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Meet John Doe

The open­ness and free-​​flowing nature of the Inter­net has brought vast changes. Other tech­nolo­gies have teamed with it to enable the cre­ator inside all of us to flour­ish beyond the wildest dreams of just two decades ago. We can reach more peo­ple with our cre­ations than ever before, reach them swiftly, with the click of a mouse and the blink of an eye.

Prior to the inven­tion of the Inter­net, the vehi­cles for dis­play­ing cre­ative con­tent were lim­ited to a few, select gate­keep­ers. It was not a democ­racy of tal­ent. It was an oli­garchy of the invited. Con­tests were held and salons were cre­ated to herd the lucky few to cer­tain des­ti­na­tions. Some true geniuses man­aged to be included among the herd. Luck­ily enough for pos­ter­ity. But the world will never know how many bril­liant artists it lost because of that herd­ing process, that fun­nel­ing, that some­times arbi­trary denial of bril­liance and beauty.

Gate­keep­ers of one kind or another always decided who was included in the pool, and who ulti­mately survived.

The Inter­net rev­o­lu­tion now makes it pos­si­ble for mil­lions of writ­ers, artists, musi­cians, pho­tog­ra­phers and movie-​​makers to bypass the salons, the limited-​​access con­tests, the patron­age sys­tems and so on … to bring their wares directly to bil­lions of peo­ple. I see this as a great thing. But it has its down­sides, and its own lim­its, and the likely tra­jec­tory is that new gate­keep­ers will come to the fore, and that these gate­keep­ers will not always be demo­c­ra­tic, diverse, open to the bril­liant and the beau­ti­ful. Even­tu­ally, a new class of “taste-​​makers” will arise, aided by the self-​​serving, by cor­po­rate and gov­ern­ment enti­ties, by those who can co-​​opt the next-​​great-​​thing. This, of course, is already hap­pen­ing, and has been for years.

How­ever, unlike pre­vi­ous soci­etal and artis­tic rev­o­lu­tions, this one spread too quickly and too widely to be snuffed out with­out a truly cat­a­clysmic and coor­di­nated reac­tion. The genie, in effect, is already long out of the bottle.

Still, it will take vig­i­lance, the prover­bial eter­nal vig­i­lance from all of us to pro­tect this free­dom, to make sure it is not slowly, sub­tly co-​​opted and com­mod­i­fied. We each have to work hard to pre­vent the reim­po­si­tion of gate­keep­ers and the oli­garchy of the invited.

From the movie clip above. Part of Gary Cooper’s great speech:

Why, your type’s as old as his­tory — if you can’t lay your dirty fin­gers on a decent idea and twist it and squeeze it and stuff it into your own pock­ets, you slap it down. Like dogs, if you can’t eat some­thing, you bury it! Why, this is the one worth­while thing that’s come along. Peo­ple are finally find­ing out that the guy next door isn’t a bad egg. That’s sim­ple, isn’t it?…It may be the one thing capa­ble of sav­ing this cock-​​eyed world. Yet you sit back there on your fat hulks and tell me you’ll kill it if you can’t use it. Well, you go ahead and try. You couldn’t do it in a mil­lion years with all your radio sta­tions and all your power, because it’s big­ger than whether I’m a fake, it’s big­ger than your ambi­tions, and it’s big­ger than all the bracelets and fur coats in the world.

 

 

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