Copyright

Niels ten Oever

Published On

2026-05-27

Language

  • English

Print Length

14 pages

THEMA

  • JP
  • JPA
  • JHB
  • JBCT
  • UY
  • UT

BISAC

  • POL063000
  • POL050000
  • SOC026000
  • SOC052000
  • COM079000
  • COM060000

Keywords

  • Open knowledge infrastructures
  • Digital governance
  • Digital commons
  • Politics of technology
  • Open source and open access
  • Epistemic justice

3. The Internet Infrastructure Has Never Been Open

  • Niels ten Oever (author)

This chapter argues that openness is not a neutral design principle but an expression of infrastructural power. Openness is never evenly distributed, but rather catering to a particular group capable of configuring and leveraging the underpinning material infrastructure. Drawing on Science and Technology Studies and infrastructure studies scholarship, particularly the concept of inscription (Akrich 1992), I demonstrate how the internet's openness has been selectively available to different actors: the US military, industry, intelligence services, states, and closed to others, such as civil society. Through analysis of internet protocol development, including the QUIC transport protocol and domain name verification proposals, I show how participation in ostensibly open governance processes does not equate to the capacity to inscribe values or structural changes into technical systems. Civil society actors may speak to legitimize, but cannot configure; their openness remains conditional and revocable. The chapter traces how military origins, commercial reconfiguration, and surveillance infrastructures have shaped an internet that is simultaneously open for extraction and closed to meaningful public control. Against contemporary policy initiatives such as the European "EuroStack" and digital public infrastructure frameworks that uncritically equate openness with publicness, I argue that genuine infrastructural openness may paradoxically require deliberate limitation and direction. If infrastructures cannot be equally accessible to all groups simultaneously, then sustainable civilian infrastructures must be understood not as universally open systems but as deliberately limited commons that protect against domination, extraction, and capture.

Contributors

Niels ten Oever

(author)
Assistant Professor in the Department of European Studies and Co-Principal Investigator of the critical infrastructure lab at University of Amsterdam

Niels ten Oever is an Assistant Professor in the Department of European Studies and Co-Principal Investigator of the critical infrastructure lab at the University of Amsterdam. His research examines communication infrastructures through the lenses of science and technology studies (STS) and international political economy (IPE), from the telegraph to the internet, submarine cables, 5G, and satellite networks.