Sunday night, I took the TGV back to Geneva. Feeling refreshed
after a day in the south of France and a weekend in Paris, I was
ready to sink into the bureaucratic abyss of Geneva.
Sink I did. I spent the next three days battling the ITU bureaucracy, trying to stop a rear guard action that was threatening to kill
the Bruno project.
In four weeks, the Bruno server had been a remarkable success.
Twenty-one servers on four continents had cloned the file system
and were distributing the Blue Book. Bruno was getting as many as
35 packets per second. Over 500 hosts in 27 countries had retrieved
over 65,000 files. We had no statistics from the other servers, but it
was not unreasonable to think that several hundred thousand files
of the Blue Book had made their way out to people who were actually reading them.
How did this compare with paper copies? This was hard to say,
as profits from documents had served as a sort of discretionary fund
for the previous Secretary-General of the ITU. Knowledge of publications was highly dispersed; only finance seemed to have sales
data, and they kept this information closely guarded.
Nonetheless, it appeared that the Bruno experiment had increased the distribution of the Blue Book by at least one order of
magnitude, and probably two or more. Tony had documented all
this in his "Friends of Bruno" newsletter and had papered the
ITU‹paper being the only medium that appeared to work there.
Yet, despite all this, the high-level Information Systems Steering
Group had met the previous Friday to decide the future of Bruno.
Rumor had it that the outcome of the policy group was that the
experiment had not been successful and was over.
Stopping the experiment was, of course, not an option. The
server was in Colorado in a locked room and I had no intention of
stopping operation. Besides, twenty-one other servers had the data.
Tony and I had carefully structured this project so there would be
no turning back.
There were, however, some important factors at stake. I had
hoped to begin putting other ITU documents on the servers. A policy decision that the experiment was over would mean that we
might have to bypass the ITU and start scanning paper copies.
More importantly was the role of the ITU in dissemination of
standards over the network. The logical outcome of the Bruno experiment was to have the ITU put itself on the Internet and take
over this function.
Tony had set me up for three days packed with meetings. Many
of these people were division directors or other Very Important Bureaucrats (VIBs) who sat on the Information Systems Steering
Group.
One meeting, in particular, stood out over all the rest. I was
scheduled to meet with Walter Richter, director of something important. He was 45 minutes late, so I spent the time looking at the
stacks of file folders on his secretary's wall-to-wall bookcase.
They had wonderful labels such as "The Preparatory Committee
on Restructuring of Subsidiary Machinery" or "The Administrative
Committee on Coordination." One was simply labeled "High Level
Committee" and took up several folders high up on the top shelf.
The committee that seemed to take the most wall space was the
"Consultative Committee on Substantive Questions."
Finally, Richter strode in. Speaking with a heavy Austrian accent, he preceded to tell me how my experiment "was not a success
and has been terminated."
He seemed very certain that the experiment had not been a success, so I asked why. It appeared that this Internet of mine (the ITU
considered the Internet to be some private project run by Tony
Rutkowski and myself) just didn't reach the right sort of people. By
the right people, he seemed to mean those who were on the Administrative Council of the ITU or those that worked on the consultative
committees like the CCITT or the CCIR.
The conclusion that the Internet had the wrong sort of people
was odd, since I had not analyzed the data on who was accessing
my server. In fact, anecdotal evidence was pointing to just the opposite conclusion. I had received personal messages from places
like AT&T, Bell Labs, and Telecom Finland.
I found out later how Richter came to this view. Richter had a
buddy on the radio side of the ITU, the CCIR. His buddy had a pal
in Canada to whom he had spoken.
"Ever hear of this Bruno thing?"
"Nope."
"Ever hear of this Internet business?"
"Yeah, but we checked it out a few years ago and it was too
expensive."
Well, there you go. Can't argue with a few personal anecdotes
when making a high-level policy decision. I tried trotting out a few
of my own anecdotes, but Richter had already assembled the data
he needed.
