Critical Perspectives on the InternetGreg Elmer Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 - 217 pages This critical reader of original essays places the boom and bust years of the Internet in a broad cultural context. Exploring the world of html, web browsers, cookies, online net guides, portals, and Internet service providers, this text includes the history of the Internet, interesting case studies and discussions on online community, user inequalities, and governance. Within the larger issues of technological infrastructure, government policy, and globalization, Critical Perspectives on the Internet highlights both the limitations and possibilities of everyday Internet use. Does the net function as a space for radical social and political change? For challenging established media? What opportunities lie in the cracks and crevasses of net structure? With its critical agenda for Internet studies, this text is a valuable tool for upper-level courses on the Internet, online communication, computer-mediated communication, communication and information technologies, and media and politics. |
From inside the book
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Page 22
... exchange value where institutional arrange- ments confer a degree of monopoly power on its owner . " She goes on to lay out the problems for information economics : information can be copied and reproduced at low cost , it is never ...
... exchange value where institutional arrange- ments confer a degree of monopoly power on its owner . " She goes on to lay out the problems for information economics : information can be copied and reproduced at low cost , it is never ...
Page 34
... exchange updated files . Jennings , a po- litical anarchist , gave the software away on the condition it would never be used for profit . Hundreds of boffins upgraded its capabilities , sometimes daily . By 1990 more than 10,000 amateur ...
... exchange updated files . Jennings , a po- litical anarchist , gave the software away on the condition it would never be used for profit . Hundreds of boffins upgraded its capabilities , sometimes daily . By 1990 more than 10,000 amateur ...
Page 40
... exchange . The network started with seventy - five institutional members using the system . By 1985 the " for - profit " GeoNet system had expanded , providing access points in most Western European countries and the United States ...
... exchange . The network started with seventy - five institutional members using the system . By 1985 the " for - profit " GeoNet system had expanded , providing access points in most Western European countries and the United States ...
Contents
Disorganizing the New Technology | 3 |
A Critical History of the Internet | 27 |
EnablingDisabling | 49 |
Copyright | |
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accept cookies Access Allowed associative reasoning Bourdieu capital Chiapas civil society claim climate change commercial communication computer network cookie files cookie technology corporate create critical cultural cyberspace discussion list domain economic electronic enclosure EZLN Feenberg Fidonet formation FreeNets global GM food GM food debate Greenpeace groups hacker Hacktivism human hyperlinking indigenous individual information society infrastructure institutions interlinking Internet Internet service provider Inuit issue network knowledge linguistic logics Magic Cookie Mass McLuhan media stories media technologies National Netscape Netscape's NGOs nology NSFNET operating options organizations personal computer perspective points political potential preferences Press programs public trust relevant Richard Rogers search engine server social movement space speech structure Subcomandante Marcos surfer surfer-researcher tech techno-populists Telecommunications television tion University URLs users warez Web browser Wired Yahoo York Zapatista