Kiran Jonnalagadda
My name is Kiran Jonnalagadda. I work with an organization named HasGeek that encourages people in the tech industry to discuss their work with peers outside their own organizations, helping good ideas and best practices spread across the ecosystem. This, in turn, helps the industry grow in capacity and maturity. I remember a time when the internet of the 70s, 80s, and 90s—last century, last millennium even—was described as a distributed network with no single point of vulnerability because everyone ran their own infrastructure in their own corner of the internet. That’s not the internet we use today.
If you use email, you’re probably using Gmail, where all of your emails are hosted by a single company, just like everyone else’s. This is no longer a distributed system, even though it retains some characteristics of its original internet architecture. The trend towards centralization over the last 20 years of the internet is not beneficial for anyone outside the mainstream who wants to build an idea and gain public acceptance, because now they’re up against centralized decision-making about which new ideas are welcome. We need to start looking for ways to return to our cooperative structure of the digital commons, distributing authority and decision-making. This will involve some level of technical innovation to return to decentralized systems, as well as some level of policy change to ensure that our approaches are legitimate and acceptable to the larger society. That’s roughly what I’m working on.