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Plaintext
This e-text is copyright Tomas F J Kriha 1994. All rights
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reserved. Do not distribute or publish this e-text without the
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express prior permission of the author.
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This e-text is based substantially on a paper submitted for
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assessment towards a BA majoring in political science at
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Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand). All opinions
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expressed are the author's own and do not necessarily represent the
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opinions of Victoria University of Wellington, nor any of its
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staff.
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****************************************************************
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C Y B E R A N A R C H I S M
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Tomas F J Kriha
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****************************************************************
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"All men are equal and free: society by nature, and destination,
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is therefore autonomous and ungovernable." -- Pierre-Joseph
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Proudhon, _Les Confessions d'un Revolutionnaire_
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****************************************************************
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I N T R O D U C T I O N
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****************************************************************
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"[The] Internet has for years been a nearly perfect laboratory
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for testing the democratic principles of free speech and self-
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governance." [1]
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-- Peter H Lewis, _New York Times_ correspondent
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"Most people who get their news from conventional media have
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been unaware of the wildly varied assortment of new cultures
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that have evolved in the world's computer networks over the past
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ten years. Most people who have not yet used these new media
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remain unaware of how profoundly the social, political, and
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scientific experiments underway today via computer networks
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could change our lives in the near future."
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-- Howard Rheingold, editor of the _Whole Earth Review_ [2]
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The Internet has recently received unprecedented mass-media
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exposure as a potent device for influencing the political
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decision-making process. Most of this coverage ignores the
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implications of the new *kind* of communication the Internet
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enables, and the new *kind* of community it produced: a
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community of **voluntary associations based on common interests
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within an environment lacking centralised coercive authority**.
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This paper examines the nature of this anarchist society--a
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community without a state. Max Weber defined a state as a "human
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community that (successfully) claims the _monopoly of the
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legitimate use of physical force_ within a given territory";
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consequently, "if no social institutions existed which knew the
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use of violence, then the concept of 'state' would be
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eliminated, and a condition would emerge that could be
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designated as 'anarchy', in the specific sense of the word". [3]
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The Internet is capable of creating precisely such an anarchy.
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The object of this paper is *not* to analyse the Internet's
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influence on the external world as the mass-media has done;
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rather, it is to analyse the implications of the Internet as a
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political environment **in its own right**.
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****************************************************************
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P A R T O N E
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The Global Network of Networks: the Internet
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****************************************************************
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"Each of the small colonies of microorganisms--the communities
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on the Net--is a social experiment that nobody planed but that
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is happening nonetheless." [4]
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-- Howard Rheingold
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A brief overview of the technical history of the Internet is
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necessary in order to explain why the Internet tend to
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encourage, as a matter of structural necessity, an anarchist
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environment.
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****************************************************************
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A Short History of the Internet [5]
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The word "Internet" means, literally, a network of networks. The
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first prototype of today's Internet was an experimental four-
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node network--between UC of Los Angeles, Stanford University, UC
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Santa Barbara, and University of Utah--a quarter of a century
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ago in 1969. This "internetworking" project (hence "Internet")
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was patronised by the United States Department of Defense
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Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) which hoped to design
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a computer network that could survive partial destruction in the
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event of a nuclear attack. This objective resulted in three
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fundamental design elements of the Internet:
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(1) The networked computers are capable of remote operation.
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Further, the network allows an assorted range of computers
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communicate "transparently".
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(2) The network has no centralised administrative core required
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for it to operate. Any two connected sites are able to
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communicate.
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(3) The model governing communication between source and
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destination sites *assumes* that the network is unreliable and
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expects the imminent collapse of any portion of the network. In
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this event, sites merely re-route data packets around the
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collapsed portion.
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This research culminated in the Advanced Research Projects
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Agency Network (ARPANet) which was "delivered" to the Defense
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Communications Agency as an operational network in 1975. The
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core of the ARPANet system of networks was a mutually agreed
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method of communicating: the TCP/IP [6] Protocol Suite.
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The early 1980s saw a consolidation of many diverse local area
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networks as they adopted the TCP/IP protocol and connected to
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the Internet in increasing numbers. The formation of the
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National Science Foundation Network (NSFNet) in 1986 initiated
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the diversification of Internet sites from government agencies
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to the educational, commercial, and private sectors. Since then,
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in the words of Vinton Cerf (who worked on the ARPANet project
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since 1969), the Internet has been "well beyond critical
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mass" [7] and steadily expanding at an exponential rate.
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Far surpassing the modest ARPANet which initially networked a
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mere one thousand users in 1969, the Internet currently houses
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an estimated 30 million virtual residents (growing by 15% per
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month). [8] The Internet is no longer the exclusive domain of
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United States government agencies; it is rapidly becoming
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commercialised, privatised, and internationalised. More
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importantly, the recent convergence of two previously
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independently developing technologies--high speed global
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telecommunications and cheap yet powerful personal computers--
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has made the Internet widely accessible to the wider public.
