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Death of Internet Predicted: Film at 11

Remik writes "The Register has a piece analyzing several threads of Lawrence Lessig's blog, and concluding that the Internet as we know it is dying. For anyone who reads the majority of YRO posts, Lessig's blog is one of the most important sites on the net." Another submitter summed it up well: 'Lessig is predicting that the days of the Commons of the Internet are over, and that as a result of FCC deregulation, the concentration of digital rights in the hands of just a few large media companies will kill the internet for good. Even former FOX and Vivendi executive Barry Diller has criticised the move.' We joke, but there are large elements of truth to Lessig's dour predictions.

34 of 546 comments (clear)

  1. Hah by B3ryllium · · Score: 4, Funny

    And they say *BSD is dying ... geez ... :)

    Maybe Al Gore can hurry up and finish Internet2?

    1. Re:Hah by B3ryllium · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, come to think of it, we're spawning a Neuromancer-style situation, where people have to be hackers to circumvent regulations.

      Hopefully "people" will be victorious over "government sanctioned actions".

  2. SPAM is more enemy to net. by Deadite · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think spam is more a danger to internet. I think folks will say hey I hear the Internet as full of spam I don't want to go online if it's just a big ad space. I don't know if that makes any sense or not but some people may say why the hell do I want to pay 20-45 bucks a month to get ads.

  3. Predicted death of the net is on a blog? by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 5, Funny

    Newspaper editorial on the death of print
    Movie-house trailer on why home DVDs will mean the end of film
    "The End Of The Book Printing Industry" as seen at Border's
    Puuuuhhhleeeeze! This is nonsense. It's buzzword fishing, it's -1 Flamebait
    Michael, YHBT, YHL, HAND

    --

    1. Re:Predicted death of the net is on a blog? by TopShelf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I second the motion - if anything, the recent attention given to blogs has legitimized a thoroughly uncommercial and decentralized news gathering force. Think of the Baghdad blogger, for example, who by himself provided a viewpoint on the war in Iraq that no monolithic news source could.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    2. Re:Predicted death of the net is on a blog? by Tony · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Marillion wrote: "It will be regretable that some good stuff about the Internet will be the victim of "improvements." Let's hope that some things make a comeback."

      This is funny. You take your nick from a band that is popular because of self-controlled destiny, popularization through the internet, and the ability to produce their own media.

      Marillion would not be where they are today without the open, free internet. Media companies would have kept them in Europe; here in the states, nobody would have heard of them, except the few die-hard fans that discovered them accidently overseas.

      They certainly would not have had the artistic freedom to produce and publish their own albums based entirely on support from fans.

      "C'est la Vie" has nothing to do with it. Getting hit with a car: that's life. Watching the car coming and not doing anything about it: that's stupidity.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  4. Technology will save the day by PD · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Or, at least I hope it will...

    Wireless networks are what we need. Whatever problems exist are at least partially because we don't own the wires. But citizens can have more control of a section of the spectrum, and we can build little networks with that.

    But who really said that the Internet has to be a bunch of commercial sites and spam-laden e-mail? If individual servers get too cumbersome to use, then they will be replaced with something else. When http and port 80 become nothing but a vast marketing wasteland, we can make something new. We've got our own publishing rights, so we don't have to eat what's shoveled to us.

  5. Why they have to kill the Internet. by doublem · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Media companies must make sure no artists gain popularity without their approval and control.

    Corporations need to ensure bad press and negative experiences with their products are buried.

    The media must present the "correct" view of the world. Dissenters must be kept quiet.

    "Your 15 minutes" must be in the form of a controlled "reality" show instead of a blog where you get people to boycott a company that screwed you over.

    Even though movie grade cameras and editing equipment are priced within the reach of middle class citizens, they must not be permitted to make movies that threaten the Hollywood mainstream, or at the very least they must be prevented from distributing them.

    There are more reasons, but I don't have time to type them now.

    --
    "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
  6. I don't think so... by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe the internet experience isn't living up for BabyBoomers, but find me a GenXer or GenYer who doesn't use the net. Hmmm...for the price of an ISP (POTS, wireless, or cable/DSL), you can talk to your friends through instant messaging for free (so to speak); you can download purchased or *creatively acquired* software, music, and motion pictures; and you always have the most up-to-date news vs. from television. Spam? You just delete it. At least you don't have to physically shred it like junk mail because you don't want credit card account numbers getting into the hands of prisoners sorting the trash before it arrives at the landfill. So how is this internet do-hicky dying? And sitting in front of a noisy computer hasn't proven to cause you brain cancer, unlike a cell phone... I'd rather have my computer and broadband access than television, wired or wireless phone access, and cable television...or radio...

