Declaration of Digital Independence

Version 1.3 (June 29, 2019; version history)

See also: Social Media Strike!FAQ about the project to decentralize social mediaResources

This document is included as Chapter 11 of my 2020 book, Essays on Free Knowledge. Please support the struggle for freedom by buying a copy!

Humanity has been contemptuously used by vast digital empires. Thus it is now necessary to replace these empires with decentralized networks of independent individuals, as in the first decades of the Internet. As our participation has been voluntary, no one doubts our right to take this step. But if we are to persuade as many people as possible to join together and make reformed networks possible, we should declare our reasons for wanting to replace the old.

We declare that we have unalienable digital rights, rights that define how information that we individually own may or may not be treated by others, and that among these rights are free speech, privacy, and security. Since the proprietary, centralized architecture of the Internet at present has induced most of us to abandon these rights, however reluctantly or cynically, we ought to demand a new system that respects them properly. The difficulty and divisiveness of wholesale reform means that this task is not to be undertaken lightly. For years we have approved of and even celebrated enterprise as it has profited from our communication and labor without compensation to us. But it has become abundantly clear more recently that a callous, secretive, controlling, and exploitative animus guides the centralized networks of the Internet and the corporations behind them.

The long train of abuses we have suffered makes it our right, even our duty, to replace the old networks. To show what train of abuses we have suffered at the hands of these giant corporations, let these facts be submitted to a candid world.


They have practiced in-house moderation in keeping with their executives’ notions of what will maximize profit, rather than allowing moderation to be performed more democratically and by random members of the community.

They have banned, shadow-banned, throttled, and demonetized both users and content based on political considerations, exercising their enormous corporate power to influence elections globally.

They have adopted algorithms for user feeds that highlight the most controversial content, making civic discussion more emotional and irrational and making it possible for foreign powers to exercise an unmerited influence on elections globally.

They have required agreement to terms of service that are impossible for ordinary users to understand, and which are objectionably vague in ways that permit them to legally defend their exploitative practices.

They have marketed private data to advertisers in ways that no one would specifically assent to.

They have failed to provide clear ways to opt out of such marketing schemes.

They have subjected users to such terms and surveillance even when users pay them for products and services.

They have data-mined user content and behavior in sophisticated and disturbing ways, learning sometimes more about their users than their users know about themselves; they have profited from this hidden but personal information.

They have avoided using strong, end-to-end encryption when users have a right to expect total privacy, in order to retain access to user data.

They have amassed stunning quantities of user data while failing to follow sound information security practices, such as encryption; they have inadvertently or deliberately opened that data to both illegal attacks and government surveillance.

They have unfairly blocked accounts, posts, and means of funding on political or religious grounds, preferring the loyalty of some users over others.

They have sometimes been too ready to cooperate with despotic governments that both control information and surveil their people.

They have failed to provide adequate and desirable options that users may use to guide their own experience of their services, preferring to manipulate users for profit.

They have failed to provide users adequate tools for searching their own content, forcing users rather to employ interfaces insultingly inadequate for the purpose.

They have exploited users and volunteers who freely contribute data to their sites, by making such data available to others only via paid application program interfaces and privacy-violating terms of service, failing to make such freely-contributed data free and open source, and disallowing users to anonymize their data and opt out easily.

They have failed to provide adequate tools, and sometimes any tools, to export user data in a common data standard.

They have created artificial silos for their own profit; they have failed to provide means to incorporate similar content, served from elsewhere, as part of their interface, forcing users to stay within their networks and cutting them off from family, friends, and associates who use other networks.

They have profited from the content and activity of users, often without sharing any of these profits with the users.

They have treated users arrogantly as a fungible resource to be exploited and controlled rather than being treated respectfully, as free, independent, and diverse partners.


We have begged and pleaded, complained, and resorted to the law. The executives of the corporations must be familiar with these common complaints; but they acknowledge them publicly only rarely and grudgingly. The ill treatment continues, showing that most of such executives are not fit stewards of the public trust.

The most reliable guarantee of our privacy, security, and free speech is not in the form of any enterprise, organization, or government, but instead in the free agreement among free individuals to use common standards and protocols. The vast power wielded by social networks of the early 21st century, putting our digital rights in serious jeopardy, demonstrates that we must engineer new—but old-fashioned—decentralized networks that make such clearly dangerous concentrations of power impossible.

Therefore, we declare our support of the following principles.