Richter had something in common with most of the other VIBs
that I met in three days at the ITU. He was very, very sure of himself. For example, he was absolutely convinced that the entire ITU
network architecture was fatally flawed.
I must confess, this was certainly my working assumption when
starting to deal with the ITU computer group, but the reality turned
out to be that they had a fairly decent network architecture in place.
Not what I would have chosen, but adequate for the job.
I asked Richter to tell me what was wrong.
"The Ethernet," he replied. When his PC had first been installed, it was a diskless machine. A mistake, of course, but it had
been fixed. He was convinced that all ITU network problems had at
their root Ethernet saturation, because it had once taken several
hours after pressing a key to see the character appear on his screen.
Based on this anecdote, he was ready to completely micromanage some fairly talented engineers that worked at the ITU computer
department. Rather than set broad policy (an area that had been
sorely lacking), he was convinced that the answer was to roll up his
sleeves and dig into the bits and bytes.
Another curious aspect of the three days of meetings was this
idea of the Internet as some academic toy that real people didn't
use. I met with one staff member who expressed this view and
waved a piece of paper at me that had the names of delegates he
was working with as proof.
I picked up the piece of paper and started going through the list.
Many of the places, such as the Centre National des Etudes de Telecommunications in Paris, were clearly on the Internet. In fact, the
vast majority of institutions on the list appeared to be connected in
one form or another.
There was another more fundamental issue that started to focus
and helped explain this reluctance among the VIBs. Printing documents was a big empire at the ITU, and building empires was the
name of game. My project was not a good way to build big empires
(efficiency never is).
The printing department at the ITU was truly an impressive
place. I walked past the "keep out" signs and gave myself a private
tour. There were seven offset presses, four state-of-the-art, top-of-the-line Xerox 5090 copiers, and a dozen or so other large copiers.
The ITU's own facility generated only a fraction of the total output.
Swiss printers had a long and cozy relationship with the ITU bureaucracy.
Things would be printed with no relationship to demand under
the assumption that larger print runs meant a lower per-unit cost.
True, of course, but if you throw away most of the units, your average costs can be considerable.
One of my underground sources gave me an example. For several years, the ITU had produced a beautiful four-color "charts in
profile" document. Each time, 10,000 copies would be printed at a
cost of several hundred thousand dollars.
Of this print run, 2,000 copies would be given away and roughly
100 sold. Yet, every few years, a new edition would be put together
and 10,000 new copies would be printed. Strolling around basements and subbasements, I saw enough paper to start a firestorm.
Pallet after pallet was loaded with boxes and boxes of documents
that nobody would read.
This being the decade of the environment (or was it the children?), I naively asked about the ITU recycling program. Needless
to say, one didn't exist.
The Bruno experiment directly threatened this paper empire.
The bureaucracy had framed its argument very cleverly. Every year,
the ITU had received several million Swiss Francs in revenue from
selling documents. The official "profit" from the Blue Book had
gone to fund programs in the developing world.
In other words, Bruno was depriving the ITU of revenues that
would fund vital infrastructure. My selfish little project meant that
people who needed to call a doctor wouldn't be able to. Project
Bruno, baby killer.
Nobody actually accused me explicitly of killing babies, but I
certainly felt that undercurrent. After donating several months and
several thousand dollars to putting ITU standards online, I had
somehow not expected this type of reaction.
The donation was the single most difficult concept for the VIBs
to understand. Why was I doing this? What was my motive?
What was in it for me?
Of course, donations to the common infrastructure are how the
Internet was built. Even formal standards bodies like the ITU run
on donations. Corporations work in the standards process as a volunteer effort.
In the Internet community, volunteer efforts are the norm. The
IETF has many people who attend as private citizens, paying for the
privilege three times per year out of their own pockets. Paying for
the privilege of getting the Blue Book online was not remarkable,
but VIBs didn't know what to make of it.