    --
    "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
  7. Deja vu all over again by DreamerFi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think what he's painting is a "worst case" scenario. Reality will be different, and I cannot predict what it will be like, but it will not be as bad as he thinks. Most really innovative work still has to be done. Did anybody here predict the social influence Google would have? I think not.

    And to illustrate this with a recent development: iTunes. Conventional wisdom is that Apple seriously fucked up, the RIAA is going to sue Apple's pants off, and Apple's new iTunes Music Store will be shut down by the some seriously pissed off record companies.

    Kottke would like to believe an alternative theory. Apple had to know what they were doing with iTunes. Their engineers aren't stupid. They left the whole thing wide open and had to know how trivial it would be for developers to figure out the protocol and write apps to download the music directly.

    Things will be not develop in the way we are thinking now. Nevertheless, Lessig will remain a good read for quite a while!

    -John

  8. Dying? It's Dead Already... by tekrat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The "Web" died the moment companies started suing private individuals because those people got to the proper domain names first. Those corporations had zero foresight and should have had to do without. But nooooo, they sick'ed lawyers on everyone and everything until they got what they wanted, and then realising that they had this kind of power, started to "lobby" Congress into changing law to suit their needs.

    Consider the DMCA, which seems to serve no other purpose than to harass "the little guy", when a big corporation would like to roll over on him.

    Mind you, corporations would do it anyhow, but now they've made it legal, and are using your taxes to harass him -- they no longer need to spend their own money.

    Consider that half the people I know are now afraid to put up websites for fear that if they link to somone or say the wrong thing online, they will get sued.

    Thanks to spam, email has become near-useless, nobody uses usenet, and the web is controlled by the big boys.

    The internet died a while ago.

    You see that every time an AOL ad comes on TV.
    Only the media conglomerates have control. We're just hanging on to the fringes, like sailors clinging to the wooden remains of a destroyed ship. But the ship has indeed sunk, and we're just treading water until we too, sink below the waves of internet-trash.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  9. The internet is just changing by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Although it's always risky to argue from analogy, think of the current internet as the world prior to the arrival of the nation state. No borders, as such, freedom to go wherever, little control.

    The internet, as stateless entity, is dying, and being replaced by the internet as a paid-for, regulated utility.

    For example, if the U.S bans spam, the spammers can move offshore. All that's happened is that the spammers have moved to a place where the same regulations don't apply. What'll happen? Probably somthing like the ITU, where nations get together and agree on standards for sending information, and then establish tarrifs.

    Basically, the day is rapidly approaching when the internet will be like the current telephone or snail mail networks. Actually, it'll probably subsume them, and adopt most of their regulations. Then you'll have a collection of national intranets, with the internet being the scheme which negotiates communication among them.

    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
  10. Iraqi Information Minister Sez.... by Tsali · · Score: 4, Funny

    "The inter-net is being taken from the infidels! They will be boiling in their own blood! Our corporations, bless Allah, are overcoming them right now. As a matter of fact, you are not even on the inter-net now because it has indeed been shot down."

    "Go home and pray to your collective saviors. There will be much gnashing of teeth. Dogs and cats living together. Mass hysteria."

    "There will be more beautiful news tomorrow. Out of my press conference!"

    --
    This space for rent.
  11. Predictions vs. Possibilities. by I'm+a+racist. · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The things that Lessig talks about are certainly possible, perhaps even likely. However, I don't see the future coming out quite so bad.

    The average voter (or non-voter for that matter) doesn't really give half a hairy shit about the DMCA, fair use, divestiture of communications service, spectrum allocation, and so on. They probably never will. Outside of a few key issues (abortion, gun control), people just don't care about politics. Lots of people have their 'pet issue' (ie. /. readers and DRM) but most don't know or care about a large portion of the issues.

    Taking that into account, when you realize all the money being fed into our representatives, it seems that the laws will be written the way that the corporations want them. Maybe the technology companies will stand up to the media industry, maybe they won't. Let's, for now, assume that they won't. What this means is that consumers will lose all rights, with respect to media.

