Internet Archive + Metropolitan New York Library Council: The Decentralized Web: An IntroductionLink:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OWBGrQNcDUThe Gist: This hour-long video served as an introduction to what the decentralized web is, the first in a 6-part series. After a brief overview of how the Web has evolved and the differences between centralized (data exist on a single place under the control of one authority), and distributed networks (data exists on a group of servers that can still be under the authority of one person/group (Amazon Web Services was used as an example), decentralized networks were introduced as data and sites residing in multiple areas that no one person or group has control over. At this point the presentation was turned over to other speakers:
Brewster Khale, the founder of the Internet Archive, talked about how he came to propose a decentalized web to start with in 2015 and the issues he set out to resolve, especially the fact that data often lives in one place and can be lost if that site/server is taken offline or can be blocked by companies or governments that don't want people to access the information. He also promoted a decentralized web as a way to end capitalistic surveillance, return power to individual creators and away from large publishers, and do away with large payment processors by allowing funds to be paid directly to content creators.
Mai Ishikawa Sutton, formerly of the Electronic Foundation Frontier and now Founder and Editor of Compost Magazine, talked about starting the magazine as an experiment in building the web as a shared resource using 'solidarity-based systems' (not sure what that means tbh). In addition to having a traditional webpage, Compost Magazine can be viewed using the IPFS and Hypercore protocols (which I take to be decentralized equivalents to HTTP, and she demonstrated how you could use a browser like Agrigore to view, download, and share the magazine with others, much like a traditional peer-to-peer network like Napster (that name was thrown around a lot in the presentation).
Finally, Paul Frazee, founder of the Beaker Browser, demonstrated how people could view, download, share and build websites using the Beaker Browser through the IPFS protocol, showing how the site is saved and shared as you build it on your computer so you don't need a webhost. He also demonstrated a microblogging site that pulls posts from each person's website (so there's no centralized database). He then went through the challenges with the technology at present. While he demonstrated the microblogging website, he acknowledged the difficulties of scaling it up beyond a few people, making it work across platforms and devices, and how to discover sites to begin with. Currently, you have to find a site's decentralized address on the traditional web or ask the person for it.
As the length of this summary suggests, it was an information-packed session that both explained why they feel this technology is needed and how it can be used today.
Wintermoot's Thoughts: Recently I've read a few relevant articles: one about how Reddit was being sued to turn over the IP addresses of users who had posted about pirating as part of a lawsuit against Frontier, one about how an Indian court had forced Reuters to take down an investigative report worldwide, and one about, and one about how Russia is segregating its portion of the web from the rest of the world. They all point to the need for a better model that isn't so easily controlled by companies or governments. I could see why digital librarians would want this, especially as they come under attack by publishers.
I was particularly intrigued at the phrase "blockchain registration", which wasn't elaborated upon but I assume would allow users to register with sites and verify that they are them without passing along data like an IP address.
That being said, I think something was missed at least in this first video: the need for convenience for end-users. The same traits that Web 2.0 came under scrutiny here for are also some of the traits that allowed the internet to become ubiquities. Most people don't want to make their own website, so platforms like Facebook and Twitter made it easy for people to share their thoughts without having to. Not to mention the matter of finding a site to start with. Paul Frazee suggested somebody put together a site with a list of links, in what sounds a lot like what Yahoo! was before search engines became a thing, but then you give the author of that site power over what sites people can easily find, which seems to defeat the purpose of a decentralized web.
If they can't solve the problem of convenience, it'll never be mass-adopted and it'll remain a niche for techies and intellectuals. Even on the traditional web, the concept of federated servers has been an obstacle to surpassing Twitter. Turns out people don't want to figure out what server things are on and which one they should reside on...they just want to register and have everything be there.
That being said, I understand the technology is still in its infancy, and I'm intrigued enough to want to watch the rest of the videos, though I'm not sure I'll be able to anytime soon. I do agree that the web is in danger of falling completely under the control of a handful of companies that have few restrictions on how to use the data they're given or how to treat the people on their networks.