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****************************************************************
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The Internet Today
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The Internet's ARPANet military ancestry explains--apart from
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why acronym dictionaries are so common on the Internet--the
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origins of its essential characteristic: the lack of centralised
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structure, authority, and funding. Whether or not the anarchist
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nature of the Internet was consciously cultivated by its early
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population (among educational and an public service
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professionals) is often debated, but is largely irrelevant. The
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decentralised design structure of the Internet will inevitably
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encourage the development of an anarchist environment, and this
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is reflected in its management and funding structures.
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The closest approximation to a ruling body the Internet has is
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the Internet Society (ISOC), a voluntary membership organisation
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promoting information exchange via Internet technology. The
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Society's most influential role, of developing and maintaining
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network protocols, is carried out by the Internet Architecture
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Board of ISOC created in 1983 to coordinate technical management
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and direction of the Internet. (Despite this apparent central
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authority, the development of Internet protocols is largely, and
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increasingly, the product of "a collaboration among cooperating
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parties".) [9] Each section of the Internet is self-funding,
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though in practice some networks receive subsidies from
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governmental and corporate sponsors. (Although the public supply
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of technical and financial means is diminishing due to escalating
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commercial investment throughout the Internet, it is still
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relatively influential in the United States, France, and Japan.)
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[10] Any site using the TCP/IP protocol can connect to the
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Internet merely by establishing a telecommunications link (at
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its own expense) with an existing Internet site.
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This environment produces an organisational structure remarkably
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similar to Robert Nozick's vision of a minimalist state: a
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"meta-utopia" within which smaller utopian communities (such as
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Internet sites) develop as free associations. In his words,
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"though the framework [of the meta-utopia] is libertarian and
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_laissez-faire_, _individual communities within it need not be_,
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and perhaps no community within it will choose to be so". [11]
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****************************************************************
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P A R T T W O
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The Global Village: Cyberspace
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****************************************************************
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"Cyberspace [is a] consensual hallucination."
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-- William Gibson, novelist [12]
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An entirely distinct environment--parallel to the "confederal"
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Internet structures--emerged: cyberspace. The term
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"cyberspace" was coined by William Gibson in his novel
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_Neuromancer_ to describe an abstract conceptual reality created
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by Computer Mediated Communication (CMC). Cyberspace is an
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abstract space of knowledge and communication. Although
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cyberspace is very much a "virtual reality" in that it does not
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*physically* exist--for it is merely a representation of
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knowledge and communication in the minds of network users--it is
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*a* reality nonetheless. (Indeed, for many it *is* reality!)
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Gibson derived "cyberspace" from the word "cybernetics" (the
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study of communication and control systems).
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Communication and information is the life-blood of cyberspace;
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cyberspace is, for want of better terms, an "infocracy" or
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"cybercracy". Cyberspace has reduced political society to its
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essence: social interaction facilitated by communication.
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****************************************************************
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Computer Mediated Communication
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"Although the network was originally supposed to connect people
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with computers, what they really spent time doing was connecting
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with one another."
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-- Sara Kiesler, social psychologist [13]
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Although ARPANet was designed with the remote operation of
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computers in mind, the TCP/IP protocol also made possible the
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remote communication of information by network users (viz. CMC).
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The communication of information is now the primary function of
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the Internet. The assorted cybermedia [14] (communication and
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control media) used on the Internet--from e-mail to Usenet news,
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to real-time conferences, to file archives, to
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hypertext/hypermedia--all perform functions which may be
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classified according to three kinds of CMC defined by the number
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of senders and recipients: personal *correspondence*,
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*publication*, and *conferences*. Particular cybermedia need not
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be restricted to a single CMC function, though many are.
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KINDS OF CMC
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TYPE SENDER(S) RECIPIENT(S)
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--------------------------------------
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Personal Single Single
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Publication Single Multiple
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Conference Multiple Multiple
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For example, the Usenet news network organises conferences in
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over 9,000 [15] globally distributed newsgroups defined
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heirachically by subject-matter. (Such as soc.culture.new-zealand,
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alt.politics, or alt.politics.libertarian.) Sites are free to
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choose which newsgroups they "carry" to and from other sites.
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Any user may view, post, and reply to messages in newsgroups
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carried by their site. Therefore, Usenet is a "conference"
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cybermedia.
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By contrast, e-mail may be used to send private messages to a
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particular address ("correspondence"), a group of addresses on a
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recipient list ("publication"), or to a mailing list
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("conference"). In the later case, list subscribers may send
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messages to the list address, which then automatically forwards
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the messages directly to all other subscribers.
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***Cyberspace is created and maintained by the collective use of
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these three kinds of cybermedia by CMC.***
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****************************************************************
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Liberti, Igaliti, Fraterniti... and Cyberspace
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"Ben Franklin would have been the first owner of an Apple
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computer. Thomas Jefferson would have written the Declaration of
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Independence on an IBM PC. But Tom Paine would have published
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_Common Sense_ on a computer bulletin board."
