by WendyGrossman (Author)
Yesterday's battles over internet turf were fought on the net itself: today's battles are fought in government committees, in Congress, on the stock exchange, and in the marketplace. What was once an experimental ground for electronic commerce is now the hottest part of our economic infrastructure.
In From Anarchy to Power, Wendy Grossman explores the new dispensation on the net and tackles the questions that trouble every online user: How vulnerable are the internet and world wide web to malicious cyber hackers? What are the limits of privacy online? How real is internet addiction and to what extent is the news media responsible for this phenomenon? Are women and minorities at a disadvantage in cyberspace? How is the increasing power of big business changing internet culture?
We learn about the political economy of the internet including issues of copyright law, corporate control and cryptography legislation. Throughout the book the emphasis is on the international dimensions of the net, focusing on privacy and censorship in the United States, Europe and Canada and the hitherto ignored contributions of other countries in the development of the net. Entertaining and informative From Anarchy to Power is required reading for anyone who wants to know where the new digital economy is heading.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 238
Publisher: New York University Press
Published: 28 Feb 2001
ISBN 10: 0814731414
ISBN 13: 9780814731413
Grossman brings a wealth of professional and personal experience to the material-and a clarity of style and analysis that is a welcome relief from both the hyperbolic prose of many Net boosters and the overwrought jeremiads of cyberphobes.
-ReasonA pleasant antidote to the breathless rhetoric one finds in many books and magazines devoted to computer culture.
-Technology ReviewThere is a lot to like about this survey, especially the diligent research and reading the author has invested in it. The endnotes are vast and informative...From Anarchy to Power gathers strengh as it goes along.
-The Christian CenturyVividly describes the virtual realm as a place of interconnecting communities every bitas complicated, exciting, and dangerous as any city.
-BooklistBoth newbies (newcomers to the Internet) and Netizens (old-timers) will find challenges and rewards in this witty, knowledgeable, and timely report from the electronic front.
-Publishers Weekly