Politics and Technology of Control I: Introduction
From Technologies and Politics of Control
The Net has great potential for “good” (e.g. innovation, economic growth, education, and access to information), and is likewise is a great platform for the bawdy, tawdry and illegal. Is this platform about fundamental social, political and economic change, or about easier access to pornography, cheap pharmaceuticals, free music and poker at home? This question leads us to a host of interesting issues that weave their way through the course related to openness, access, regulatory control, free speech, anonymity, intellectual property rights, democracy, transparency, norms and values, economic and cultural change and cyber-terrorism, as well as scamsters and thieves.
Contents |
Preparation
To get the discussion started, please come prepared to share three ways in which you think the Net is changing the world -- and provide examples (e.g. article, website). If you are not joining the class in person, please post your thoughts to the Question Tool (pick "InternetSociety2008") before class starts.
Readings
John Perry Barlow, A Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace
Chris Locke, Doc Searls & David Weinberger, Cluetrain Manifesto (just the manifesto)
Jack Goldsmith & Tim Wu, Digital Borders
Jonathan Zittrain, Without a Net
Videos Watched in Class
Zuckerman on the History of the Internet
Links
NYTimes: Courts Turn to Wikipedia, but Selectively
NYTimes: In Politics, the Camera Never Blinks (or Nods)
The Register: The Pirate Bay plans to buy Sealand
Information Week: Spam Made Up 94% Of All E-Mail In December
Wikipedia: Sealand
Simson Garfinkel's trip to Sealand: pictures
Great interview with Cluetrain Manifesto co-author, David Weinberger (site and the intro is in German, but the sprockets feel makes it worth the wait - click on the image your preferred platform): Cluetrainy stuff, how to think about the Net, web 2.0, Net neutrality
