Ronda Hauben on Sat, 1 Jan 2000 05:44:46 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> The Internet and Netizens and the New Millennium: Past as Prologue |
What will the new Millennium mean for the Internet and for the Netizens who have emerged with the development of the Internet? J.C.R. Licklider's research in the 1950s recognized the importance of the question of what should be the relationship between the human and the computer and set a foundation for time sharing and interactive computing. He proposed that the relationship should be one of human computer symbiosis, that is the human doing what the human could do best and the computer doing what it was most suited for in the partnership. Licklider then was invited to work at the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) in 1962. He set up the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) which spearheaded many of the outstanding changes that we have witnessed in the development of computers and networking and then internetworking in the past 40 years. Not often in people's lives do they witness the significant events that have occurred in the past 40 years of our past century. This includes the development of time-sharing and interactive computing with Project MAC and of other centers of excellence projects in the 1960s. These made it possible to replace the form of batch processing that was the computing paradigm until then with interactive computing and time-sharing. The work on time-sharing also led people like Donald Davies in Great Britain and others thinking. Davies realized that multiplexing could be applied to the transport of computer data as well as to the organization of an operating system. Davies had the idea for packet switching along with others like Paul Baran. By the later part of the 1960's Larry Roberts had been brought to IPTO by Robert Taylor. Roberts spearheaded the developments at ARPA that would make it possible to create the ARPANET as an early and outstanding example of packet switching technology and that would make a new form of computer and communications possible. The marriage of computers and communication by the early 1970s had countries and researchers around the world excited about the potential of computer networking. The ICCC'72 conference in Washington DC not only was the event that demonstrated packet switching would work to those who attended from around the world. The conference was also an interdisciplinary event with papers from researchers around the world. A number of those present realized that the significant developments in computers and in communications on their own would bring great change to the world. But the marriage of these developments would prove to be an especially important development. Among those at the conference, some predicted that computer networking developments would challenge government officials and all other institutions of society to make the promise they held possible. And they questioned whether the public would indeed benefit from these important developments or would only those already with the power benefit? Countries around the world were planning computer networks. Would it be possible to have these different networks interconnect? After the 1972 conference, Bob Kahn, was among those researchers thinking about the problem of interconnecting computer networks or the Multiple Networking problem that it was then called. Working with Vint Cerf, they took on to propose a philosophy and a design for a way to solve the problem of linking up diverse packet switching networks, without interferring with the technology of those networks. The philosophy was open architecture. Working to create a protocol that would make an Internet possible, Kahn and Cerf drafted their paper describing a new protocol for Internetworking, for the creation of a protocol that would be called Transport Control Protocol, or TCP (and evenually TCP/IP). The ideas for the new protocol were presented at a meeting in Sussex England to a group of researchers working on networking problems in Fall of 1973. And their paper describing TCP was published in May 1974. Kahn went ahead and created an internetting project at IPTO, by exploring how to link up a ground packet radio network and a satellite packet switching network with the ARPANET so they could all share resources. By 1975 he had connected them in a way to know that they would work, and by 1977 IPTO conducted a demonstrations of the TCP implementations that had been developed and a demonstration of internetworking showed it was possible to send packets to Great Britain and Norway and back to the US using the ground packet radio network, the satellite packet switching network and the ARPANET. By January 1983 there was a cutover to TCP/IP on the ARPANET. Actually the cutover took a bit of time to carry out, but by October 1983 it was possible to split the ARPANET, into the MILNET and the ARPANET networks and to have communication made possible across this early internet. Also by 1983 there had been a linking up of the ARPANET mailing lists with some Usenet newsgroups. In the mid 1980s there were Unix user groups around Europe using UUCP and Usenet to explore email and online discussions. And the Internet began to make communication possible among these diverse networks of users. By 1992 there were users around the world connecting to the Internet. And online research exploring the experiences of those users showed that a new social form was emerging online, the social form of the Netizen. That there were people who participated in the resource sharing that the Internet made possible, and they were finding that there was a vibrant and exciting new online community that was being developed. And they took on to make this new online means of communication available to others so they could benefit and contribute to it. Much has happened in the past 8 years, much that has spread this new medium of global communication around the world, and much that has shown that the new medium has some who don't understand its nature or the vision that has given it birth. There are some who are out to try to limit who benefits to those who feel that their money or power should give them special privileges to determine what the future of the Internet will be. But there are also those who are trying to carrying out the original vision of pioneers like JCR Licklider and Robert Taylor that access to the Internet should be a right for all not a privilege for the few. A contest is being waged. A contest that is tugging at the essence of the Internet. One manifestation of the contest has been the efforts by the U.S. government to try to turn over the publicly developed and important essential functions of the Internet like its protocol creation and