Issues for the Internet Society 132
DenOfEarth writes "The Economist has published a series of articles detailing some of the issues facing our current society and the technological leaps and bounds that are leading to the future internet society. They include: Protection of Privacy, Constant internet connectivity, Copyright 's Role in the Future, Technology-based Democratic Process, Government Authority, and Social and Political Ramifications. There's a good deal of information to waste one's time with here, but some good discussion is bound to come out of it."
Environmental Issues (Score:5, Insightful)
Also what about the issue of disposal of old computer equipment. All these toxic chemicals are dangerous, and old monitors contain large amounts of lead and some radioactive components.
We really need to deal with these environmental problems before we can continue along the path of technology in good conscience.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2)
Wouldn't microchips be more expensive if that were the case? Besides, they don't make one chip at a time, they make a plate of them.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:1, Insightful)
Consider what it takes to refine a chemical in a lab (those who've suffered through post-secondary chem can relate). The public hears that some substance has been isolated or synthesised, and it sounds very simple. In reality there are often tens or even hundreds of intermediate steps, all of which are variously inefficient, involving large investments of energy and solvents and the subsequent disposal of these as waste. These sort of studies merely point out the origin of things that people have come to take for granted, but which are unsustainable. Most people would be pretty surprised if they knew how the composition of an aluminum pop can compares to their monthly electric bill, for instance.
Mass-production methods are taken into account, of course. No one makes one microchip, or moves one meg of data then dismantles the Internet. It's a running average.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:5, Insightful)
The environmental damage of any new technology needs to be balanced against the environmental damage of the technology it supplants.
For example, the damage done by cars had to be balanced against the damage done by horses. In that case, the tradeoff wasn't so good, because horse manure is biodegradeable. Still, at the time cars began to replace horses, many citizens hailed the newly clean streets, and were pleased that the exhaust of cars blew away on the wind, unlike the exhaust of horses.
In the case of chips, I think their impact has to be weighed against the savings in fuel and other resources that such technologies as just-in-time manufacturing, telecommuting (I know, hasn't happened yet) online shopping and paperless archiving (ditto). Consider that a robot with a screw gun doesn't have to drive an SUV to work, and the usual trip to work burns a lot more than a couple pounds of oil.
Of course, there will be human costs associated with these environmental savings, namely unemployment among former screw gun operators.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2, Insightful)
The amount of fossil fuels that go into the electrics of my car save me MUCH more than 2 kgs worth of crude oil thats processed into gasoline. Over the lifetime of the car, those chips have a much greater overall benefit to the environment.
Likewise a fancy new digitally controlled oil furnace, compared to my 30 year old piece of shit that breaks down right in the middle of a fucking cold spell and I freeze my ass off i mean christ sakes who heard of a fucking furnace that doesnt fucking work if its too fucking cold out?
Ranting notwithstanding, computer technology in general has many environmental benefits.
If not for computers we wouldnt be able to as accurately model the environmental effects of computers.
Robot with a screw gun (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Robot with a screw gun (Score:1)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:4, Funny)
Actually paper use has gone up dramatically since the invention of computers.
Printers make it possible to print out everything without a lot of troubles.
Can't count the times I've printed something out just to read it on my way home (subway) and throw it away when done.
I know this isnt very environment friendly - but atleast I dont own a car
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2)
Even Google wasnt my friend at first but after refining the search a few times google finally came up with this [216.239.39.100]
Google cache only as I can't reach the site
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2)
My paper usage has gone through the FLOOR over the past few years...
Nearly all my "written" communication is e-mail, I seldom travel, (mostly work at home, and communicate with clients by phone) and about the only thing my now aging inkjet is used for is invoices to be faxed.
That's about it.
-Ben
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:1)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:4, Interesting)
You think that by not entering the technology sector that sector will end up producing products that are less environementally unfriendly?
If you want to see a change become an Electrical Engineer instead (or related field) and WORK on producing processes that are better.