    Even if that does happen, I don't see it being enforced. What will happen is the media companies will push for prosecution of all the new "crimes". That's when people will start to care, because they don't want to be criminals (in general). Plenty of people who don't care about the RIAA/MPAA campaign against P2P found it pretty ridiculous to sue for billions of dollars.

    The only way said media conglomerates will be able to heavily prosecute these "crimes" is by convicing the public that they are indeed crimes. So far, they're doing a very poor job of that. Most people feel that they have a right to "steal" content using P2P networks. All the lobbying in the world isn't going to change that feeling. Maybe some clever marketing will help them, but trying to convince someone that they're obtaining 'free stuff' is not an easy task.

    Society, and almost any natural system, tends to settle into an equilibrium. There's a certain inertia that needs to be overcome in order to push out into some other stable region. The media industry is pushing really hard, but I just don't think they have the muscle to really pull this off. They can shake things up, but in the end, it'll probably settle back down again. Let's just hope they trow their collective back out in the process...

    <Disclamer>
    • I do, in fact, support the "criminalization" of certain things (ie. drug addicts are criminals).
    • I do have my own "pet" issues (ie. affirmative action is discrimination against whites).
    </Disclaimer>
    --


    Down with Saudi Arabia!!!
  12. Thankfully, this cannot happen by ajs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Woefully, it's likely to happen.

    Let me explain: Large ISPs are going to start to clue in that they can shape the Net by imposing restrictions on their users. As long as most people can surt the Web (through a proxy) and send/read mail (through approved servers), then this will work for said ISPs.

    Thankfully, while such things (and the later changes that will doubtless be made such as proprieterizing the protocols) will break the Internet as we've known it for the last few years, the Internet as we've known it for the last 20 years will continue on. MIT isn't going to roll over and play ball with AOL, ripping up the IP infrastructure that they've maintained for 20 years. You will still be able to run a Linux or BSD or Darwin box and connect to anyone who wants to talk IP with you.

    A few major revolutions like de-centralizing the DNS root might be required, but that's actually not much of a challenge, and there's no reason at all that universities world-wide could not get together and start Internet-prime and once again be the seed from which net Net grows.

    IP is your friend. Open standards are your friend.

  13. Email is Not a Disaster by e2d2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even if our Bayesian filters win the arms race against the spammers, in terms of quantity as well as quality of communications, email has been a disaster.

    Using this same logic you could conclude that snail mail (normal postal mail) is a failure. But yet it continues to thrive in various forms. Just because it doesn't meet utopian standards doesn't mean it's a failure.

    1. Re:Email is Not a Disaster by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Insightful
      When's the last time your 8-year-old kid got a piece of paper junk mail containing a color photo of people having anal sex?

      When's the last time someone sent you a check, but it didn't get to you because the post office mistakenly classified it as junk mail, and threw it in a dumpster?

  14. Some Truth, Some Hope by YllabianBitPipe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the internet as we know it is dying. Namely, being overrun by advertising and being taken over by large corporations. Spam is choking email. I think my spam to intentional email ratio is 20 to 1. Pop up ads are killing websurfing. And lastly, more and more information is being monopolized by Yahoo, MSN, AOL, or some other big corporation. It's harder and harder to get to the smaller, independent sites.

    None of the above should be a big surprise to anyone. But I think there are always ways out. I see glimmers of hope in programs that completely bypass the browser model, for example Watson ... why bother logging into MSN when you can get everything you need via a simpler user interface? Or RSS news feed browsers. Or the Apple music store. By having a specific program you get what you want, instead of having a generic browser looking at everything and leaving you to sort through it. Second, it's another layer above individual websites that the big companies can't compete with (yet). So I have hope.

    The web need not be limited to a web browser (as we know it) or web sites. Maybe it's time we break these metaphors. The web site can just serve up the info, formatting left to the user, programs interchangeable. Go XML.

    1. Re:Some Truth, Some Hope by an_mo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      20 to 1? I don't know what you are talking about. Perhaps you post your address everywhere you go. My spam/mail ration is exactly the opposite and I achieve that by registering to unimportant internet services with fake accounts or alternative accounts. The rest is handled by mozilla mailnews bayesian spam filtering. Popups are handled by mozilla just as well. Sure one popup occasionally gets through but it's no biggie.

