---
title: You Become What You Disrupt
description: What happens when a disruptive technology wins a platform play and inherits the obligations of the system it replaced? I wrote this on O'Reilly Radar in 2007. The questions are still open.
doc_version: "1.0"
last_updated: 2007-10-02
slug: you-become-what-you-disrupt-oreilly-radar
outlet: O'Reilly Radar
author: Jesse Robbins
date: 2007-10-02
url: https://web.archive.org/web/20130228024606/http://radar.oreilly.com:80/2007/10/you-become-what-you-disrupt.html
type: Article
excerpt: What happens when a disruptive technology wins a platform play and inherits the obligations of the system it replaced? I wrote this on O'Reilly Radar in 2007. The questions are still open.
quote: You become what you disrupt. What changes occur when you win a platform play, when you go from disruptive technology to a public utility?
quoteAuthor: Jesse Robbins
tags:
  - Disruption
  - DevOps History
  - Platform Strategy
  - Regulation
  - Web 2.0
  - Engineering Culture
---

> "You become what you disrupt. What changes occur when you win a platform play, when you go from disruptive technology to a public utility?"
> — Jesse Robbins

<div class="repost-note">
<p class="repost-note-label">A note from Jesse</p>

I originally posted this to [O'Reilly Radar](https://web.archive.org/web/20130228024606/http://radar.oreilly.com:80/2007/10/you-become-what-you-disrupt.html) on October 2, 2007, in advance of the Web 2.0 Summit.
</div>

An idea we've been exploring in advance of the Web 2.0 Summit is "You become what you disrupt":

1. What changes occur when you win a platform play, when you go from disruptive technology to a public utility?
2. Where are the opportunities to innovate instead of regulate?
3. What parts of "eTel" are becoming "Tel"?
4. Where else will this happen?

For example, the ongoing US VoIP/911 debacle was a missed opportunity to improve a life-saving technology. There have been years of delays, lawsuits, and regulatory standoffs while emergency calls go unanswered. Yes, the fine print says that VoIP isn't a replacement for your phone line, and suggests that you educate "anybody that might be in your home" about how to call 911. At some point in the adoption curve that kind of disclaimer becomes unacceptable... *but where?*

The 911 Modernization and Public Safety Act (H.R. 3403) was being considered by Congress. This bill was intended to give VoIP providers the same access to the 911 system as wireless carriers. It had broad support from both public safety officials and VoIP providers, but was opposed by established operators because it "provides more access to 911 infrastructure than wireless carriers have and therefore an unfair advantage".

How do we avoid this kind of problem in the future? Where should we be looking now?

Services like Skype are classified as "data services", meaning they don't have to provide 911 access for now. It's unclear how services like SkypeOut and Skype embedded handsets change this, although their terms of service say:

> "*7.4.2 No Compulsion to Offer Emergency Services.* You recognize and agree that Skype is not required to offer Emergency Services pursuant to any applicable local and or national rules, regulation or law. You further recognize that Skype is not a replacement for Your primary telephone service."

Perhaps this Skype job posting provides clues as to how this will play out:

> **Director of Government and Regulatory Affairs, North America**
>
> - Influence legislative and regulatory developments in the North American region
> - Minimize exposure to political and regulatory risk
> - Develop specific expertise in the area of public safety and state telecommunications public policy
> - Promote Skype's interests through various coalitions, trade associations, and public safety groups
> - Act as early warning system for regulatory risks

These questions take us far beyond 911. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 states that "consumers in all regions of the nation, including low income consumers should have access to telecommunications and information services". Will the Universal Service Fund subsidize internet and VoIP? Should it?

Similarly, new "utilities" are emerging from the web as a platform. Will utility computing services like Amazon EC2 eventually become regulated? What about identity services, or even "social utilities" like Facebook?

## Also Mentioned

- [O'Reilly Media](https://www.oreilly.com) (company)
- Jesse Robbins (person)
- Amazon (company)
- Skype (company)
- Facebook (company)

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