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-- Dave Hughes, online activist [16]
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Cyberspace is characterised by the *technical* equality and
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liberty of cybercitizens to access and communicate information--
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individuals' *practical* equality and liberty being limited by
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their knowledge, ability to communicate ideas, and computer
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literacy.
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****************************************************************
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Cyberliberty
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"People in virtual communities do just about anything people do
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in real life, but we leave our bodies behind."
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-- Howard Rheingold [17]
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"Other than flaming by the indignant and self-policing by
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commercial service providers who give subscribers access to
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cyberspace, there is no means for enforcing the 'netiquette' as
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it is called, of the Internet."
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-- Peter H Lewis [18]
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Cybercitizens have an almost unfettered *technical* ability to
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access and communicate information on the Internet. Their
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*practical* ability to access and communicate information may
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subject to three sources of restraint, if it is subject to any
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at all:
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(1) Domestic law: Most cyberspace activity will be subject to
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domestic laws (such as privacy, defamation, intellectual
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property, and censorship). However, most laws may be
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circumvented by emerging technologies, particularly those
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facilitating anonymous CMC (where the sender's identity remains
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unknown) and encrypted CMC (where the information communicated
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remains unknown to anyone but the intended recipient).
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(2) Internet providers: The provider of Internet access will
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often regulate Internet usage to a certain extent (for example,
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some sites refuse to carry "pornographic" Usenet newsgroups).
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However, the relationship between the Internet provider and the
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cybercitizen is one of contractual voluntary association and the
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cybercitizen often has alternative routes of Internet access.
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(3) Cybercommunity: Cybercommunities invariably develop societal
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norms of behaviour which are self-enforced on an ad hoc basis.
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These fluid norms are similar to Thomas Paine's "great
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fundamental principles of society and civilisation--to the
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common usage universally consented to, and mutually and
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reciprocally maintained". [19]
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However, should a cybercitizen wish to exercise his or her
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ability to communicate, the Internet's decentralised structure
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makes it technically difficult, if not impossible, to regulate
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that communication as "the Net interprets censorship as damage
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and routes around it". [20] While this has made the Internet an
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invaluable forum for political dissidents and activists in
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countries where other communication media is censored, [21] it
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has also proved invaluable for cybercitizens flouting the law or
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cybersocietal norms.
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Frequently, self-regulation of the cybercommunity (the third
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restriction described above) has proved the most effective.
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Cybercommunities regulate themselves, not according to domestic
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law (which is rather a meaningless concept on an international
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network), but according to evolving norms which are
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"established, challenged, changed, reestablished, rechallanged,
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in a kind of speeded up social revolution". [22] Their
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development is governed by a curious blend of Weber's three types
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of authority: *traditional* (norms develop according to precedent
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to a certain extent), *charismatic* (norms can be influenced by
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high-profile cybercitizens), and *legal-rational* (norms are usually
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enforced only if they achieve some rational purpose). [23] These
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norms can range from the trivial (typing in ALL CAPS is regarded
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as the equivalent to shouting and is considered rude) to the
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complex (the creation of a Usenet newsgroup usually follows a
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loose procedure: a "call for discussion" of the proposal, a
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period of public debate incorporating many "requests for comment",
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and finally a vote).
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Earlier this year, a husband and wife law partnership in Arizona
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posted adverts in over 5,000 Usenet newsgroups. [24] This act did
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not breach any domestic law, but breached conventions against
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"spaming" the Internet (that is, the voluminous and
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indiscriminate random posting of messages in inappropriate
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newsgroups) and as such the pair were "considered pariahs because
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they openly expressed disdain for Usenet rules and 'netiquette' and
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vowed, despite pleas for cooperation, to do so again". [25] A
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professor of computer science at Georgetown University
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complained: "It took me longer than an hour to clean up their
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mess. I rely upon Internet news for many professional tips and
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bits. They didn't just take away one hour of my leisure time--
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they cut me off from my source of news about my work". [26]
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Further, the cost of Usenet news is borne, not by senders, but by
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recipients via network fees.
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Cyberterrorism ensued: "flames" (scornful messages) and
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voluminous junk mail was transmitted in random e-mail, fax, and
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voice mail attacks; their home address, credit card numbers, and
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credit reports (cyberspace has also "democratised" the ability
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to snoop!) were published; and even e-mail messages containing
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death threats, forged in their name, were mailed to the
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President. As one computer consultant explained:
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"disproportionate response or not, they knowingly incited the
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wrath of the Net community by flagrantly abusing a communal
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resource shared on a cooperative basis by millions of people all
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over the world" and that "a lynch-mob style reaction is to be
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expected". [27]
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****************************************************************
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Cyberequality
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"Hierarchy is irrelevant, because everyone has equal access to
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the network, and everyone is free to communicate with as few or
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as many people as they like." [28]
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-- Benjamin Woolley, freelance journalist
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"It is common [for virtual acquaintances meeting in real life
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for the first time] to be surprised by the physical appearance
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of people they know only by streams of text. In cyberspace;
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physical disabilities, racial or ethnic differences,
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socioeconomic stratas and even gender issues tend to disappear."
