

The Open Internet is Dead. What Comes Next?
8 snips Oct 12, 2025
Mallory Knodel, Executive Director of the Social Web Foundation, and Burcu Kilic, Senior Fellow at CIGI, dive into the decline of the open internet. They trace the erosion back to the 1990s, blaming it on laissez-faire policies that favored Big Tech's consolidation. The conversation highlights the misleading use of 'open' by corporations, the failures of regulations like GDPR, and warns about AI reinforcing centralization. They advocate for stronger antitrust actions and the creation of public digital alternatives to revitalize true openness in technology.
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Protocol Openness Masked Service Consolidation
- The internet's early open protocols hide today's consolidation into a few dominant services.
- Those centralized services have replaced protocol-level openness with implementation control and vendor lock-in.
Clinton-Era Choice To Let Industry Lead
- Burcu recounts the Clinton-era decision to largely let industry self-regulate the internet in the 1990s.
- That policy choice set the stage for surveillance capitalism and persistent industry influence over global rules.
Companies Hijacked 'Open' To Resist Regulation
- Debates conflated protecting the internet and protecting dominant companies, letting firms claim they defend openness.
- That false narrative shields monopolistic behavior and blocks effective antitrust action.