This has been impressive and unprecedented. But it also reveals something new about the power of Big Tech. In the past, trans-oceanic cable laying required the resources of governments and their national telecom companies. But these costs are small change for today’s titans: In 2020 alone, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and Amazon poured more than $90 billion into capital expenditures.
By building their cables, the tech giants are saving themselves money over time that they would have to pay other cable operators. However, because they are not selling bandwidth but using it for their services – which also allows them to escape being regulated as telcos – the tech companies don’t need to operate their cables at a profit for the investment to make financial sense. They have transformed the business model for the critical infrastructure of the 21st century.
This is both good and bad news. The good news is that most of the Big Tech cables are collaborations among rivals. The Marea cable, for example, which stretches approximately 6598km
(4,100 miles) between Virginia Beach in the US and Bilbao, Spain, was completed in 2017 and is partly owned by Microsoft, Meta and Telxius, a subsidiary of Telefónica, the Spanish telecom. While this will enable Amazon, for example, to stream millions of HD movies simultaneously, it also helps ensure that more redundancy is built into the backbone. This helps to keep the internet humming when a cable is severed or damaged – which happens 200 times a year apparently – and thus provides security to all internet users.
The ability of these companies to vertically integrate down to the level of the physical infrastructure of the internet itself is good news for the users of their services. It reduces their costs for delivering Google search results, Facebook’s social networking services and Amazon and Microsoft’s cloud services.
The bad news is that this self-serving behaviour, despite its positive impact on the global economy, helps concentrate Big Tech’s control over this critical infrastructure. By owning its own lanes on the superhighway, Big Tech has even more power to restrict competition and, more importantly, determine who will be allowed to travel there as well.
This is analogous to Amazon owning the roads where packages are delivered. Just remember the aftermath of the US Capitol riots in 2021: Not only was an elected president removed from Twitter and Facebook by Silicon Valley’s unelected tech barons, but Parler, a rival social media service, effectively went offline when Apple took it off the App Store, Amazon suspended its web hosting service, and Google booted the platform off its Play Store.
The privatisation of the backbone of the internet should be a wake-up call. The power of these super-rich, unelected and unaccountable corporations is historically unprecedented. They can prevent competitors from travelling the superhighway (as non-telcos, they have no common carrier obligations). But, as they have already demonstrated, they also can control what can be said or who can participate in the modern public square. A cheaper, more resilient internet is not a price worth paying for the threat this poses to the future of free speech, democracy, and innovation.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
© 2022, paradox . All rights reserved.