      Is it harder to get independent news sources? Judging from slashdot's sources, it seems rather the opposite. Most of the stuff I read here would have been impossible to report/know/learn without the internet. I realize you are not talking about tech news, so why isn't there a successful general interest news site using the /. model? Perhaps because the need is not there yet. I find and obtain plenty of sources, most importantly I can find primary sources (judges' opinions, congressional debates, and what not), stuff that was unthinkable 10 years ago. And guess what I a use a browser to read them. Alternative means are welcome but I don't see any reason for pessimism here.

  15. Earliest "Imminent Death of the Net" sighting? by dsplat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Okay, the earliest sightings of smileys were found. How long will it take us to agree on when the earliest reference to Imminent Death of the Net Predicted was? I found one dating to April 11, 1991. Does anyone know of an earlier one?

    --
    The net will not be what we demand, but what we make it. Build it well.
  16. A couple of comments on the article by secolactico · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From the article:

    An architect friend tells me that email has become the biggest productivity drain in his organization: not just the quantity of attachments, but the mindless round-robin communications, requesting comments that get ignored. Email has become a corporate displacement activity

    Psh... this is hardly an Internet issue. It's more of a corporate-mail mentality. Spam is *the* internet-email problem.

    Basic web surfing means navigating through web sites whose inspiration for their baroque overdesign seems to have been Donald Trump's wedding cake, all the while requiring the user to close down dozens of unrequested pop-up advertisements.

    I believe this is only the case when you want to visit the page of the Smith Family from Anytown, USA, so you can see pics of their kids playing with the family dog.

    Self-Respecting sites that want to keep their audience/customers will have a sensible interface or lose to the competition.

    Users are not stupid.

    This is where I agree. See comment above.

    --
    No sig
  17. Re:As long as there are opponents to DRM ... by Xerithane · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As long as there are opponents to DRM and commercialization, the internet will never die.

    I'm not opposed to DRM. I think it's a perfectly reasonable tool that can be used to promote good things. For example, signing an applications source and allowing free distribution. It's what media companies want to do with DRM that's horrible. DRM can be PGP signatures or md5sums on source, to prevent trojans and "evil code" on the kernel level. DRM can also kill your rights. Until DRM is extensively used to excercise fair use, I will avoid ever supporting it. I see it as a tool.

    Commercialization is fine on the internet. Just stick to your .com's. Why the hell do companies have a right to a .org? A .net if they aren't a Network Service Provider. This is what is wrong with the internet.

    I hope that with IPv6, it is possible to setup an alternate internet. Managing our own DNS systems, that hold strict rules for what exactly can be under each domain and get an automated script to find possible offenses.

    The internet isn't dying, innovation on the internet is. People stopped doing innovative things with the internet since TCP/IP gaming and Flash became "cool"

    There are a few projects that make it different, like FreeNet and P2P applications, but those are going to become endangered. If the geeks unite, we can contribute to lobbyists (EFF, et al) and "campaign contributions" and hopefully keep these projects alive and promote proper innovation and the next step in networking.

    --
    Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  18. A very bad article by an_mo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can't believe what I have just read. An article supposedly reporting the death of internet coming from the words of Lawrence Lessing that cites Lessing's words only once (not even linking to it), in reference to his worries about media concentration not stopped by the net.

    Then, the article goes on an on with self-referencing quotes (most from the register) complaining about spam, google bombers and whatnot, all of which are not evidence and will not cause the death of the internet, and none of which were connected by Lessig to the death of the internet.

    Most people get flamed on /. for not reading the article. In this case do yourself a favor, skip it and for future reference, and especially skip Orlowski's (the author) articles

  19. On the Al Gore thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This has really become as distorted as the McDonald's hot coffee lawsuit. Please read this for the lowdown behind the wisecracks.

  20. The Internet works just great by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'm very satisfied with the way things work today. I mostly use the Internet for its original purpose - quick access to technical information.
    • Today, I used Google to find some information on avalanche diodes. I found a new supplier, and a new part, I hadn't known about, and I called them. Before the Internet, I wouldn't have heard about them until the annual components directory, EEM, came out. This leads to a promising approach to a problem that's been unsolved for years.
    • I looked up some patents, using the USPTO's search engine. I used to have to drive to Sunnyvale and look at microfiche for hours to do that.
    • I put up a technical paper on our in-house web site, and sent an E-mail to my team to tell them to review it.
    • I answered a request from a Stanford professor for job descriptions for summer students. That reply refers them to our web site for most of the information, so I don't have to make up or send out handouts.
    • Early this morning, my financial analysis system, Downside, updated itself using the latest data from the Securities and Exchange Commission 10-K filings. The update took place automatically, and that system has worked for a year with minimal attention. You used to have to order that information by mail, and it took weeks.

