Thursday Forum: Ben Peters - The Free Market Failure of the Soviet Internet
2.5.09
12:30 -1:30 pm
Location: 3rd Floor, Sherrerd Hall, Conference Room 306
Food at 12:30 pm. Discussion begins at 12:45 pm. Everyone invited.
Why wasn’t there a Soviet ARPANET equivalent? This working paper develops several leads with fresh archival evidence: one, that the first person to design a national computer network for civilian use was a Soviet Colonel; two, that the decentralized design of both Soviet institutions and networks contributed to that network’s failure; three, that while the ARPANET initially succeeded thanks to US state subsidies, the Soviet networks failed to develop due to unregulated competition between ministries. Combining these and other counter-intuitive thoughts, the story of what Slava Gerovitch calls “the Soviet InterNyet” offers a cautionary tale about residual cold war market logics in the contemporary design of policy and technology.