Using your logic you shouldn't become a doctor either because of the hazards of biomedical waste. I can't think of a profession that isn't environmentally unfriendly in some way. Daily life is environmentally unfriendly. If you think there is a problem do something proactive. Not getting a degree in CS because the tools of the trade are produced in an environment unfriedly way doesn't solve the problem or really make any differance at all.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2)
I've got news for you - your "Won't somebody think of the trees" rant probably wasted way more resources just to type up, send across the line, and get posted on the server.
I'm not saying that these issues don't need to be dealt with, but you can't get all worried about the use of resources, and at the same time waste even more of them by happily typing along on your computer 20 hours a day.
If you are that concerned, then please feel free to unplug. I think Ted Kaczynski has a place for sale in Montana.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:1)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:1)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:3, Interesting)
Then, that's why you should go into the Industry. Find out ways to fabricate chips without such things.
It's not as if we're going to give up computers.
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:3, Insightful)
This recent slashdot post [slashdot.org] talked about his firm's ideas for a recyclable car.
annmariabell.com [annmariabell.com]
Re:Environmental Issues (Score:1)
As our technology has grown, we have become aware of the problems our technology has caused. We now include environmental impact as a part of product development. We seek to minimize the harm to the rest of the world along with minizing the cost. The system is not 100%, because there are still people in the world who DO NOT CARE about the environment as much as they care about that extra nickle a pound.
Slowly, like generations turning, the attitudes change. Be apart of the changes in a positive manner by supporting green technologies when you can.
Just because a lot of dangerous chemicals are involved in the manufacture of computer chips does not mean that those chemicals are dumped into the enviroment. People go to jail for things like that.
But, then not always. The NY Times ran a series of articles on the McWane Cast Iron Pipe Empire and all of the atrocities they commit. Thousands of OSHA and EPA violations every year. They make the pipes that carry the water you drink. They make them cheaply by killing, maiming, and poluting, just like they did back in the early part of the 1900's. They're doing this in the USA not in some dingy, corrupt, third world country. (Sorry the article is in the archives and the NYT wants money for it)
If you're going to rethink you career based upon the adverse impact of technology on the environment, you'll be very surprised at what technologies harm the environment most.
They would have avoided the slashdotting... (Score:1)
Re:They would have avoided the slashdotting... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I started to read the article.... (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree, except with the fact that identity theft, SPAM and the amount of crucial information online is growing tremendously. I want crime involving the internet to be punishable. Ann Rand this is not.
Another point of interest for the future... (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone else see the S-curve in Internet usership? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Anyone else see the S-curve in Internet usershi (Score:5, Insightful)
No, but the internet is quite diffrent from the Yellow Pages...
Ok, general information aside, here is what I could do, if I wanted to, from my computer on the internet right now.
1)Order all my groceries and have them delivered to my door (if I use the right companies).
2)Read all the news I want to and look at all of opions from editiors, experts, slashdot users, etc. i want to. Most of it's free too.
3)Buy all the books, CD's, antiques, DVD's, video's, comics, etc. I want and have it delivered to my door.
4) With a microphone I can effectively call people anywhere in the world for no interntaional call charges. Or I can chat to them online in chat rooms, instant messaging and so on.
5) I can send my reports to work/university/wherever without having to pay postage.
How do these things change society? like this...
1)No more need for supermarkets or checkouts, o people running them... just a few big warehouses arount the area to deal with demand.
2)No more need for newspapers or magazines, or the newsagents who sell them.
3)No more need for most of the high street.
4)I pay less money to my phone operators and as I'm on a flat rate for my internet connection anyway I don't care how many people I call.
5) No more need for offices.
If everyone were to use the internet to it's full capability, and order everything they could exclusively through it, then society would change a lot. Our city's would have no need for malls or supermarkets, which seeing as we've used a place like that to shop for at least 2000 years, (think markets, then shops... and so on) it would be a huge change from the past.
Obviously shopping is an extreme example, but it shows well how having the ability to view everything you need (almost) in one central place (the screen on my desk) could have a huge effect on society.