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-- Peter H Lewis [29]
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The above quotes describe two distinct kinds of cyberequality.
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First, cybercitizens have an equal technical ability to access
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Internet resources and communicate information. Second, in the
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absence of physical contextual clues (such as gender, race,
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wealth, disabilities) cybercitizens are distinguishable only by
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their knowledge and ability to communicate.
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Sara Kiesler, a social psychologist, observed that the use of
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CMC within organisations "can break down hierarchical and
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departmental barriers, standard operating procedures, and
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organisational norms". [30] Cybercitizens are able to experiment
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with different forms of communication and self-representation
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[31]--especially in real-time interactive cybermedia, such as
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Internet Relay Chat and Multi User Dungeons, where users may
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manufacture fictitious identities and personae. Consequently,
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writing becomes a performing art in virtual communities:
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"elegantly presented knowledge is a valuable currency. Wit and
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use of language are rewarded in this medium, which is biased
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toward those who learn how to manipulate attention and emotion
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with the written word". [32]
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The combination of this egalitarianism with cybermedia capable
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of "publication" or "conferencing" CMC--those which give senders
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the ability to communicate with multiple recipients--is a potent
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mix indeed. Never before has it been possible for any member of
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a community to publish to an audience of millions for no more
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than it costs (in terms of labour and capital) to communicate
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privately:
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"[The Internet gives users] access to alternative forms of
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information and, most important, the power to reach others with
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your own alternatives to the official view of events. Changes in
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forms and degrees of access to information are indicators of
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changes in forms and degrees of power among different
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groups." [33]
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|
****************************************************************
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Cybercommunities
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"A full-scale sub-culture was growing on the other side of my
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telephone jack, and they invited me to help create something
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new. It became clear to me during the first few months of that
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history that I was participating in the self-design of a new
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kind of culture."
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-- Howard Rheingold [34]
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That communities should develop at all in an environment without
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a centralised coercive authority would be a surprise to many of
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the most respected political theorists. For Plato, complex
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societies required an effective division of labour, and
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therefore a hierarchical state. [35] Aristotle held that because
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individuals are not self-sufficient, the state is natural and
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therefore exists prior to the individual. [36] Thomas Hobbes
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predicted that the "state of nature", where all individuals are
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equally free, would be a state of war; life would be "solitary,
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poor, nasty, brutish, and short". [37] The creation and maintenance
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of civil society required that sovereignty be vested in a
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"leviathan" wielding absolute power over citizens.
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However, the history of the Internet has demonstrated "whenever
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CMC technology becomes available to people anywhere, they
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inevitably build virtual communities with it"; [38] but they are
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built *without* constructing Weber's state (social institutions
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monopolising the legitimate use of force within a given
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territory). This would suggest that John Locke was correct in
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distinguishing between the dissolution of government and the
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dissolution of society, [39] and Thomas Paine in asserting that:
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"The instant formal government is abolished, society begins to
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act: a general association takes place, and common interest
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produces common security." [40]
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There is no "single, monolithic, online culture" but an
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"ecosystem of subcultures" [41] --cybercommunities are formed,
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not on mutually exclusive communities of *location*, but on
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overlapping communities of *interest*, which may be defined by a
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shared culture, religion, profession, value-system, or hobby.
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Because in cyberspace, time and location no longer restrict
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communication and the exchange of information, "place" is
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conceptualised in terms of interests (viz., the subject-matter of
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the information communicated). As these new *kinds* of human
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associations incorporate emotional place-like and practical
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tool-like functions, they are founded "on a shared need for
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information and emotional support". [42]
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Marc Smith [43] observed that cybercommunities are formed by
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isolated individuals banding together in a competitive environment
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and are bound together by three kinds of "collective goods":
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social network capital, knowledge capital, and communion. The
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common interest of members of the community in its collective
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goods results in an informal (and often unnoticed) social contract
|
|
creating an information "gift- economy":
|
|
|
|
"In some cases I can put the information in exactly the right
|
|
place for ten thousand people I don't know, but who are
|
|
intensely interested in that specific topic, to find it when
|
|
they need it. And sometimes, one of the ten thousand people I
|
|
don't know does the same thing for me." [44]
|
|
|
|
Whether one is motivated by an indirect self-interest where one
|
|
vicariously benefits from the community, or a proximate self-
|
|
interest, the effect is much the same: a economy based on
|
|
indirect reciprocity (quite unlike conventional economies)
|
|
develops:
|
|
|
|
"Sure, it may take a few days, but I can get a number of answers
|
|
on virtually any subject or field of endeavour just by asking,
|
|
and those who take their time to reply do so for no reward other
|
|
than increasing the chance that their future queries will
|
|
likewise find willing respondents." [45]
|
|
|
|
The gift economy is accentuated in smaller cybercommunities
|
|
where individual members are well-known:
|
|
|
|
"A sociologist might say that my perceived helpfulness increased
|
|
my pool of social capital. I can increase your knowledge capital
|
|
and my social capital at the same time by telling you something
|
|
that you need to know, and I could diminish the amount of my
|
|
capital in the estimation of others by transgressing the group's
|
|
social norms." [46]
|
|
|
|
****************************************************************
|
|
P A R T T H R E E
|
|
Cyberanarchism?