The "Bruno, baby killer" aspect was a difficult one. Profits from
document sales were virtual at best, and the simplest solution
would be to redo the accounting system to look at the total costs of
the inefficient document production process, but that proved to be
dangerous.
I thus attacked the widespread unease with giving away copies
on the Internet. Tony was advancing the novel theory that by giving copies away, you increased the market and thus increased sales.
Such an argument, although bearing a few logical flaws, seemed to
stop the VIBs, at least for a few minutes.
While the ITU was criticizing the Bruno experiment, they were
attempting to move forward on their own electronic document handling system. Evidently, the Bruno situation had impressed the Secretary-General enough that he had presented himself at the meeting
of the Information Systems Steering Group and suggested that they
should do something.
The committee had thus spawned a task force. The task force
had formed a small working group. Their initial inclination was to
start using X.400 as a way to send out working documents, but only
to members of the committees.
Tony and I tried valiantly to switch the focus to getting the ITU
on the Internet and sending the documents out to as wide an audience as possible. This was not meeting with much success. The
computer department was worried about the resource implications
of such a move and wanted two additional staff members (in addition to their current network staff) to support the effort.
Basically, the bureaucracy desperately wanted to get back to a
world they could control. In order to control documents, however,
you need to own them. Nobody at the ITU wanted to admit that
there was a possibility that the ITU didn't own its own documents.
Tony Rutkowski had made an analysis of the issue of copyright
and had come to the conclusion that the ITU didn't have a sustainable basis for asserting copyright protection. Many of the other
VIBs, however, felt that the issue was cut and dried.
There are no apparent legal cases in which somebody has challenged copyright on a standards document. There are many factors
that must be weighed before a court will uphold a copyright claim,
and it was naive to think that the issues are so simple that the ITU
could confidently claim they would win in a court of law.
In order for a document to have a copyright applied to it, it
must, among other criteria, be original and not previously published. Since almost all standards start out as public domain working
documents, even this fundamental requirement is not often met.
Many jurisdictions do not allow protection to be granted on official or governmental works. Even a private standards body might
be considered by the courts to be quasi-governmental. Many places,
such as the U.S., make standards a procurement requirement, making copyright enforcement questionable at best.
Even if standards are copyrightable, only the representation of
the standard, not the contents, can be protected. Tony's conclusion
was that in almost any jurisdiction, running the paper through a
scanner and OCR software and posting ASCII text would be defensible.
Many standards do have graphics, of course. The graphics have
a stronger basis for copyright, since the representation is everything.
As we had seen with the Blue Book, though, in many cases the
graphics were not absolutely essential, at least for getting a rudimentary understanding of the standard.
With these factors in mind, Tony and I walked across the street
to meet Larry Eicher, Secretary-General of ISO. My feeling was that
even if there was no copyright on standards, it was certainly easier
to work with ISO than against them.
The fact that Tony accompanied me was meant to send the message that my efforts enjoyed at least some support from the ITU. I
brought along a copy of Stacks; Tony brought the slides from his
presentation to INTEROP in which he concluded that it was unlikely that any standards organization could assert copyright on
documents.
"Do you think that's diplomatic?" I asked.
"Nothing wrong with pushing forward the state of the art," he
said with a smile.
We met Eicher and Mike Smith, one of the leaders of the task
force which supports the OSI effort. Both turned out to be very reasonable people.
I gave a little speech about the moral necessity of disseminating
standards. I advanced the view that the reason that OSI had taken
so long to come to market was simply because it cost so much to
find out about it.
We then started talking about applying Bruno to the ISO world.
Eicher was quite frank: 25 percent of ISO revenues came from the
sales of standards documents. How did I propose to replace that
revenue? Even more importantly, ISO was controlled by its member
organizations, which also made much money from standards sales.
How did I propose to convince groups like ANSI that posting standards for free would help them?
Simply put, it was a question of financial survival. Interestingly
enough, Eicher was clearly unwilling to argue his case on copyright
grounds. When I ventured the theory that copyright protection for
ISO documents was legally weak and that some radical might just
go ahead and post the standards, Eicher said "it's not a question of
copyright protection, it's a question of fair business practices."
