I.
A lot of libertarians and anarcho-capitalists envision a future of small corporate states competing for migrants and capital by trying to have the best policies.
But the Internet is about as close to that vision as we\u2019re likely to find outside the pages of a political philosophy textbook. And I am far from convinced.
Let\u2019s back up. Internet communities \u2013 ranging from a personal blog like this one all the way up to Facebook and Reddit \u2013 share many features with real communities. They work out rules for punishing defectors \u2013 your trolls, your harassers \u2013 and appoint a hierarchy of trusted individuals to carry out those rules. They try to balance competing concerns like free expression and public decency. They host cliques, power grabs, flame wars, even religious strife. They try to raise revenue, they establish a class system of Power Users and Premium Users, they deal with resentment from people who aren\u2019t getting their way. They develop a culture.