Eruditorium 
            138: Data Havens #0 of 44: (jabloe) Fri 16 Jun '00 (12:48 PM) 
            HavenCo, on the quasi-maybe-might-be independent state of Sealand, 
              is the first real-life attempt at a data haven state (as opposed 
              to just setting up shop on some Caribbean island with loose accounting 
              laws). Is there a (non-)place for such data havens, and how does 
              sovereignty, whether earth-bound or virtual, play in all this?
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #1 of 44: mz (smz) Fri 16 Jun '00 
              (12:50 PM)
            I hope everyone's read "Islands in the Net" by our friend 
              Bruce Sterling.
             
            Eruditorium 
              138: Data Havens #2 of 44: (jabloe) Fri 16 Jun '00 (12:52 PM)
            My take on Sealand/HavenCo itself is that it'll be more a marketing 
              foray for the idea of data havens, than a practical co-lo facility; 
              going by Simson Garfinkel's article in Wired, it'll be frightfully 
              expensive compared to running some bunkered facility in Omaha (what 
              with the elements, transportation headaches, and being hostage to 
              only a few connectivity providers), and many of the technical features 
              (e.g., a machine room they don't let customers bring equipment to, 
              for security reasons) are readily duplicable.
            So maybe it's the data haven meme their incubating... (sorry, "they're")
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #3 of 44: Raven (ravensclaw) Fri 16 
              Jun '00 (01:07 PM)
            One kind of "non-place," which is still a physical fact, 
              would be a satellite. Then any physical location on earth could 
              be in a client relation to the extra-terrestial host.
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #4 of 44: Sir Nose (paparoach) Fri 
              16 Jun '00 (01:09 PM)
            how about those pesky satellite uploads and downloads -- where 
              would the dishes be?
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #5 of 44: Raven (ravensclaw) Fri 16 
              Jun '00 (01:32 PM)
            I guess the dishes--which can be pretty small now, can't they?--could 
              be whereever the people who participate in the sovereign entity 
              (let's call it a virtual state) would be.
            As for sovereignty it's interesting to note that Max Weber considered 
              territory (in the physical sense) to be a defining characteristic 
              of the modern state, i.e., you can't be a state without territory. 
              He and others talk about the peculiar fact, then, that no other 
              criterion except control over a population in a territory seems 
              capable of defining a state, since references to population traits 
              (e.g., ethnicity) as criteria of citiz, with most citizens living 
              in various places on earth and participating in the body politic 
              via various sorts of IT-enabled connections. The second, and I think 
              crucial, issue would be what Weber called "legitimacy." 
              The experience of legitimate authority, which all successful states 
              have to some sufficient degree, is hard to define (though familiar 
              to normally socialized individuals) and even harder to imagine separated 
              from place, or territory. But I think it could be, though I don't 
              know if this is the right place to go into it. Maybe if somebody 
              has and objection or issue with what I've said so far, I could respond?
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #6 of 44: Rob Beltre (rbel) Fri 16 
              Jun '00 (01:33 PM)
            To and anyone else on this topic: I've got to run now, but will 
              return with greatest interest.
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #7 of 44: Frak Piece (the-negatory) 
              Fri 16 Jun '00 (01:47 PM)
            i'm seeing off-world data havens connected by here-they-are-now-they're 
              gone mini satellite dishes as temporary autonomous zones that arise 
              and the collapse as needs dictate.
            surely the powers that am would be as helpless before a distributed 
              and ever-changing dish network as they were and are when dealing 
              with so-called pirate broadcasters with now you see em now you do 
              china
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #8 of 44: Brian Frank (blue) Fri 16 
              Jun '00 (02:02 PM)
            If citizens of the state don't have any place to live openly under 
              their own laws, it seems to me it's not real
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #9 of 44: (jabloe) Fri 16 Jun '00 
              (02:30 PM)
            There was an interesting discussion on NPR last week, re the Vatican, 
              the Holy See, and the status of both; the former is kind of a state, 
              i.e., a multi-acre portion of land within Italy (within Rome, specifically) 
              that enjoys its own soverignty relative to Italy, while it's the 
              latter that has observer status at the UN. IIRC, there were four 
              criteria for bher states, and one other. There's a group lobbying 
              to have the Holy See stripped of its particular observer status 
              at the UN, wanting it instead to be accorded the same status as 
              a religious body.
             
            Eruditorium 138: Data Havens #10 of 44: Raven (ravensclaw) Fri 
              16 Jun '00 (04:02 PM)
            Re Dennis: I was thinking similarly. Another example of the power 
              of here-now, gone-later functionality is the ever-popular nuclear 
              sub, which can launch a missile from who-knows-where. Of course, 
              just as the nuclear sub has a home base, its country of origin, 
              that remainint about virtual states is not that they would have 
              no physical actuality, and hence no physical security issues; the 
              point is, virtual states would have a qualitatively different physical 
              actuality: physical, but not territorial.
            Re Brian: Take American citizens today. They live under their own 
              laws, and not only while they are physically inside U.S. territory. 
              If they are outside the country, there are reciprocity agreements, 
              etc., with many other (but not all) countries. So I could imagine 
              a sovereign vight now to entering into agreements with virtual states. 
              I think the first set of issues would be about how a VS might serve 
              and control its own citizens. Can the VS police its own citizens 
              and, hence, be able to enter into responsible agreements with other 
              (territorial) nations regarding the permissible conduct of VS citizens? 
              And could the VS protect its citizens through its own police functions, 
              or would the VS have to effectively subcontract personal security 
              functions to the territorial government where the VS citizen currently 
              resided? I think a VS could do those things for and on behalf of 
              its citizens, but only if the VS could be the legitimate government, 
              i.e., "have legitimacy," for its citizenry. So we wouldn't 
              be talking about a voluntary organization or such-like.
            R say, Italy's. For example, here in the U.S. we have quite a few 
              Native American tribes that are considered sovereign under law, 
              but it's clearly a matter of the U.S. granting, with the implicit 
              power to "ungrant," this sovereignty to the tribes, just 
              as Italy somehow grants, or allows, sovereignty to the Vatican. 
              In both cases (more so, I should think, in Italy), the "host" 
              sovereigns would surely play hell if they tried to revoke such sovereignty, 
              because their own citizenry wouldn't tolerate it. But that only 
              goes to show who's really in charge of that kind of sovereignty, 
              namely, the host, "real" sovereign. ***I fear, however, 
              that these remarks might lead to interesting but, from my point 
              of view, off-the-track issues. I'm sure a lot of people are passionate 
              about sovereignty claims of the Vatican or, maybe even more so, 
              of Native American tribes. My only point is, thinking about these 
              claims to sovereignty may derail us from the question of whether 
              and how it could be possible for a virtual state to exercise and 
              embody the same kind of sovereignty that modern nation-states do 
              (and I don't think either the Vatican or the Native American tribes 
              exercise the same kind of sovereignty that modern nation-states 
              do).