulatory capture is mind-boggling. Take that law I mentioned earlier, Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act or DMCA. Bill Clinton signed it in 1998, and the EU imported it as Article 6 of the EUCD in 2001. It is a blanket prohibition on removing any kind of encryption that restricts access to a copyrighted work ā things such as ripping DVDs or jailbreaking a phone ā with penalties of a five-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine for a first offence. This law has been so broadened that it can be used to imprison creators for granting access to their own creations. Hereās how that works: In 2008, Amazon bought Audible, an audiobook platform. Today, Audible is a monopolist with more than 90 per cent of the audiobook market. Audible requires that all creators on its platform sell with Amazonās ādigital rights managementā, which locks it to Amazonās apps.
So say I write a book, then I read it into a mic, then I pay a director and an engineer thousands of dollars to turn that into an audiobook, and sell it to you on the monopoly platform, Audible, that controls more than 90 per cent of the market. If I later decide to leave Amazon and want to let you come with me to a rival platform, I am out of luck. If I supply you with a tool to remove Amazonās encryption from my audiobook, so you can play it in another app, I commit a felony, punishable by a five-year sentence and a half-million-dollar fine, for a first offence.
Thatās a stiffer penalty than you would face if you simply pirated the audiobook from a torrent site. But itās also harsher than the punishment youād get for shoplifting the audiobook on CD from a truck stop. Itās harsher than the sentence youād get for hijacking the truck that delivered the CD.
Think of our ad blockers again. Fifty per cent of web users are running ad blockers. Zero per cent of app users are running ad blockers, because adding a blocker to an app requires that you first remove its encryption, and thatās a felony. (Jay Freeman, the American businessman and engineer, calls this āfelony contempt of business-modelā.)
So when someone in a boardroom says, āLetās make our ads 20 per cent more obnoxious and get a 2 per cent revenue increase,ā no one objects that this might prompt users to google, āHow do I block ads?ā After all, the answer is, you canāt. Indeed, itās more likely that someone in that boardroom will say, āLetās make our ads 100 per cent more obnoxious and get a 10 per cent revenue increase.ā (This is why every company wants you to install an app instead of using its website.)
Thereās no reason that gig workers who are facing algorithmic wage discrimination couldnāt install a counter-app that co-ordinated among all the Uber drivers to reject all jobs unless they reach a certain pay threshold. No reason except felony contempt of business model, the threat that the toolsmiths who built that counter-app would go broke or land in prison, for violating DMCA 1201, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, trademark, copyright, patent, contract, trade secrecy, nondisclosure and noncompete or, in other words, āIP lawā.
IP isnāt just short for intellectual property. Itās a euphemism for āa law that lets me reach beyond the walls of my company and control the conduct of my critics, competitors and customersā. And āappā is just a euphemism for āa web page wrapped in enough IP to make it a felony to mod it, to protect the labour, consumer and privacy rights of its userā.
We donāt care. We donāt have to. Weāre the phone company.
What about that fourth constraint: workers? For decades, tech workersā bargaining power and vocational awe put a ceiling on enshittification. Even after the tech sector shrank to a handful of giants. Even after they captured their regulators. Even after āfelony contempt of business modelā and extinguished self-help for tech users. Tech was still constrained by their workersā sense of moral injury in the face of the imperative to enshittify.
Remember when tech workers dreamt of working for a big company for a few years, before striking out on their own to start their own company that would knock that tech giant over? That dream shrank to: work for a giant for a few years, quit, do a fake start-up, get āacqui-hiredā by your old employer, as a complicated way of getting a bonus and a promotion. Then the dream shrank further: work for a tech giant for your whole life, get free kombucha and massages on Wednesdays.
And now, the dream is over. All thatās left is: work for a tech giant until they fire you, like those 12,000 Googlers who got fired last year, eight months after a stock buyback that would have paid their salaries for the next 27 years.
Workers are no longer a check on their bossesā worst impulses. Today, the response to āI refuse to make this product worseā is āturn in your badge and donāt let the door hit you in the ass on the way outā.
I get that this is all a little depressing. OK, really depressing. But hear me out! Weāve identified the disease. Weāve identified its underlying mechanism. Now we can get to work on a cure.
There are four constraints that prevent enshittification: competition, regulation, self-help and labour. To reverse enshittification and guard against its re-emergence, we must restore and strengthen each of these.