|
|
****************************************************************
|
|
|
|
"There is an intimate connection between informal conversations,
|
|
the kind that take place in communities and virtual communities,
|
|
in the coffee shops and computer conferences, and the ability of
|
|
large social groups to govern themselves without monarchs or
|
|
dictators."
|
|
-- Howard Rheingold [47]
|
|
|
|
"Government is no farther necessary than to supply the few cases
|
|
to which society and civilisation are not conveniently
|
|
competent; and instances are not wanting to show, that
|
|
everything which government can usefully add thereto, has been
|
|
performed by the common consent of society, without government."
|
|
-- Thomas Paine, in _The Rights of Man_ [48]
|
|
|
|
This paper has described the nature of two distinct but parallel
|
|
political environments on the Internet. One is the physical
|
|
Internet infrastructure, having its origins in the ARPANet
|
|
military research network; the other is cyberspace, the virtual
|
|
reality created by CMC:
|
|
|
|
PARALLEL POLITICAL ENVIRONMENTS
|
|
|
|
ENVIRONMENT PHYSICAL (INTERNET) VIRTUAL (CYBERSPACE)
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Communal unit: Internet provider Community of
|
|
interest
|
|
|
|
Structure: Confederal Anarchic
|
|
|
|
Relations governed by: Contract Communal norms based
|
|
on gift economy/self
|
|
interest
|
|
|
|
The most controversial claim in the above table is that
|
|
cyberspace is an anarchic environment. Some anarchists and
|
|
libertarians have argued that cyberspace cannot be considered
|
|
truly anarchic, and is only anarchic superficially, because of:
|
|
first, the role of the United States government in establishing,
|
|
developing, and maintaining the Internet; secondly, the continuing
|
|
influence of domestic law and Internet providers on the
|
|
behaviour of cybercitizens; and thirdly, the unequal distribution
|
|
of power caused by practical variations in computer literacy and
|
|
the ability to communicate.
|
|
|
|
All these claims may be countered to a certain extent by
|
|
recalling Weber's apt definition of the state as: social
|
|
institutions monopolising the legitimate use of force within a
|
|
given territory. Applying this definition, cyberspace is
|
|
anarchic *as a matter of fact*--whether it fulfils any
|
|
anarchist ideals is another matter entirely. Unless anarchy is
|
|
universal, no anarchist environment will be immune to *external*
|
|
influences (such as other governments). *Internal* sources of
|
|
authority (such as Internet providers, cybersocietal norms, and
|
|
other cybercitizens) are natural anarchic elements, *provided*
|
|
they do not monopolise the legitimate use of force. Indeed, such
|
|
sources of authority strongly resemble those found in anarcho-
|
|
syndicalist and anarcho-communist theory, such as Kropotkin's
|
|
mutual-aid communities. (It should also be noted that, by
|
|
insulating individuals from the need for physical contact,
|
|
members of a cybercommunity are insulated from the worst effects
|
|
of any potential coercion.)
|
|
|
|
What of the future of cyberanarchism? Rheingold believes that
|
|
the futures of both cyberspace and of human community, are
|
|
inextricably linked. There is certainly *potential* for
|
|
cyberspace to bypass the increasingly centrally controlled and
|
|
funded conventional media and perhaps even to resurrect citizen
|
|
based democracy (at least in cyberspace itself). Cyberspace
|
|
could become Habermas' ideal public sphere where opinions are
|
|
formed in public by citizens free from coercion--a global
|
|
citizen designed and citizen controlled electronic _agora_ in
|
|
the Athenian tradition. However, as in any citizen controlled
|
|
information system, "responsibility for organising information
|
|
shifts from the writer to the reader". [49] CMC may create
|
|
intellectual, social, commercial, and political leverage, within
|
|
cyberspace, "but the technology will not in itself fulfil that
|
|
potential; this latent technical power must be used intelligently
|
|
and deliberately by an informed population". [50]
|
|
|
|
It seems clear that for cyberanarchism to survive as a
|
|
functioning form of organisation, there needs to be a consensus
|
|
among community members to respect the equal liberty of all
|
|
other community members. Whether this consensus can survive the
|
|
rapid influx of newcomers, who have not been socialised
|
|
according to this set cybersocietal values, is uncertain.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
****************************************************************
|
|
Bibliography
|
|
|
|
Adkins, N F (editor) (1953): _Thomas Paine: Common Sense and
|
|
other Political Writings_, The Liberal Arts Press, New York.
