$NAME(7)	"$AUTHOR"

Although I am not planning to implement WebDAV access to txtdir[1]
anytime soon, I'd like to think of this as a future milestone. This
should enable sync for any device. Theoretically. See, I went searching
for iOS apps with WebDAV support (and found an impressive online
spreadsheet[2]) but very few of these have WebDAV support. At the same
time, almost all have sync to Dropbox, which I think speaks to a
fundamental problem with modern software development.

Before I go any further, I should point out that talking about anything
official on the internet is like talking about official human rights --
it's ultimately a contradiction with the inherent nature of the thing.
The internet, as an inherently international construct, can have no real
overarching governing body. (Even the W3C has its forked off
collaborator/competitor, the WHATWG.) The presence of any true authority
would lead to an infinite regression of appeals to higher authority. At
some point we just need to admit that co-operation is all we have.

That said, we *should* at least make an effort towards open standards.
WebDAV is defined in RFC 4918. I had to look up exactly what "RFC"
means. Request for Comments. It's the internet analogy to peer-reviewed
publications. Or maybe it is peer-reviewed publications. The internet
becomes more strange the more you think about it. In contrast, the
Dropbox API is not a published as a RFC. Dropbox is a private company.

Since Dropbox syncs a folder of files from your computer to a kind of
Dropbox platonic ideal of your files in the sky, I think it's easy for
people to think that Dropbox's servers are simply a whole bunch of
folders; there's Marianne's folder, and Piotr's folder, etc. But it's
not like this. Digital data can be thought of in several different
abstracted ways -- the words we use to identify data, the contents of
that data, the way the data connects to other data to form a coherent
structure -- and Dropbox divides these things up[3] in order to
distribute files across their scalable infrastructure.

By no means am I criticising their model. But it is just that: their
model. When developers build things that only work with Dropbox, they
put their complete faith in the continuation of this model.

Now, I'm not blind to the direction of the world economy. I understand
that the huge companies that control most of the public-facing internet
will continue to strengthen this control, and the likelihood of some
cultural reversal is slim. (At the same time, we know that as economic
systems decrease in equality they become more volatile.) I'm not
thinking about this from a business perspective; my championing of
open-source software derives from a humanitarian interest: as the pace
of technological "advancement" increases, the shift in power relations
will be in favour of those controlling the technology. We can see the
way this works with government support offices shifting their primary
method of contact to online -- when those least likely to have online
access are those who most likely need the support.

Every day people make concessions about what they consider ethical in
exchange for free and easy technology. They commit more of their life
experience (and I don't mean the record of life experience) to Facebook
in exchange for the illusion of free and easy social connection. They
exchange all the details of their own personal and professional
correspondence (and those of whomever they correspond with) to Google
for free and easy email. I feel these are shrewd economic decisions on
the part of huge companies to gain something much more valuable that
what they sell, but I'm not condemning people's trade-off here. I'm
saying that to these companies, the trade-off is only economically
attractive when the users are economically attractive, that is, in this
equation poor people are not valuable. The more power we give huge
companies in controlling technology, the further away we push the poor.

If we want to hold onto the belief that technology can rectify economic
inequality, that new technology developed in richer countries and
exported to poorer countries can offer a shortcut to keeping pace, then
we should be supporting openness. The alternative is a further slide
into inequality. I mentioned this to Jessica and this was her reply:

	I think developers lack empathy. They support what they would use
	because everyone else is also using it, or they should be.

Ultimately this is a question of what a developer should do, and can
therefore be short-circuited with Silicon Valley libertarianism. The
newer generation of technologists (of which I'm definitely a part) tend
towards embracing the "self-made man" myth. Nowhere is this more
apparent than on the internet -- a huge collaborative open-source
project built by incalculable hours of volunteer labour. It strokes the
ego for a start-up founder to kid themselves that they "built themselves
from nothing" rather than stood upon the shoulders of giants and held up
some new flashy thing.

But the point I'm trying to make is not against erroneous start-up
mentality or even that a developer should implement WebDAV support
before Dropbox, it's just that we should think about it a bit more.

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[1] https://txtdir.net (now defunct plaintext pubnix)
[2] https://airtable.com
[3] https://www.dropbox.com/help/1968