Re:Anyone else see the S-curve in Internet usershi (Score:3, Insightful)
:
:
"4)I pay less money to my phone operators and as I'm on a flat rate for my internet connection anyway I don't care how many people I call."
I take your point here, but this is as nothing compared to the ability to chat directly with people from all over the world you would not otherwise have been able to communicate with.
And when you can do that, you can find out about their lives and cultures, and find out that people are basically the same the whole world over.
You may find that most people from certain countries you have heard a lot about are, in fact, human beings, and not an unthinking part of some "evil society" that other media sources may have been trying to portray them as.
Alternatively, you may find the opposite is the case.
But the point is - you can find out for yourself.
Re:Anyone else see the S-curve in Internet usershi (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it mostly wastes a lot of our time which we could be using to better purposes.
You bring up an interesting point here that is in itself worthy of discussion. While there are certainly good uses for the Internet for gathering information, it seems most of the time spent with it is actually entertainment oriented. Furthermore, this entertainment is inherently anti-social. While multiplayer gaming networks and chat rooms abound, these relationships are often very shallow. They can never replace relationships built with direct interaction with other people. On of the most profound impacts on society is the generation of a perceived unity in the world even as it isolates the individual from strong, close relationships.
Another impact is taking an already entertainment driven society and expanding the problem. When you look at the new developments in the Internet, nearly all of them are driven by the demand for improved entertainment. What kind of impact is this having on our society? One could argue, as in the case with computers, that the improvements made in computer hardware to support the gaming industry also enabled work to be more efficiently performed due to GUI interfaces and more powerful applications. However, as the Internet continues to build, are we really seeing major productivity boosts as a result? When I consider the time I spend reading Slashdot, I sometimes wonder if the opposite may be true. We (and I mean we) spend so much time entertaining ourselves that we lose sight of real issues and problems that need to be addressed (poverty, pollution, abuse, etc.). The Internet may actually prove to be more of a curse than a blessing when all is said and done if we simply entertain ourselves while Rome burns to the ground.
On the other hand, one could argue that the Internet is merely a tool, and the problems mentioned above are purely a result of our society. Does anyone else have thoughts on this?
Re: Entertaining (Score:3, Insightful)
As an example, I know many people who seem to be able to "hit it off" with other people quite easily due to the fact that they watch the same television shows on a regular basis. Eliminate the common entertainment experience(which, I assume, they enjoy), and they might not be able to interact in as quick a fashion. Similarly, I can assume that there are a large bunch of like-minded indivduals who I can discuss things like this with over long distances. Also, in the days before all of this internet enabled entertainment were we surrounded by people to a larger degree, or for a longer period of time? I'm not totally sure about that one.
The second thing I'd like to bring up is the idea that everyone is too busy having fun to realize that things around them are bad. While I would guess that for a large chunk of the technologically enabled population this would be true, there are still going to be people trying to keep the flames down, not because that's what they love to do with their time, but because a stable society means a profitable society which means that these people will get paid to be the fire legion, in whatever form that may take.
Just my two cents.
Amusing Ourselves to Death (Score:3, Informative)
constant access (Score:4, Insightful)
From the article:
Maybe his father has the right idea. Dick hardly sees the old man these days because he always seems to have his video image and live-communicator access blocked. Blocking access is considered rude, even suspicious, but Dick wonders if he shouldn't do the same.
Find - or make - time to unplug. Don't be a Dick.
The party doesn't allow that (Score:2)
Re:The party doesn't allow that (Score:2)
I mean, it's already the most nightmarish State on the planet, but the fact that they actually have a poor-state's version of the 1984 viewscreens... I find that quite frightening.