|
|
|
|
Aristotle (1885): _Politics_, translated by Benjamin Jowett.
|
|
Available via FTP "ftp://ftphost.vuw.ac.nz/pub/etext/
|
|
Literature/Aristotle/politics.gz". Selections also available in:
|
|
Brown (1990):99-137.
|
|
|
|
Arnum, E (1994): _Correlation of GNP/GDP to Number of Internet
|
|
Hosts in July 1994_, Internet Society. Available via FTP at
|
|
"ftphost.waikato.ac.nz/pub/netinfo/isoc/charts".
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|
|
|
Brown, R (1990): _Classical Political Theories: From Plato to
|
|
Marx_, Macmillan, New York.
|
|
|
|
Cerf, V (1993a): _A Brief History of the Internet and Related
|
|
Networks_. Available via gopher at "gopher://is.internic.net/11/
|
|
infoguide/about-internet/history/".
|
|
|
|
-- (1993b): _How the Internet Came to Be_. Available via gopher
|
|
at "gopher://is.internic.net/11/infoguide/about-
|
|
internet/history/".
|
|
|
|
Crowder, G (1991): _Classical Anarchism: The Political Thought
|
|
of Godwin, Proudhon, Bakunin, and Kropotkin_, Clarendon Press,
|
|
Oxford.
|
|
|
|
Electronic Frontier Foundation (1994): _EFF's Guide to the
|
|
Internet_, (formerly known as _The Big Dummies' Guide to the
|
|
Internet_), Version 2.3, Electronic Frontier Foundation,
|
|
Washington. Available via FTP at "ftp.eff.org" and via WWW at
|
|
"http://www.eff.org".
|
|
|
|
Held, D, _et al_ (editor) (1985): _States and Societies_,
|
|
Blackwell, Oxford.
|
|
|
|
Internet Society (1994): _Latest Internet Measurements Reveal
|
|
Dramatic Growth in 1994_, Press Release: 4 August 1994.
|
|
|
|
Kehoe, B P (1993): _Zen and the Art of the Internet_, Second
|
|
Edition, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs.
|
|
|
|
Krol, E; Hoffman, E (1993): _FYI on "What is Internet?"_,
|
|
Internet Society (FYI 20, RFC 1462). To obtain this document,
|
|
send an e-mail message to "nis-info@nis.merit.edu" with "send
|
|
access.guide" in the body of the message.
|
|
|
|
Lewis, P H (1994a): "Staking a Claim on the Virtual Frontier"
|
|
in: _The New York Times_, 2 January, 1994.
|
|
|
|
-- (1994b): "Strangers, Not Their Computers, Build a Network in
|
|
Time of Grief" in: _The New York Times_, 8 March 1994, pp A1,
|
|
D2.
|
|
|
|
-- (1994c): "An Ad (Gasp!) in Cyberspace" in: _The New York
|
|
Times_, 19 April 1994, pp D1, D2.
|
|
|
|
-- (1994d): "Anarchy, a Threat on the Electronic Frontier?" in:
|
|
_The New York Times_, 11 May 1994, pp D1, D7.
|
|
|
|
-- (1994e): "Sneering at a Virtual Lynch Mob" in: _ibid_, p D7.
|
|
|
|
-- (1994f): "On the Internet, Dissidents' Shots Heard 'Round the
|
|
World" in: _The New York Times_, 5 June 1994, p E18.
|
|
|
|
Lohr, S (1994): "Can E-Mail Cachet = jpmorgan@park.ave?" in:
|
|
_The New York Times_, April 1994 [exact date unknown], pp A1,
|
|
D4.
|
|
|
|
Markoff, J (1994): "The Rise and Fall of Cyber Literacy" in:
|
|
_The New York Times_, 1994 [exact date unknown], pp 1, 5.
|
|
|
|
Plato (1894): _The Republic_, translated by Benjamin Jowett.
|
|
Available via FTP at "ftp://ftphost.vuw.ac.nz/pub/etext/
|
|
Literature/Plato/republic.gz". Selections also available in:
|
|
Brown (1990):17-96.
|
|
|
|
Spunk Press (1994): _Quotations: Proudhon_, Spunk Press.
|
|
Available via FTP at "etext.archive.umich.edu/pub/Politics/
|
|
Spunk".
|
|
|
|
Rheingold, H (1994): _The Virtual Community_, Secker & Warburg,
|
|
London.
|
|
|
|
Wolff, J (1991): _Robert Nozick: Property, Justice and the
|
|
Minimalist State_, Polity Press, Cambridge.
|
|
|
|
Woodcock, G (1962): _Anarchism: A History of Libertarian Ideas
|
|
and Movements_, Penguin, Harmondsworth.
