Minitel "saved" by hackers?
I'm reviewing "Cultures of Internet: Virtual Spaces, Real Histories, Living Bodies" edited by Rob Shields. Chapter 2, "The Labyrinth of Minitel" by Andre Lemos tells a fascinating story, after you get past the verbiage in the introduction (sample: "If modernity refused the artificial, and deepened separations and dichotomies, postmodernity tries to surpass well-established dichotomies, not in the dialectical sense through sublimation and synthesis, but more in the direction of making a place for dialogical complexity"). This may be old hat to cypherpunks, but it seems that the system, conceived as a videotex system, was hacked: "At the end of 1981 the messaging software ... was pirated by some users planning to communicate between each other in real time. Through this detournement -- literally, a 'hijacking' was born the messagerie." These included games dialogs in real time and postings. Soon there was the "messagerie rose", the sex stuff -- which generated most of the revenues. As Claire Ancelin notes,"the public has not hesitated to manifest tastes often opposed to those foreseen by experts, this public has not hesitated to make a serious information tool into a frivolous communication tool." So, shocked by this, what does the government do? Being unable to distinguish between different kinds of messageries, the government put a 30% tax in 1989 on all, and raised it to 50% in 1991! No wonder the Internet is gaining rapid popularity in France. My questions: 1) are any of those 1981 French hackers on this list or known to people here? 2) I checked out "Minitel history" on Alta Vista, and since my French is very modest, downloaded http://www.dlib.org/dlib/december95/12kessler.html, The French Minitel: Is There Digital Life Outside of the "US ASCII" Internet? A Challenge or Convergence? by Jack Kessler, and http://tklab6.informatik.uni-bremen.de/nii/Conference/Abstracts/berne.html THE MINITEL SUCCESS by Dr. Michel Berne. Surprisingly, neither mentioned the 1981 hijack. Can anyone suggest better references? 3) Kessler raised a controversial point: "Centralized control -- its political as well as its social and economic manifestations -- is relatively untested. Some fans of the Internet even deny the possibility of centralized control in their version of "Cyberspace". Yet such control is the single greatest issue of networked information to many Asians. Minitel's approach, which is so different from the Internet's celebrated de-centralized structure, provides useful comparisons for both systems to consider. ... The question for networking's next generation is what will scale up for Asia? To meet this challenge, some "convergence" -- some pooling of talents and approach, combining the sophisticated with the simple, the academic with the commercial, the decentralized and chaotic with the centralized and bureaucratic and controlled -- might not be such a bad idea for both the Internet and the Minitel to pursue now." Do you know of any country in Asia or elsewhere favoring the Minitel "centralized and bureaucratic" model over the Internet?
Arun Mehta describes the "hijacking" of Minitel (where users changed a videotex system into two-way communication medium) as a "hacking" (in the computer breakin sense). I think it might be more accurate to call this a "redirection" -- the people using Minitel "manifest[ing] tastes often opposed to those foreseen by experts" A similar thing happened to ARPANET in the late 1970's, with superficially frivolous newsletters such as SF-LOVERS and, of course, the proliferation of personal correspondance. Perhaps this is just another example of the cypherpunks manifesto: "information wants to be free." Martin Minow minow@apple.com
participants (2)
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Arun Mehta -
Martin Minow