Re:The party doesn't allow that (Score:1)
Re:The party doesn't allow that (Score:2)
that being said, the Economist is STILL one of the few publications that is actually "fair and balanced" without being either a crypt-leftist affair or a vast right-wing fox-spiracy. witness:
Simple, fair, balanced, accurate, and sufficiently non-technical for anyone to understand. And yet clear enough to understand how the Orlando brownshirts plan to hit you up like a two-dollar whore looking for an up-sell, only with NORAD aiming the fucking bomb between your eyebrows. Again, cut through all the bullshit and get to the common-sense understanding. To arrest someone for making a copy of music for their friends is even more stupid than arresting people for pre-marital sex. Sex for money: in most places illegal. Being a slut: illegal only in places no one smarter than a sea cucumber wants to live in. No one in Congress or a major media company's lobby whore orgs will support this idea openly, but it's obvious and morally fair: non-commercial sharing shouldn't be illegal, while commercial sharing should be illegal. Works for sex, and that's more complicated than music. Anyone who can't accept this is a fucking retard. "Share" privately, fine; share commerically, not fine.Sure, some people who really, really want free music/content will get it without paying for it, just as sex outside of marriage has continued, yet in 50,000 years has failed to destroy the institution. Big fucking deal Most of us settle for the security, pay for it, and that's enough to keep the institution going even in complete absence of rules. The rules are there only to make sure your account gets debited every time you even fucking dream of mickey mouse. May Sonny Bono rot in hell.
The big issue on my mind is (Score:1, Funny)
My that's a long list (Score:5, Funny)
Check out *nix.org [qhcf.net], a dynamic, informative, and fun portal for fans of BSD, Linux, OS X, & Solaris!
In the future, eberything is just hunky dorey. (Score:4, Insightful)
so she briefs herself on politics and votes on some of the half-dozen referendums held every day.
First off, if we ever get to the point where government is producing more than a half dozen referendums every day, I'm finding another country. Enough garbage gets out with elections "only" once a year as it is.
Also, Terrorism eliminated just because of security cameras? As though a security camera can stop someone intent on, say, blowing themselves up. I suppose, on the bright side, you would be able to identify him, after he had blown himself up.
And traffic, a thing of the past, thanks to the hand-held portable and 3d image viewer. I don't see working from home ever happening on the scale it's been touted. It is far more efficient to have your employees at the same place at the same time, rather than off at the opera, supposedly working "on the go". But back to the article, there are plenty of people who's business it is to drive for a living. There will always be traffic in a moderately large city.
I guess my problem with articles like this is that they make it sound like with just a few more GHZs and MBs, we'll somehow eliminate all the problems of modern society. A toast to foolhardy optimism!
In other news: (Score:4, Funny)
I suppose in this future, slashdot posters will end with sigs reading "Those willing to sacrifice freedom for Unencumbered access to public roads deserve neither."
Re:In the future, eberything is just hunky dorey. (Score:3, Informative)
If you live in the States, Using the total calendar days of the 1988 and 1989 legislative sessions, the median U.S. legislature produced 4.7 laws per day. [wvu.edu].
That was 15 years ago, and that's just for State legislatures. You think those numbers have gone down since then?
don't you think... (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure it's been going to hell in a handbasket for a while now, with the US govt and their corporate lackeys out to kill freedom of expression and all.
But when enough people get sick of it, won't they just build something else?
Who's up for internet 2.0?
Re:don't you think... (Score:3, Insightful)
Rather than giving up our rights and allowing bad laws to stand unchallenged we need to take a proactive approach. If we don't the time could come when it is illegal to build that something else.
Re:don't you think... (Score:2, Interesting)
the thing that infuriates me about this, is how (for some reason) all of these decisions get to be made by the US. why the collective governments of the world aren't getting their undies into knots eludes me...
it's probably because they're too old and foolish (and self-involved and...) to even KNOW what internet is.
Somebody HELP, we, the users of internet ARE being OPPRESSED!
...not too mention that Palladium has (so far) barely been mentioned in Europe.
Europeans, asians, save ALL the netizens, SEND THE PALLADIUM FAQ TO YOUR TELEVISION CHANNELS.
now all I can do is:
1)hope someone stops internet from going from 99% crap to 100% crap -and you don't get to see it all.
or:
2)hope someone figures out a way to make an inet 2.0 that is government free.