|
|
|
|
Woolley, B (1992): _Virtual Worlds: A Journey in Hype and
|
|
Hyperreality_, Blackwell, Oxford.
|
|
|
|
The development of concepts discussed in this paper was assisted
|
|
by private correspondence with the following persons (among
|
|
others who wish to remain anonymous):
|
|
|
|
altaf@crl.com (Altaf Bhimji)
|
|
bandit@cruzio.com (Bandit)
|
|
bis4cg@de-montfort.ac.uk (Chris Gillie)
|
|
brunell@gate.net (Dave Brunell)
|
|
crm@lems.brown.edu (Christopher R. Maden)
|
|
gcf@panix.com (Gordon Fitch)
|
|
gmcgath@mv.mv.com (Gary McGath)
|
|
inst1229@cl.uh.edu (Don Blick)
|
|
john@waikato.ac.nz (John Houlker)
|
|
klacobie@agoric.com (Kevin Lacobie)
|
|
kurt@data-io.com (Kurt Guntheroth)
|
|
misc248@cantva.canterbury.ac.nz (Nicky Green)
|
|
mg.crawshaw@auckland.ac.nz (Mike Crawshaw)
|
|
muisca@aol.com (J. Rifkind)
|
|
nagesh_rao@brown.edu (Nagesh Rao)
|
|
petersod@cs.colostate.edu (David Peterson)
|
|
porterg@gems.vcu.edu (Greg Porter)
|
|
rschmidt@panix.com (Robert Schmidt)
|
|
rsumner@osf1.gmu.edu (Robert T Sumner)
|
|
spam@telerama.lm.com (Steve Marting)
|
|
tom.biggs@dscmail.com (Tom Biggs)
|
|
yngmar06@its.uct.ac.za (Mark Young)
|
|
|
|
****************************************************************
|
|
Annex I: _Cyberanarchism?_
|
|
|
|
I posted the following request for feedback in several relevant
|
|
Usenet newsgroups on the morning of 12 October 1994 (New Zealand
|
|
Standard Time), and received over 50 well considered replies. My
|
|
thanks to all respondents.
|
|
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.society.anarchy
|
|
From: tomas.kriha@actrix.gen.nz (Tomas F J Kriha)
|
|
Subject: Cyberanarchism?
|
|
Lines: 53
|
|
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 22:11:14 GMT
|
|
|
|
I am working on a short research paper analysing the Internet
|
|
community as a functioning anarchist society--that is, a
|
|
community lacking centralised coercive authority.
|
|
|
|
Many political philosophers have predicted what such a community
|
|
would be like--most in an attempt to rationalise the imposition
|
|
of a centralised coercive authority such as the state. Thomas
|
|
Hobbes described life in the "state of nature" as "solitary,
|
|
poor, nasty, brutish, and short". By contrast, Thomas Paine
|
|
argued that the dissolution of government need not entail the
|
|
dissolution of society: "The instant formal government is
|
|
abolished, society begins to act: a general association takes
|
|
place, and common interest produces common security".
|
|
|
|
In _The New York Times_ (11 May 1994), Peter H Lewis described
|
|
the Internet as "a nearly perfect laboratory for testing the
|
|
democratic principles of free speech and self-governance". What
|
|
do *you* think the results of this experiment have shown? I
|
|
would like to hear any comments you might have on the following
|
|
issues which I will be covering in the paper (some in more
|
|
detail than others):
|
|
|
|
* The origin and development of the Internet.
|
|
|
|
* The nature of cybercommunities/cybersocieties/cybercultures.
|
|
IMO, cyberspace reduces political society to its lowest common
|
|
denominator: social interaction facilitated by communication.
|
|
|
|
* Development of societal norms/conventions in cybercommunities.
|
|
|
|
* The degree to which human nature can be said to be cooperative
|
|
or competitive in cyberspace.
|
|
|
|
* Liberty on the net: The *technical* ability of cybernauts to
|
|
act, and the *practical* ability to breach societal
|
|
norms/conventions (at the risk of peer-sanctions).
|
|
|
|
* Equality on the net: The *technical* equality of cybernauts to
|
|
communicate and to access, distribute, and publish information.
|
|
The decreasing influence of traditional sources of inequality:
|
|
wealth, ethnicity/culture, religion, gender, opinions/beliefs,
|
|
&c.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Please reply to me *personally*--preferably by Saturday 15
|
|
October--at: tomas.kriha@actrix.gen.nz
|
|
|
|
BTW, if you don't wish to be quoted in the paper, please say so.
