Media Re:Public - Internet: Difference between revisions

From Berkman@10
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(New page: Where have we come from? Where are we going? * Business models * Networked public sphere How has the networked public sphere changing discourse? What happens in that space in terms of pol...)
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Where have we come from? Where are we going?
Framing the Net: What We Say is What We Get.
* Business models
Or  "Caught in the net while hurtling down the information superhighway"
* Networked public sphere
Session Organizers: Steve Schultze


How has the networked public sphere changing discourse? What happens in that space in terms of political action? Do issues have salience in a different way from 5-10 years ago?
Nothing matters more than what the Net *is*. Yet when we call it a "space" or a "stage" or "pipes," we frame it with metaphors that yield very different purposes, laws and business models—also different futures. What different laws and regulation do we get by framing the Net in terms of real estate ("domains," "sites," "commons"), transport ("packets," "content," "pipes") or theater ("audience," "experience")? How do these different frames guide debate over net neutrality, open infrastructure, governance, regulation, public good and business opportunity? Are there other ways of framing the Net, and how might they help?
 
The networked public sphere = everyone online and discussing civic life.
 
Connectors: GV, PRX,

Revision as of 15:50, 26 March 2008

Framing the Net: What We Say is What We Get. Or "Caught in the net while hurtling down the information superhighway" Session Organizers: Steve Schultze

Nothing matters more than what the Net *is*. Yet when we call it a "space" or a "stage" or "pipes," we frame it with metaphors that yield very different purposes, laws and business models—also different futures. What different laws and regulation do we get by framing the Net in terms of real estate ("domains," "sites," "commons"), transport ("packets," "content," "pipes") or theater ("audience," "experience")? How do these different frames guide debate over net neutrality, open infrastructure, governance, regulation, public good and business opportunity? Are there other ways of framing the Net, and how might they help?