development process, its domain name and numbering system and its root server system to a private corporation that has been created by the U.S. government. This would take away the public protection that is so important for these essential functions that can give controlling power over the Internet to those who are able to control this private corporation. And as one would expect there is a fierce battle on trying to seize such power by those who feel their gain is more important than the health and well being of the Internet and the global community it has created. There have been other contests in the developing life of the Internet. Some of these contests included the passage by the U.S. Congress of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) which would have limited the right of people to the global communication that the Internet makes possible under the guise that adults are to be limited to what might be appropriate to children. Online discussion and protest along with a lawsuit led to a court decision overturning the CDA and affirming the right of people online to participate in the global conversation that is so precious and that the Internet has brought into the world. There are many other examples of challenges to the Internet that have developed and many other examples of how those online who recognized the importance of the Internet and the communication it makes possible have been able to take on the challenges so that the Internet could continue to grow and flourish. What will be the future for the Internet and for the Netizen in this new millennium? The Internet and the Netizen are indeed some of what is important that has been developed over the past few decades that are prologue to the upcoming new millennium. What will the new millennium bring? How will the contest continue to unfold? A herald of the future is a conference I was invited to in Tampere, Finland in early December. The conference was on the topic of the role of the citizen in the coming new millennium. It was called citizen2000 and was sponsored by the European Union. (http://www.citizen2000.net) The seminar I was invited to participate in explored how the Internet can make possible new means of participation in the affairs of government for the citizen. The researchers who made presentations all were exploring what was actually possible with the new medium, and what were the benefits and the problems. If the Internet is to grow and flourish there may well be a necessity to explore how to increase the role of citizens in determining what will be the role that government will play in the future development of the Internet. It was quite special to see this research issue being recognized as important and explored at the citizen2000 conference in Finland. Below is the description of the seminar that was held in Tampere, Finland in early December. I wonder what others thoughts are as we enter this new millennium with respect to the important developments we are bringing with us from the past millennium and the challenges we will face in the next. Ronda Following is the description of the seminar held as part of the EU Citizens' Agenda NGO-forum 2000 in Finland, December 4th. E3. Civic Participation, Virtual Democracy and the Net What are the possibilities for more intensive democracy and participation while utilising internet and other new technologies? How can the internet facilitate local democracy? Finnish NGOs, Tampere-foorumi, Tampere Technology Centre Tampere Hall, VIP-room Languages: English A Digital Neighbourhood? The Vision of the Netizens? Public Sphere? If you are anxious to know more about these issues, take a closer view of the thematical seminar 'Civic Participation, Virtual Democracy and the Net'. In this seminar the matter in hand is the social impact of the so called information society. We will bring up for example the question of how one can encourage civic participation and create an active net community. We will also discuss the practices of virtual democracy and the problem of access. The seminar includes seven presentations and a panel discussion. In addition, there will be an interactive exhibition - a place where different kinds of net projects give food for thought. Speakers and their subjects Myrna J. Alejo: Information Technology and the Production of Democratic Ethos: the Philippine Case - How the uneven penetration of information technology affects the nature of "public sphere" in the Philippines; and how the philippine civil society is dealing with the problem of access. Ronda Hauben: Is the Internet a Laboratory for Democracy? The Vision of the Netizens vrs The E-Commerce Agenda - Why it is important for Netizens to participate in the contest being waged (as for instance: ICANN) over which strata of society will gain the benefit of the Internet and how the Internet provides the means for such participation. Steven Lenos: Networking for democracy: the digital future? - How organisations can use the Internet for (international) networking and how they are able to organise succesfull digital public debats. Jari Sepp Net participation - what can the City offer? - 10 years experience of work as a news repotrer in local newspapers and national tv-news - 12 years Head of Information of the City of Tampere, Finland He has acted as the chairman for two committees founded by the Association of Finnish Local Authorities, one creating the good practise for municipal information and the other one guidelines for municipal services presented over the Internet. In his presentation he will introduce some practical examples how the City of Tampere has developed civic participation via the Internet. We will hear how the Internet enables plan presentation, dialogue and lobbying, combined into the visual and functional opportunities provided by new media. Aija Staffans: Netted but not trapped. Local stakeholders on a digital neighbourhood forum constructing urban knowledge and planning - The main issue is whether a digital neighbourhood forum is able to bring together the municipality and local stakeholders (like inhabitants, citizen organizations, schools, kindergardens, shopkeepers etc.) in order to develop urban environment Lasse Peltonen & Seija Ridell: Citizen forums, virtual publicness and practices of local democracy: - The case of Tampere-foorumi (Lasse Peltonen) - Tampere-foorumi on the net (Seija Ridell) - The main issue is to describe the attempts, achievements and obstacles met by one local civic group in organizing opportunities for public interaction and dialogue - both in 'real life' and on the net - between city officials, politicians, economic actors and ordinary citizens. Civic Participation, Virtual Democracy and the Net # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net