|
|
|
|
Many thanks in advance; T.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------- \_ ---
|
|
Tomas F J Kriha Email: tomas.kriha@actrix.gen.nz </'
|
|
*******@******.***.govt.nz /)
|
|
Phone: +64 (4) 566-0534 (/`
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------- ` -----
|
|
|
|
****************************************************************
|
|
FOOTNOTES
|
|
****************************************************************
|
|
|
|
1. Lewis (1994d): D1.
|
|
|
|
2. Rheingold (1994): 4.
|
|
|
|
3. Weber: Politics as a Vocation, in: Held (1985): 111.
|
|
|
|
4. Rheingold (1994): 6.
|
|
|
|
5. This brief account of the origins of the Internet is based
|
|
upon the following sources: Rheingold (1994): 7-9, 65-109;
|
|
Electronic Frontier Foundation (1994); Cerf (1993a); Cerf
|
|
(1993b).
|
|
|
|
6. In full: Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol.
|
|
|
|
7. Cerf: (1993b).
|
|
|
|
8. Lohr (1994): D4.
|
|
|
|
9. Cerf: (1993a).
|
|
|
|
10. Rheingold (1994): 11.
|
|
|
|
11. Nozick: Anarchy, State, and Utopia, quoted in: Held (1985):
|
|
567.
|
|
|
|
12. William Gibson, quoted in: Woolley (1992): 122, et seq.
|
|
|
|
13. Sara Kiesler, quoted in: Lewis (1994b): D2.
|
|
|
|
14. For an introduction to various cybermedia, see: Electronic
|
|
Frontier Foundation (1994); Kehoe (1993); Rheingold (1994).
|
|
|
|
15. Lewis (1994c): D2. Many more newsgroups are distributed
|
|
locally.
|
|
|
|
16. Dave Hughes, quoted in: Rheingold (1994): 241.
|
|
|
|
17. Rheingold (1994): 3.
|
|
|
|
18. Lewis (1994c): D2.
|
|
|
|
19. Paine: Rights of Man, Part II Chapter I "Of Society and
|
|
Civilisation" in: Brown (199): 382-384; Held (1985): 85-86.
|
|
|
|
20. John Gilmore (telecommunications network pioneer), quoted in:
|
|
Rheingold (1994): 7.
|
|
|
|
21. For discussions of recent political activities using the
|
|
Internet, see: Lewis (1994f); Rheingold (1994).
|
|
|
|
22. Rheingold describing his first contact with the Internet in
|
|
1985, in: Rheingold (1994): 2.
|
|
|
|
23. Weber: _Politics as a Vocation_, in: Held (1985): 112.
|
|
|
|
24. For discussion of the Canter and Siegel affair, see: Lewis
|
|
(1994c); Lewis (1994e).
|
|
|
|
25. Lewis (1994e): D7.
|
|
|
|
26. Peter Wayner, quoted in: Lewis (1994d): D7.
|
|
|
|
27. J|rgen Botz, quoted in: ibid.
|
|
|
|
28. Woolley (1992): 125.
|
|
|
|
29. Lewis (1994b): D2.
|
|
|
|
30. Sara Kiesler, quoted in: Rheingold (1994): 62-63.
|
|
|
|
31. See also: Rheingold (1994): 178, 180-181.
|
|
|
|
32. Ibid: 59.
|
|
|
|
33. Ibid: 268.
|
|
|
|
34. Rheingold describing his first contact with the Internet in
|
|
1985, in: ibid: 2.
|
|
|
|
35. See: Plato (1894): Book IV; Brown (1990): 58-72.
|
|
|
|
36. See: Aristotle (1885): Book I; ibid: 99-101.
|
|
|
|
37. Brown (1990): 220; Held (1985): 69.
|
|
|
|
38. Rheingold (1994): 6.
|
|
|
|
39. See: Locke: Second Treatise of Government, Chapter XIX "Of
|
|
the Dissolution of Government" in: Brown (1990): 294-302.
|
|
|
|
40. Paine: Rights of Man, Part II Chapter I "Of Society and
|
|
Civilisation" in: Brown (199): 382-384; Held (1985): 85-86.
|
|
|
|
41. Rheingold (1994): 3.
|
|
|
|
42. Lewis (1994b): D2.
|
|
|
|
43. For a description of Marc Smith's "collective goods" theory,
|
|
see: Rheingold (1994): 13.
|
|
|
|
44. Rheingold (1994): 57.
|
|
|
|
45. Private correspondence with porterg@gems.vcu.edu (Greg
|
|
Porter).
|
|
|
|
46. Rheingold (1994): 60.
|
|
|
|
47. Ibid, 281.
|
|
|
|
48. Paine: Rights of Man, Part II Chapter I "Of Society and
|
|
Civilisation" in: Brown (199): 382-384; Held (1985): 85-86.
|
|
|
|
49. Markoff (1994): 5.
|
|
|
|
50. Rheingold (1994): 4.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------- \_ ---
|
|
Tomas F J Kriha E-mail: tomas.kriha@actrix.gen.nz </'
|
|
kriha_t@kosmos.wcc.govt.nz /)
|
|
Phone: +64 4-566-0534 (/`
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------ ` -----
|
|
|
|
|
|
|