On competition, itās actually looking pretty good. The EU, the UK, the US, Canada, Australia, Japan and China are all doing more on competition than they have in two generations. Theyāre blocking mergers, unwinding existing ones, taking action on predatory pricing and other sleazy tactics. Remember, in the US and Europe, we already have the laws to do this; we just stopped enforcing them.
Iāve been fighting these fights with the Electronic Frontier Foundation for 22 years now, and Iāve never seen a more hopeful moment for sound, informed tech policy.
My big hope here is that Steinās Law will take hold: anything that canāt go on for ever will eventually stop
Now, the enshittifiers arenāt taking this lying down. Take Lina Khan, the brilliant head of the US Federal Trade Commission, who has done more in three years on antitrust than the combined efforts of all her predecessors over the past 40 years. The Wall Street Journalās editorial page has run more than 80 pieces trashing Khan, insisting that sheās an ineffectual ideologue who canāt get anything done. Sure, thatās why you ran 80 editorials about her. Because she canāt get anything done.
Reagan and Thatcher put antitrust law in a coma in the 1980s. But itās awake, itās back and itās pissed off.
What about regulation? How will we get tech companies to stop doing that one weird trick of adding āwith an appā to escape enforcement?
Well, here in the EU, theyāre starting to figure it out. Recently, the main body of the Digital Markets Act and the Digital Services Act went into effect, and they let people who get screwed by tech companies go straight to the European courts, bypassing the toothless watchdogs in places like Ireland.
In the US, they might finally get a digital privacy law. You probably have no idea how backwards US privacy law is. The last time the US Congress enacted a broadly applicable privacy law was in 1988. The Video Privacy Protection Act makes it a crime for video-store clerks to leak your video-rental history. It was passed after a rightwing judge who was up for the Supreme Court had his rentals published in a DC newspaper. The rentals werenāt even all that embarrassing.
Sure, that judge, Robert Bork, wasnāt confirmed for the Supreme Court, but that was because he was a virulent loudmouth who served as Nixonās solicitor-general. Still, Congress got the idea that their own video records might be next, freaked out and passed the VPPA. That was the last time Americans got a big, national privacy law. And the thing is, there are a lot of people who are angry about it. Worried that Facebook turned Grampy into a QAnon? That Insta made your teen anorexic? That TikTok is brainwashing Gen Z into quoting Osama bin Laden?
Or that cops are rolling up the identities of everyone at a Black Lives Matter protest or the Jan 6 riots by getting location data from Google?
Or that red state attorneys-general are tracking teen girls to out-of-state abortion clinics?
Or that Black people are being discriminated against by online lending or hiring platforms?
Or that someone is making AI deepfake porn of you?
Having a federal privacy law with a private right of action ā which means that individuals can sue companies that violate their privacy ā would go a long way to rectifying all of these problems. Thereās a big coalition for that kind of privacy law.
What about self-help? Thatās a lot farther away, alas. The EUās DMA will force tech companies to open up their walled gardens for interoperation. Youāll be able to use WhatsApp to message people on iMessage, or quit Facebook and move to Mastodon, but still send messages to the people left behind. But if you want to reverse-engineer one of those Big Tech products and mod it to work for you, not them, the EUās got nothing for you. This is an area ripe for improvement. My big hope here is that Steinās Law will take hold: anything that canāt go on forever will eventually stop.
Finally, thereās labour. Here in Europe, thereās much higher union density than in the US, which American tech barons are learning the hard way. There is nothing more satisfying in the daily news than the recent salvo by Nordic unions against that Tesla guy. But even in the US, thereās a massive surge in tech unions. Tech workers have realised theyāre not founders-in-waiting. In Seattle, Amazonās tech workers walked out in sympathy with Amazonās warehouse workers, because theyāre all workers.
(continued in reply)
Weāre seeing bold, muscular, global action on competition, regulation and labour, with self-help bringing up the rear. Itās not a moment too soon, because the bad news is enshittification is coming to every industry. If itās got a networked computer in it, the people who made it can run the Darth Vader MBA playbook on it, changing the rules from moment to moment, violating your rights and then saying: āItās OK, we did it with an app.ā
From Mercedes effectively renting you your accelerator pedal by the month to Internet of Things dishwashers that lock you into proprietary dish soap, enshittification is metastasising into every corner of our lives. Software doesnāt eat the world, it just enshittifies it.
Thereās a bright side to all this: if everyone is threatened by enshittification, then everyone has a stake in disenshittification. Just as with privacy law in the US, the potential anti-enshittification coalition is massive. Itās unstoppable.
