Friday, March 02, 2012

How the Web Nurtures Underground Economies

Through Anonymous Web Proxy Servers.

From author Bill Rounds (howtovanish.com), [hat tip Charleston Voice]

Communist Cuba is a great example of how this is being done. It has a thriving market for goods and services, even though strict regulations prohibit entrepreneurship, because the citizens find ways to exercise their enterprising minds. A site similar to Craigslist, called revolico.com, allows Cubans to exchange everything from baseball equipment to their place in line and they love their hawaladar. For the good of the people, the site is blocked by the government. But the site thrives nonetheless. How do the Cubans get around the repressive and immoral policies of their overbearing government? They use anonymous web surfing practices.

Anonymous web surfing is generally done by using proxy servers. Proxy servers allow the proxy computer, outside of Cuba and not subject to Cuban government regulations, to do the web surfing for the Cubans. The ISP registers that they have visited the proxy server, not the sites visited by the proxy server on their behalf. And, because there are many thousands of servers available at any moment, some of which have never been used before as a proxy, it is far more difficult to restrict access to proxy servers than to individual websites. This way, the web surfing activity of individual Cubans is made anonymous to those who are watching them.

Cubans using anonymous proxy servers for anonymous browsing which don’t disclose their IP address to the websites that they visit, nor the fact that the proxy server is even surfing for someone else, make it that much harder for a repressive government, like Cuba, to discover which citizens are visiting a site and then prevent them from visiting the site.

Cuba is not the only example. China, Iran, and many other countries have seen their citizens utilize proxy servers to spread information and ideas. I am sure that governments are not done trying to prevent their citizens from accessing information, sharing information, or associating with others through the internet, but I am also sure that there will always be those who circumvent limitations placed on them through the use of anonymous web surfing techniques. Some people might want to seek residency in another country that is more free and allows for more privacy.

Rapid innovation and accelerating diffusion of technology usage has been eroding the political framework of the 20th century. Also these have been fostering economic activities that goes beyond the clutches of political authorities.

And this means that the greater the penetration levels of technology, the bigger the informal economy, as well as, greater pressures applied to existing vertical structured political institutions. Put differently, closed door political economies are incrementally being pried open by the globalization through technology.

The relationship between markets and regulations can be analogized to a “cat and mouse” game which Wikipedia.org defines as “a contrived action involving constant pursuit, near captures, and repeated escapes” where the interrelationship exists via a feedback mechanism: the markets always discovers means to skirt political shackles, and the political response to innovation would be to introduce new regulations.

Nonetheless the markets are always way ahead of and smarter than politicians, which is one fundamental reason to be optimistic despite the many challenges posed by the incumbent political agents and their lackeys.

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