We began searching for a potential solution. I proposed my
high resolution/low resolution compromise. The plan would post
low resolution versions of documents for free on the network and
allow ISO and ANSI to continue to sell the high resolution versions,
either on paper or electronically.
Low resolution might mean ASCII text and 200 DPI bitmaps of
graphics, formulas, and other elements not well suited to representation as ASCII text. Some document format such as ODA could
be used to tie the pieces together. Using ODA would help ISO by
spurring the development of the standard by giving people a substantial base of documents worth reading.
The crucial assumption was that people with the free version
would then pay for documents. I argued that free distribution of
standards would increase the base of people who read documents
by at least a factor of 10, maybe even more. Many of these would
want the paper documents. Giving away standards would lead to
increased revenues.
I then offered to test this theory on Bruno at no cost to ISO.
Eicher agreed to at least consider a formal proposal, so we went
back to the ITU and dashed off a formal letter. Kind of a long shot,
I figured, but certainly a first step. (I never received a response to
my letter, but that was no surprise. I did, however, publish the offer
in Communications Week just in case ISO had misplaced my letter
and needed a reminder.)
Tony and I had one more item of business to attend to. A seminar had been scheduled for Monday morning to give people at the
ITU a briefing on Bruno. Tony had sent electronic mail on Friday,
but by Monday, none of the mail had arrived and therefore nobody
showed up at my lecture.
Turned out that the entire ITU mail system was running off a
VAXmate with a very limited amount of memory. If you sent mail
to everybody at the ITU (only a few hundred people), the system
crashed.
Rather than remove the offending mailing list or even move the
message handling system up to an appropriate host, the issue of the
"mail server situation" had entered the bureaucracy and a heated
debate had begun, focusing on whether or not to expand memory
on the VAXmate. I was a bit incredulous. Running a mail system
for 900 professional bureaucrats off a VAXmate is kind of like using
a Volkswagen Beetle to haul timber out of the Amazon jungle.
We rescheduled the seminar, booking Tarjanne's personal conference room for the occasion. The secretaries were worried that the
room would be too small (it could only hold 50 people or so), but
Tony and I insisted that the venue had the appropriate symbolism
and that having to turn away people wouldn't be all bad.
Since electronic mail wasn't going to do the trick, we had only
one alternative: ElevatorNET. Posting notices in the elevators was
about the only effective means of communication at the ITU, the
organization that invented X.400.
The ITU has some of the strangest elevator manners in the
world. When you enter a lift, custom requires you to greet everyone. Everybody then choruses back a hearty "bon jour."
When you leave, you say goodbye and everyone responds with
their own "au revoir." Nice custom, but what it means is that during a busy period, it can cost you a dozen hellos and goodbyes to go
up just a few floors.
Tony and I pushed the button for the elevator and caught the
first one, respecting the elevator protocol. Every time we caught an
elevator, we rode a few floors, long enough to post the notice. We
then got off, pushed the button again, and hoped that a different
elevator would start. Finally, dozens of bon jours later, we had
caught the last elevator and posted the last notice.
Wednesday morning, Tony had prepared all sorts of handouts
for the eager crowds. I nervously sat in the corner and prepared my
talk.
Two people came. One was our ally in the computer department, another a gentleman I had already briefed. Nobody else bothered to show up.
We all chatted for a few minutes, had a cup of coffee, then went
back to Tony's office. I bid Tony goodbye.
Thursday, I took a series of four flights from Paris to London to
New York to Ithaca, home of Cornell University. Sitting on the
planes, I had plenty of time to reflect in wonder at the ITU. Many
people were grateful that Tony Rutkowski had put the time into the
bureaucracy, but you had to wonder how somebody that talented
could survive in such a labyrinth. (He didn't for very long. Tony is
now an employee of Sprint International and Vice President of the
Internet Society.)