The cynics among you might be sceptical that this will make a difference. After all, isnāt āenshittificationā the same as ācapitalismā? Well, no.
Iām not going to cape for capitalism. Iām hardly a true believer in markets as the most efficient allocators of resources and arbiters of policy. But the capitalism of 20 years ago made space for a wild and woolly internet, a space where people with disfavoured views could find each other, offer mutual aid and organise. The capitalism of today has produced a global, digital ghost mall, filled with botshit, crap gadgets from companies with consonant-heavy brand names and cryptocurrency scams.
The internet isnāt more important than the climate emergency, gender justice, racial justice, genocide or inequality. But the internet is the terrain weāll fight those fights on. Without a free, fair and open internet, the fight is lost before itās joined.
We can reverse the enshittification of the internet. We can halt the creeping enshittification of every digital device. We can build a better, enshittification-resistant digital nervous system, one that is fit to co-ordinate the mass movements we will need to fight fascism, end genocide, save our planet and our species.
Martin Luther King said: āIt may be true that the law cannot make a man love me, but it can stop him from lynching me, and I think thatās pretty important.ā And it may be true that the law canāt force corporations to conceive of you as a human being entitled to dignity and fair treatment, and not just an ambulatory wallet, a supply of gut bacteria for the immortal colony organism that is a limited liability corporation. But it can make them fear you enough to treat you fairly and afford you dignity ā even if they donāt think you deserve it.
Cory Doctorow is a special adviser to the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a visiting professor of computer science at the Open University. His next book āThe Bezzleā, published by Head of Zeus, is out this month. This piece is adapted from his Marshall McLuhan Lecture, delivered at the Embassy of Canada in Berlin last month
yeah I salute our troops
Martin Luther King said: āIt may be true that the law cannot make a man love me, but it can stop him from lynching me, and I think thatās pretty important.ā
it didnāt stop him though
Thank you!
those fucks ! When i posted it it had no Paywall ā¦ omg is ther eno end to it ??
Edit the link to this https://archive.is/KCElF
doesn work , i cant save it .(cant click button ) and the Archive.link doesnt work (for me )ā¦
EDIT: Ironicā¦ but i put buckycats text into it.
-
Iām not going to cape for capitalism. Iām hardly a true believer in markets as the most efficient allocators of resources and arbiters of policy.
another comfortable liberal who reduces capitalism to āmarketsā
But the capitalism of 20 years ago made space for a wild and woolly internet, a space where people with disfavoured views could find each other, offer mutual aid and organise.
capitalism is responsible for none of that.
The capitalism of today has produced a global, digital ghost mall, filled with botshit, crap gadgets from companies with consonant-heavy brand names and cryptocurrency scams.
itās the same fucking capitalism. of course then you wouldnāt get to brag about how you coined a popular word
hereās a link sans paywall, Iām going to read this later because Doctorow is an absolute writing machine (can this man ever stop?) and Iāve got some work to do twenty minutes from now
Itās a most excellent read š
For the various people who are saying cory doctorow is too lib, do you have any suggestion of someone (a person, org, whatever) that discusses similar issues in a better way?
I find he is helpful in understanding specific tech/legal situations in a light that suggest a path forward. Like anyone, you gotta pick n choose and take what is helpful.
Not necessarily the same thing, but Iād recommend unlearning economicsā video on this. While he never uses the term enshitification, he categorizes this broadly as another form of planned obsolescence.
I think the main difference is that itās not a new phenomenon. Treating the issue like itās something unique I do think leads people to be uncritical of the fundamental incentive systems that produce the behavior.
Donāt get me wrong, I think Coreyās analysis is important, but itās arguably myopic IMO.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
Under capitalism, tech is for producing monopolies. Sometimes that monopoly is over your use of your dishwasher or whatever. Itās not really different from Googleās monopoly over email or search except that now you notice because you have to explicitly rather than implicitly pay them.
Being a professor of computer science doesnāt help you realize this because the technical details donāt actually matter. Everyone can understand subscription models or harvesting data for advertising or DRM. But something CS professors tend to suck at is questioning the economics of their entire industry and realizing they donāt know that much about it (engineering profs universally have a pretense that they understand everything already). They might actually be the worst kind of person to ask about this topic.
god it was kind of funny to begin with but āenshittificationā is such a ponderous fucking word. āausterityā āmonopolyā āenclosureā we had better more descriptive options
deleted by creator