Principles of Decentralized Social Networks

  1. We free individuals should be able to publish our data freely, without having to answer to any corporation.
  2. We declare that we legally own our own data; we possess both legal and moral rights to control our own data.
  3. Posts that appear on social networks should be able to be served, like email and blogs, from many independent services that we individually control, rather than from databases that corporations exclusively control or from any central repository.
  4. Just as no one has the right to eavesdrop on private conversations in homes without extraordinarily good reasons, so also the privacy rights of users must be preserved against criminal, corporate, and governmental monitoring; therefore, for private content, the protocols must support strong, end-to-end encryption and other good privacy practices.
  5. As is the case with the Internet domain name system, lists of available user feeds should be restricted by technical standards and protocols only, never according to user identity or content.
  6. Social media applications should make available data input by the user, at the user’s sole discretion, to be distributed by all other publishers according to common, global standards and protocols, just as are email and blogs, with no publisher being privileged by the network above another. Applications with idiosyncratic standards violate their users’ digital rights.
  7. Accordingly, social media applications should aggregate posts from multiple, independent data sources as determined by the user, and in an order determined by the user’s preferences.
  8. No corporation, or small group of corporations, should control the standards and protocols of decentralized networks, nor should there be a single brand, owner, proprietary software, or Internet location associated with them, as that would constitute centralization.
  9. Users should expect to be able to participate in the new networks, and to enjoy the rights above enumerated, without special technical skills. They should have very easy-to-use control over privacy, both fine- and coarse-grained, with the most private messages encrypted automatically, and using tools for controlling feeds and search results that are easy for non-technical people to use.

We hold that to embrace these principles is to return to the sounder and better practices of the earlier Internet and which were, after all, the foundation for the brilliant rise of the Internet. Anyone who opposes these principles opposes the Internet itself. Thus we pledge to code, design, and participate in newer and better networks that follow these principles, and to eschew the older, controlling, and soon to be outmoded networks.

We, therefore, the undersigned people of the Internet, do solemnly publish and declare that we will do all we can to create decentralized social networks; that as many of us as possible should distribute, discuss, and sign their names to this document; that we endorse the preceding statement of principles of decentralization; that we will judge social media companies by these principles; that we will demonstrate our solidarity to the cause by abandoning abusive networks if necessary; and that we, both users and developers, will advance the cause of a more decentralized Internet.


Please sign if you agree!

You can also sign on Change.org.

 

Signings

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Goal

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I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing…

Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to James Madison, Paris, January 30, 1787. Jefferson was the author of the original Declaration of Independence, signed on July 4, 1776.
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Please do dive in (politely). I want your reactions!

237 responses to “Declaration of Digital Independence”

  1. R.J.M. Vermaseren

    This initiative should apply to the whole banking industry as well.

    1. One thing at a time. 🙂

  2. Nekeke

    A solution for a decentralized internet could be a blockchain-based protocol as it is built on an immutable decentralized ledger that can’t be altered in any way.

  3. Guy Fawkes

    The declaration exquisitely defines the problem. This is a good conceptual framework moving forward. What is missing is a sound game theoretical design to manifest this vision in an adversarial environment. If we are going to achieve this vision, we must do so through economic persuasion. Neither government nor the corporation is going to willfully give up its power. If we are to succeed, we must create a new solution which makes the old obsolete. Fortunately there is a way to do this.

    The core value proposition of all business models is trust/identity. All businesses match a buyer and a seller and collect a fee for doing so. The reason we are reliant on centralized businesses is because we cannot establish trust among two peers without going through a centralized intermediary. If we solve this problem, then we have made the centralized business obsolete.

    A system of peer-to-peer trust can be rather easily built on the blockchain. Users register their identity to a designated Bitcoin address and link all of their profile characteristics/data to this identity. Attestation from peers is used to build a public profile. Using this public immutable profile, instead of the individual broadcasting trade requests to a single monopoly provider like Facebook, Uber, eBay, Netflix, etc, the user broadcasts trade requests to thousands of competing matchmakers. Each matchmaker recreates a complete copy of the network. All prospective counterparties can verify the trustworthiness of each other on the blockchain. They need not trust the monopolized intermediary to verify each other’s reputation. By solving peer-to-peer trust, you have eliminated the very thing that allows corporations to attain monopolies — the network effect.

