overview
exceptionalism
commons
dogs in space
rich & hip
borders
e-cargo cults
community
home alone
red lights
it's all there
|
overview
This
profile ties together discussion throughout the site by
considering some myths about cyberspace, in particular
management of the global information infrastructure and
the shape of the 'new economy'.
The following pages cut across individual guides
and profiles;
particular issues are discussed in more detail in those
parts of the site, along with pointers to statistics and
comments on information sources.
"I
can't believe that!" said Alice. "Can't you?" the
Queen said, in a pitying tone. "Try again: draw a long
breath and shut your eyes." Alice laughed. "There's
no use trying," she said; "one can't believe impossible
things." "I dare say you haven't had much practice,"
said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it
for half an hour a day. Why sometimes I've believed
as many as six impossible things before breakfast."
- Lewis Carroll Through the Looking Glass
The
pages are a 'work in progress', which we'll be amending
and extending in coming months. Each page questions several
'memes', such the supposedly imminent death of the state,
the end of the business cycle, online alienation, wired
communities and the 'private life of information'.
contents of this profile
The following pages cover -
internet exceptionalism:
the notion that the internet is fundamentally unique
- representing a distinctive break from past - and that
we'll be driven by the "spirit of the net"
without the normalisation evident in adoption of other
new technologies
the digital commons:
claims that information just wants to be free, that
the death of copyright and 'big media' is imminent or
that consumers face unprecedented media concentration
and coercion by commercial interests
dogs in space: conflicting
claims that privacy is dead as we rush towards cultures
of total surveillance and the 'panoptic sort', or that
liberation is imminent (since in cyberspace no one can
tell you're a dog and the net innately corrodes all
repressive regimes
rich & hip: in the
future we'll be all "wired, rich and hip"
(or merely cyberselfish)? Will all online populations
have the characteristics of US early adopters. Are digital
divides a thing of the past - or merely of little concern
to the digerati?
the borderless world:
will the net result in early demise of the state? be
reflected in a dystopian New Information Order? erode
barriers between communities and nations? require new
global institutions (but without the warts and wrinkles
of the UN)? enable free speech across the globe?
e-cargo cults: some
questions about proclamations about 'internet-enabled'
businesses and government agencies, the end of the business
cycle, the 'Internet Dividend', regional development
("just add bandwidth and stir"), and the death
of distance
the wired community:
visions of the net as democratising, egalitarian, inclusive
and productive of new relationships
home alone and the sociopathy
of cyberspace: is life online uniquely addictive and
resulting in severe anomie or a realm where going online
makes people happier, more articulate, better informed,
politer and more altruistic?
red lights: the net
as an unregulatable "open sewer from hell"
(a domain of thieves, paedophiles and terrorists) or
a self-organising utopia innately resistant to trademark
owners, tax offices and policemen
it's all there: claims
that everything you want to know is online, that you
can easily find it and that you'll be able to do so
in future.
next page (exceptionalism)
|