Re:don't you think... (Score:1)
Re:don't you think... (Score:1)
Sorta like China's doing? The adage about the bird in the hand comes to mind.
Re:don't you think... (Score:2)
The "Operation System" of Internet 2.0 will not reside on a single machine, or anywhere in particular.
It's already common for a single software package to run on multiple machines.
It'll take a while, but it'll happen.
content providers ahead on encryption barriers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:content providers ahead on encryption barriers? (Score:1, Insightful)
If content industries overplay their hand, they could end up alienating and losing much of their audience
I've been a member of the alienated/lost audience for years now. Direct outlay of money for film and audio from me is about $100.00 a year.
That $100.00 is directly tied to how much quality films/music I find interesting enough to buy/watch at the movie theatre.
Re:content providers ahead on encryption barriers? (Score:3, Insightful)
And that's the key phrase. What makes you think there won't be hardware based DRM in your no-copyright world? Even if you don't choose to buy a Palladium equipped PC, that doesn't mean that the entertainment industry won't release their content for Palladium-only hardware. The Slashdot crowd may shun and boycott the technology, but the general public will buy whatever they need to, in order to watch the latest movies in high-definition digital television.
Re:content providers ahead on encryption barriers? (Score:2)
Exactly. And much as I hate to say it, this is why such hardware is inevitable. That's not to say that there won't be a thriving underground of hardware and software hackers who will work around most every DRM techniue that comes down the line; consider Satellite TV, for a contemporary example. But by the end of the decade hardware-based DRM will be nearly universal.
The RIAA and MPAA haven't produced enough solid evidence of economic loss to justify the enormous costs of the change to DRM hardware. But it's only a matter of time before such evidence is found -- or manufactured. And although I don't expect many people here to follow along, as more and more content is released in DRM-protected form, John Q. Public will eventually cave and acquire the necessary hardware (the cost of which will probably be subsidized by a "tax" on the exclusive content).
the answers (Score:2, Funny)
Lawyers already own government, so they will let government go to war over it with its own constituents.
Constant internet connectivity
Jam it up the butt. Voila. Instant Cable
Copyright 's Role in the Future
Copyright is and will be like oil. An enough reason to start wars.
Technology-based Democratic Process
The tried-and-tested Military Technology Democrazy I guess.
Government Authority
Government of certain 'lawridden' nations of federal states will kill, plunder and hinder peoples of other nations. Authorically enough.
and Social and Political Ramifications.
A certain nation of federastic states will try to start the fourth reich. So everyone else will have to stop them. Everything goes to Detroit.
Soliloquy (Score:5, Interesting)
Look at prohibition. It didn't work in this country. Granted, it took crime, death, and scandal to prove, but prove it did, and here we are. This may seem like a gloomy way to perceive the future, but to try perceiving the future is quite futile past a certain expunging of efforts, anyhow.
With tricky issues, the ugly-halves cannot be permanently concealed; somebody will get burned, no matter what the final vote decrees. What is so much more important (and infinately more effective) is that we pay attention to the situation that is Right Now, and deal with it, affecting change (which is highly necessary and extremely possible) as soon as need be.
To worry about not-yet-defined internet rights, taxes, government policies is an overrated endeavor. Why? Because it keeps us focused on the future, which is full of unreal imagery.
You counter with this: "let's make the right decisions now, because to affect change in the government takes so much time, lobbyist dollars, and a scattering of bi-annual elections". This is where my decree fits in precicely: we CAN'T make the right decisions now; we don't know what the right decision will be.
Let's use our vote for the purpose for which it was invented: to cast our selection of what we individually want. Do that first, don't vote for a group or with a group. Vote for what you want, and it will all be sorted out afterwards; just like Prohibition, just like 55 m.p.h. speed limits, just like government's involvement with business, just like segregation, just like woman's suffrage, just like anything that has mattered so far in our history. None of those issues were ever decided "correctly" when they were first made law. It took dilligent change (albeit human suffering, which is unavoidable) after the fact.