    By eliminating the network effect of trust, the centralized business is made obsolete. By making the centralized business obsolete, government is indirectly made obsolete. Government has no power without the centralized business implementing its decrees out of fear of getting shut down. It simply cannot control an economy of billions of individuals transacting peer-to-peer. By making the centralized business and government obsolete, the cost of trade is reduced 40%+. This is because the cost of the middleman, regulation, and extortion is removed from trade as it cannot be enforced in a peer-to-peer framework. Users will join this system not out of ideological persuasion, but because they personally profit from it.

  4. rat_from_wall

    Let’s see what a typical user thinks when sees this: It’s “What product do you want to stuff again?”.
    There are too many non-technical problems to solve, technical part is relatively easy and in fact most of the biggest problems are already solved in special platforms. But these platforms will still be the platforms containing users of various degree, from clever hackers to, unfortunately in majority, units so brainwashed that calling them “biorobots” would be an insult to robotics.
    We won’t fix work abuse causing less time for hackers, as they were the driving force of the early Internet.
    We won’t fix the amount of trash in the Internet. More, we may unintentionally prepare another landfill.
    We will just not be able to fix years of psychological or memetic conditioning by ad industry. Look a few posts above how “left” and “right” company-driven biorobots try to argue on the same things, this is the visible part of the problem.
    Finally, we will not fix the social “censorocarcy” which I call general consensus on the fact that the more censorship one has in control, the more power one has. This is related mostly to the first point as with abusive work, in some circles even called “wageslaving”, makes it impossible to understand motives. The meme used for ads has this quite nasty side effect, unfortunately.
    Sorry, really nice ideas, but this is just physically impossible to make this working as intended. In a history there was a man who tried to clock the XX-century society back to agricultural community and guess what he got? He got Agent Orange on his head.

  5. Christine Marais

    Long overdue. Making America Great Again demands the restoration of our God-given and unalienable right of free speech, stolen from all of us by fascism (the overtaking of government by mercantilist and private interests, intent on reducing all of humanity to slaves allowed to serve them exclusively).

    1. It’s not just about free speech and it definitely isn’t just for the right.

      This is a big-tent strike. It’s for anyone who thinks we should own and control our own data.

      The rights I think Big Social Media are violating are free speech—definitely—but also privacy and security. I sometimes want to throw “autonomy” into the mix, meaning the freedom to self-direct, make choices for oneself, to be respected as a different, unique individual.

  6. Jim

    I think the internet is fine the way it is. I don’t really care if google tracks me. What’s the worst they’ll do? Advertise to me better?

    The internet is not your home; I wouldn’t expect privacy in the middle of the city, and I don’t expect it on the internet.

    I’m sorry I have to be a contrarian, but if you’re implying the “truths” of this essay are self evident (and given the title… you are) you kind of opened yourself up for criticism.

    1. IT IS apparent that you have no real knowledge of the reason the BIG technocracies gather the information. You are one of those that I protect due to your own ignorance. SEMPER FI

  7. There was a time where using the internet was for nerds.

    Decentralised chat services like Riot/Matrix, decentarlised social media networks like Minds/Mastadon are picking up steam. Even centralised applications like Telegram are taking in millions of users.

    The conscious move first, I dare say the smart follow, even if many young people or countries-new-to-the-internet are swept up in this dismal grasp.

    We know what we need, and we have known it for a while. Yet, there is normie-interia, even in 30 year olds, to move from a gmail to a protonmail. In large supposedly privacy-concerned companies, too, trust is dumped into companies who have no concern for privacy; companies whose income depends on the opposite of privacy.

    The realist in me says that principles are nice, but mean nothing; infrastructure and ease of use defines what people will do. All networks have costs to run. How many failed YouTube clones are out there?

    Privacy and free speech come with their cons, but the pros greatly outweigh anything censorship and blatant, relentless manipulation provide.

    A man should be able to speak to his wife online without their thoughts between scanned and stored by marketing and manipulation companies. Let’s not forget what Bill Hick’s said.

    For that matter, anyone to anyone. I hope this picks up steam. I hope it is presented in a way that is more appealing to normies, too.

  8. Cristian Segura

    email confirmation is not working or has some delay??

  9. Major Sceptic

    While I agree with the idealistic viewpoint here, I think you are mistaken in one very basis fact:

    THERE IS NO FREE INTERNET.

    Every company is set up to make profit. Even if you put something on a free blog, this blog owner needs to pay for the computing power (CPU), storage (disks) and networking (ISP). And most likely a gazillion of other services to keep the things running.

    Nevertheless I can sign the declaration, like some other tens or even thousands of people. I just don’t believe it will change anything.

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