    All this works fine. Where's the problem?

    The Internet isn't about shopping.

  21. Re:Settle down by realdpk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think you miss the point. People are getting sued for putting up websites that say bad things about other companies. They're getting sued for writing search engine software. They're getting sued for, as he pointed out, registering domains for their own personal family names.

    Email is nearly worthless for most people - I'm at about 1:50::real email:spam. We're to the point that people are running software to filter mail for them, software which can tag non-spam as spam - a worse problem than getting the spam itself. But, people are desperate enough to restore email's worth that they'll put up with that sort of thing.

    You don't get any spam - I hope you realize that you're a part of a very small minority (you may also want to contact your MX admin, the mail server could just be down ;) ).

  22. Not sold. by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's easy to say "there's this problem and that problem and this other problem here, man the whole thing's just totally fucked!", reality is never that oversimplified.

    Email is being destroyed by SPAM: So.. people are just turning off their computers? No! There's forums, there's instant messaging, and there's chat. If that's not enough reason to calm down, then consider that SPAM will force email to evolve to be more secure. Heck, just the other day I had to fill out a challenge in order to get a message to somebody. Sorry, I don't see this as reason for people to leave the net.

    Google's getting flooded with crap: And Google's not going to work to fix that?

    Tasteless web design and pop-ups make people leave: Cable TV has 70 channels and people have trouble finding stuff to watch. Yet, the few things they do like make it all worth it. Why is the net different?

    The Internet means sitting at noisy and unreliable machines that would land any self-respecting consumer manufacturer with a class action suit: Uh okay. First off, computers aren't that unreliable. As a matter of fact, I think most people would agree they've improved considerably since 95. Remember the days when you'd get randomly disconnected from the net and you'd have to dial up again? Thanks to broadband, that's no biggie. Remember the Windows 95/98 days where you had to reboot at least once/twice a day to be productive? 2000, XP, and Linux have killed that problem. The standards on the internet have improved, so there's not so much in terms of "Oh you have to have this browser, or that plugin, etc". Fewer hiccups. It's even becoming hard to find broken links on the web. They're there, but in the olden days you used to cross your fingers and pray this link works.

    So yeah, some annoyances about the net have been brought to light. However, predicting the death of the internet is ridiculous. Humans have a way of overweighing negatives and underweighing positives. "Hmm this new job pays more money, but I like the people at my current job and I'd probably die from missing them so much!" With all the problems he's listed, he's skipped over a few things:

    - People have friends/communities on line.
    - The internet has useful information and files available. Great for pursuing hobbies.
    - There's still plenty to explore.
    - The world is full of news (like the war in Iraq) that people want to be up to date on.

    None of the problems he's listed will nullify any of the above points which are critically important to a LOT of people.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  23. *CLINK* by ebh · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's the sound of the nickel I get every time someone predicts the death of the net.

    I paid off my car with the proceeds from the non-death of USENET. I'll probably pay off my mortgage before the Internet truly dies.

  24. Re:dude... by extrasolar · · Score: 4, Funny

    Dude...this is slashdot we're talking about...they still think First Post is funny.

  25. point by point answer to the article by newsdee · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Considering that the Internet has been designed to withstand atomic holocaust, it would be ludicrous to predict its death just because of some media control on the ISPs. The points made to support the claim fall down under scrutiny. They seem to apply only to a a very limited range of ignorant users (I'm not being elitist, I'm talking the "I broke my cup holder" kind):

    1 - "email unusable because of spammers"
    A point which ignores the simple possibility of creating filters in any modern mailer to move your "trusted" sources to a specific directory, and ignore the rest. Of course, if you keep your modem connection your downloads will be slow. Time to upgrade.

    2 - Google has problems with crap content
    Time to stop clicking the "I'm feeling lucky" button and browse through results. Also, it would help to use advanced tools to refine your search. Site is bad? Click back on your 4th mouse button and keep looking.

    3 - Popup blocking:the vast majority of IE users don't have that luxury, and their patience has already been tested to the limit
    So, they are saying that because users don't have a clue, they will stop using the Internet? Suddenly this reminds me of the survey made in the US some weeks ago...

