spike wrote:Imagine, some people thinking that the Internet could exist without free market capitalism. What, then, made possible all the hardware and software it runs on?
Public university funding, military funding, and research grants. Most of the internet is based on PC's, an open hardware standard, and uses Linux/UNIX, an open source OS. All of the core software is open source and was written by public researchers, not private corporations.
Maybe the people who built the first prototypes of it were not motivated or associated with free market capitalism. But where did the money and know-how come from to get it off the ground so we all could benefit form it, so that it would become another democratic institution?
From scientists in universities, public infrastructure investment by the government, and later by a group of non-profits that work on standardization.
Two of the Internet's giants - Jobs and Gates, got in computing and its facilitation because they ultimately were motivated by profit and status. They didn't just do it as a hobby.
Neither of them had anything at all to do with the invention of the internet. Safari, the Mac browser, was waaaayyyy too slow to market and is still a pretty crappy browser. Internet Explorer only got where it was by directly copying Netscape, and now, it spends most of its time playing catch-up to Firefox, an open-source browser.
Back to communism. Communism also had a computing system. But it was rudimentary in comparison. And much of the stuff it had was stolen from the West. Moreover, its anti-competitive economic system didn't allow for or encourage the maintenance and expansion of a web. Communism, thus, eventually collapse because it couldn't keep up with the advancements of the West and its free market principles.
What the hell are you talking about here?