Re:Soliloquy (Score:2)
I'm referring, of course, to the web of draconian and unconstitutional laws that criminalize the use of drugs by consenting adults in this country. (Ordinarily, I also incorporate gambling, prostitution, etc., in these posts, but I'll remain focused on drugs.)
Congress was finally forced to repeal the XVIIIth Amendment 14 years after it took effect, but they were forced into it by the upheaval of American society in the intervening years -- no one's thoughts on the matter had changed. It was simply that those in power were unable to force Prohibition down the throats of the general populace. Today, even with the example of Prohibition staring us in the face, the same fascist elements in the government continue to blindly fight to keep the intolerable status quo on drugs. They decry the problems of crime they associate with drugs, that are in truth caused only by the illegality of drugs.
But even with exploding prison populations, and the increasing numbers of medical marijuana laws being passed by local jurisdictions, the anti-drug establishment in this country will stop at no lengths to keep themselves in power -- even to the point of arresting citizens using marijuana legally in accordance with the laws passed in their locality. Instead of communicating with the jurisdictions responsible for the laws, which groups like the Drug Enforcement Administration claim are superseded by federal law, these jack-booted thugs attack individuals, continuing their practice of tactics of fear and intimidation to perpetuate their unwinnable "War on Drugs".
So we can see that, as you say, "it will all be sorted out afterwards" -- afterwards, time and time again, on issues that change infinitesimably from cycle to cycle. Nothing is ever solved.
Welcome to Slashdot.... (Score:5, Funny)
Hi, you must be new here. Welcome to
Re:Welcome to Slashdot.... (Score:1)
Didn't Sony already develop the x-ray camera? (Score:3, Interesting)
Engineers are now developing cameras that employ low-level radiation to "see" through clothing, walls or cars.
Wasn't there a Sony camcorder out a couple of years ago which could see through clothing in night vision mode with a special filter?
Re:Didn't Sony already develop the x-ray camera? (Score:5, Informative)
Sort of.. The SONY camera measured light in the IR spectrum and used that to enhance the images in low-light situations. If you enabled this option during the day, it would allow you to "see through clothes".. Of course, we're not talking about detail.. Just large scale features..
Be careful what you wish for ... (Score:3, Insightful)
good point :) (Score:2)
Re:WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO JON KATZ? (Score:2)
Yeah, but whether or not he'd actually say anything is a completely different story.
IP6 (Score:2)
Voter apathy (Score:4, Insightful)
Eventually, people would vote directly from the comfort of their own homes. The political apathy which has spread through western countries in recent decades would be reversed.
Why is it assumed that making it possible to vote online etc, is a cure for voter apathy? Sure, for a while we might see increased turnout by people who are considering venturing out to cast their vote, and the easy option swings it, BUT the reasons for voter apathy still exist & it will continue to increase, whilst people feel so disjoined by it all....
One of democracy's greatest virtues is its flexibility, but the changes about to be wrought by new communication technologies will stretch the adaptive abilities of western democracies to their limit.
But will it? How do these advances change the process of democracy? Will it make our governemnts more acountable, as suggested in the article? Though we like to complain in the west about corruption & spin, I like to think that the media do a good job of holding our politicians to account. Will it renew our ailing interest in politics? Maybe not - the nature of the web is that you have to go looking in the first place.
Interesting articles though...
Re:Voter apathy (Score:1)
Good point. I have several intelligent friends who refuse to vote. I cannot say that I understand them, and I certainly don't agree with them, but I am quite certain that being able to vote by internet will not change their minds. They are adamant about not voting.
One of these friends has a bumper sticker that says: If god had intended us to vote, he would've given us candidates.
Re:Voter apathy (Score:5, Interesting)
In the early days of the US, civil participation was an important aspect of political life, and everybody was meant to be actively following and participating in political life. The same occurs o nthe 'Net now, which promotes participation by several mechanisms, mostly social but also some technological The very idea of getting onto the 'Net and not getting involved in some project or discussion is absurd (and I'm talking about the 'Net, not AOL or some similarly media-blinkered version too many people use).
