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Consider adding a new principle about providing undiscriminating economic opportunity #68
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When you say "undiscriminating economic opportunity", what do you mean?
vs....
This rather painful HN thread addresses this topic head on... I am not sure I can extract any positive principles from it, but I will try... I am hearing that it's a problem that "not everyone has the time to implement a new standard"... if the standard is implemented by only 1 of the top 3 browsers, that can lead to "discriminating economic opportunities"... There is also the question of "is every standard at W3C meant to be implemented by a browser vendor or all browser vendors"? Browser vendor economic opportunity is not uniformly distributed across the web or mobile vs desktop, etc... I'm not seeing a web principle here other than perhaps "Concentrated markets are bad and standards SHOULD NOT be used to make market concentration problems worse"...
I would be in favor of some language that was supportive of competitive, un-concentrated markets, and opposed to dark patterns around vendor lock, or anticompetitive manipulations of a standards process, etc. I realize this topic is potentially controversial, but imo it is a principle worth refining, I see it as directly applying to the current introduction of EWP:
IMO, It's not enough to say "The web must be for good."... there should be ethical web principles that support a competitive economic model that protects the web from accidentally or intentionally becoming evil. |
Why is there a w3c? Why not just work on specs in github repos?
W3C provides a context and staff to facilitate standards-making.
W3C provides policies and perspectives to help people who want to contribute to the common good to do so.
The rules about consensus and reviews and Members and Invited Experts and Formal Objection were meant to help insure there weren’t natural global monopolies merely because of economies of scale.
It’s part of the context of this document. Perhaps a mention in the introduction.
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I think those are great points, @masinter, worthy of a separate issue. |
The web offers incredible economic opportunities, and while a number of the ethical web principles acknowledge the value of empowering individuals or providing equal opportunity, the economic opportunities enabled by the web are barely mentioned in EWP.
I'd be happy to help suggest text once we have agreement that (a) this is worth pursuing and (b) on the direction such a principle would take.
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