    4 - Internet means sitting at noisy and unreliable machines
    Mini-ITX 500Mhz fanless motherboards, customized linux distro (locked) for reliability. Voila, safe, noiseless, reliable netbox!

    And finally:

    5 - What's dying is the idea that the Internet would be a tool of universal liberation
    Freedom requires a minimum of effort and knowledge. You have to program that VCR to be free to see the show at a specific time.

    So, in short, this article is predicting the death of the Internet for people who doesn't have a clue on how to turn on a computer and have no intention to learn it (reference to the US survey done a while back, obviously)... I'll let you draw your own conclusions.

    Bonus: map of the internet :-) The Internet could live without the US. And at worst, some underground ISPs will still remain. It would be slow maybe, but it would work.

  26. Isn't happening by GCP · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Those with the historical perspective of a mayfly combined with "progressive" political indoctrination (nobody hates progress more than progressives) see every local downtick or potential for problems as signs that the world is falling apart.

    We have more choices in music and easier access to it than ever before in history. We have more books to read. People in the wilds of Montana now have a greater selection available than residents of Manhattan had twenty years ago.

    When I started using email, it was literally a tool of the military industrial complex. Now even children regularly use it and there's so much "power to the people" that it's as if everyone in the movie theater were given his own megaphone.

    And I just love the endless blather about dissenters being kept quiet in this age of personal megaphones. Sure, if the world isn't paying rapt attention to me, then it must be the fault of some vast right-wing conspiracy silencing dissent. Yeah, what else could it be?

    --
    "Those who have never entered upon scientific pursuits know not a tithe of the poetry by which they are surrounded."
  27. Re:As long as there are opponents to DRM ... by SacredNaCl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The internet moves data from point A to point B, mostly without gatekeepers. What Lessig is talking about is that cable companies have been redefined as "information services" and soon so will telco's ISP service. Once that happens, it's no longer an issue of the "internet moves data from point A to point B" .. It's the "internet moves data that the gatekeepers approved from point A to point B".

    I honestly think we need to go the other way. Everyone ought to be able to run their own server, we don't need gatekeepers, and there isn't a shortage of bandwidth (just IP space.. Which IPv6 should take care of). I see no fundimental reason that we can't have a situation where everyone is on the same level with T1-speed service up and down. Yes, lawyers from greedy corporations will still sue, threaten, harass, and bankrupt a few unlucky people. Always has been that way... But it's a better vision than entire blocks of addresses disappearing.

    ^^^^That has already happened in some states.

    --
    Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
  28. Mosaic Killed the Internet by reallocate · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ..and Netscape, too.

    I say that with tongue only partially in cheek. Consider that the Internet had been around for some years prior to Mosiac and, more importantly, Netscape, opening the net to a profliferating number of Windows users. Prior to that, the net was a relatively small community with high barriers to entry. Those barriers -- essentially, the skills necessary to use Unix --blocked the net's development into a populist medium with enormous financial potential.

    The browser, of course, changed all that. Browsers drastically lowered the barriers of entry, allowing people wiht little of no computer skills to move files across the net, send and receive email, chat online, search archives, etc., while avoiding Unix tools like ftp, mail, gopher, and the rest.

    Whatever the net was before the browser, it wasn't considered a medium. People actively participated in the pre-browser net, as tool users and community members. They did not passively view content via a device that has more in common with television than anything else. The browser made the net a medium. A medium with billions of potential consumers.

    The shifting of the popular frame of reference from "community" and "users" to "viewers" and "consumers" marks the awareness that money could be made by creating net content and controlling access to it. Once that happened, the net became subject to the same economic forces that, absent government regulation, have fostered the increasing concentration of media ownership across the spectrum. Without countervailing action by the government, media ownership will concentrate in inverse relation to the size of a given medium's audience. I.e., the larger the potential market, the greater the tendency for an ownership oligarchy to develop and control that market.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  29. flight path analogue by alib001 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's like living under a flightpath: at first, you can't deal with all the jet planes, but after a while you don't even realize they're there.

    Good analogy but to extend it: you probably wouldn't choose to live under a flight path without good reason in the first place.

    If your first experience of the web was a deluge of deafening popups/unders/overs/whatever, as is common with some sites these days, then you mightn't bother with it after that. Which is especially true of the people that are offended by the porn.

    Those that have been around for a while have learned to adapt and deal with these "jets" and other annoyances but there's a certain amount of skill to getting a good SNR from the internet nowadays.