Politics in the US, and increasingly in European countries (i.e. the "old" democracies) involves less and less participation. Politicians actively *discourage* it - whenever citizens try to participate, they're damned. Participation is anethma to politics today. We exercise no real power over our governments because we only get the opportunity of one legitimate vote every two/four/five years (unless your government doesn't like you, like ethnic minorities in Florida). We exercise no real power over how they carry out their duties, nor over thier agenda, nor over how the agenda and results are published and perceived.
In a system where citizens have no power, and no part to play, it's no wonder they don't vote.
Re:Voter apathy (Score:4, Interesting)
I feel that internet voting would increase greatly 3rd party voting. Would that affect *overall* turnout, probably some, but if it can get a thrid party matching fund votes, it would be a GREAT force in American politics.
Instant runoff would have a similar, or greater affect, and the both together might actually make people think thier vote matters and we'd see bigger turnouts.
Then again, I can be really stupid at times =)
Just like all the other advances... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah. As opposed to using the vast increases in productivity to allow our corporate masters to extract more productivity from us in the same (or more) amount of time.
Just like all the other technological advances have.
--blob
Re:Just like all the other advances... (Score:3, Insightful)
Employers take what they can get. We're not given the choice. [washtech.org] We have to take it.
Also an editorial, not listed above (Score:2)
Internet Society (Score:2)
semantic web + p2p (Score:1)
Freedom of the Printing Press (Score:3, Interesting)
Now you have the rise of a medium that grants equal rights to anyone who can formulate a written argument. Thus the recent journalistic navel-gazing over the effect of bloggers and their role in the unmasking of Trent Lott.
Well, I see that as a good thing. Most of those who enjoy the "freedom of the press" have that right because they work for for-profit corporations. Which means that in reality their freedom of the press is limited by the need for profit. Therefore the right to "freedom of the press" has never been truly free until now.
The Internet has de-legitimized the claim of the traditional press to authoritative speech. That scares media outlets and governments to death, because they know that the time when they could control the public message is quickly becoming a thing of the past.
This is exactly why the Framers of the Constitution placed so much emphasis on the freedom of thought and expression. Without it, you have a citizenry that is enslaved because they are not allowed to think as free beings. After all, how can you act as a free citizen if you cannot think as a free citizen?
Therefore, if we as citizens can resist government/corporative efforts to limit our natural rights, we will see true freedom in our lifetimes. Free thought is ours by birth. Free culture is ours by birth. So resist the drive by government and corporations to enslave your thoughts and culture under the guise of "property." Teach the corporations and governments of the world that if the choice comes down to freedom of thought or them, they go.
Did they miss the most important one? Jobs? (Score:2)
whatever the future holds (Score:2, Funny)
The ironic thing is... (Score:3, Interesting)
Economist wondering from economics (Score:1)
Taking up the possible decline of first-world tech jobs as they go the way of factory labor (overseas) would be a more suitable topic for an "economics" magazine IMO. Sure, everything affects economics, but they should deal more with things that directly and clearly affect jobs and money. Internet voting is a topic that is way out there.
Social problems (Score:1)
More and more people can't stand each other while living in the same street or town, and that's a bad thing. If you have an opinion about something like politics, you'll always find people on the internet who think just like you. And that's far easier than to complain about it with people in your town.
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:3, Informative)
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:1)
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:1)
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:1)
Yeah, and the crocodile hunter cannot very well drive around the outback in a fscking Geo Metro can he. His use of an SUV is pretty well justified. How can a person justify a 28 year old woman who works at a law firm driving an SUV on city streets? The only justification that she can have is that she thinks SUV's are cool and trendy.
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:2, Funny)
Always interesting to see someone disprove global warming by using a local example. That's a bit like your average pimply faced McDonald's worker saying "There's no zits on my hairy ass... I have a great complexion!"
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:2, Informative)
Re:THE BIG ISSUE (Score:1)