What The Net is Doing to You 174
Bart writes "The BBC reports One of the world's first research centres dedicated to studying the social, political and economic effects of the net has opened in Oxford" I've offered to trade CowboyNeal to them as a research subject for a case of beer. I think studying the effects of the internet on him will save lives. See? Someone is thinking of the children.
Effects of the Net (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Effects of the Net (Score:2, Informative)
If you want some links on the Internet and politics, check out my "e-democracy resources" flyer: http://www.publicus.net/articles/edemresources.htm l [publicus.net]
You can also join DO-WIRE: http://www.e-democracy.org/do [e-democracy.org]
Here are some recent subject lines from the archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/do-wire@tc.umn.edu/ [mail-archive.com]
[DW] Vox Populi, Online and Downtown - NYTimes Article, Steven Clift
[DW] Die Online-Kampagnen der Parteien Event - Berlin - 19 Oct. 2002, Steven Clift
[DW] Correction - Oct 1 - Re: [DW] Die Online-Kampagnen der Parteien, Steven Clift
[DW] E-Gov Conference - Korea - 6-7 Nov 2002, Steven Clift
[DW] [IP] Student Blogs, School Cracks Down (fwd), Steven Clift
[DW] Carnegie Mellon Team Wins $2.1 Million to Build Online Forum forCitizen Deliberation (fwd), Steven Clift
[DW] Online Campaigning 2002: A Primer - Institute for Politics, Democracy and the Internet, Steven Clift
[DW] Publication - Making a case for local e-government (fwd), Steven Clift
[DW] Paris, Warsaw, Vilnius, Lisbon - Clift Speaking Schedule, Future Requests, Steven Clift
[DW] New Public Sphere: Technology and Politics in Sweden 1969-1999 - Lars Ilshammar PhD Dissertation, Steven Clift
[DW] Parliamentary E-Democracy Inquiry, Key Documents - State of Victoria, Australia, Steven Clift
[DW] US Election 2002 - Senate Campaign E-mail Lists - Wellstone at 25,000, Steven Clift
[DW] GILC Alert - China, Vietnam, Egypt, Iran ... and more, Steven Clift
[DW] Recycling Day - Two Items, Steven Clift
[DW] Voting Technology Glitches in Florida Primary, Steven Clift
[DW] MyBallot.net - New service from E-Democracy - details and press release, Steven Clift
[DW] Netactivism-Oriented Conference Calendar, Steven Clift
[DW] UK Political Participation Online Survey Results - From ERSC, Univof Salford, Steven Clift
Interesting, but how much will it proove? (Score:1, Insightful)
I think that this study will be outdated as soon as it is written.
Re:Interesting, but how much will it proove? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Interesting, but how much will it proove? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Interesting, but how much will it proove? (Score:2)
It's not a study. It's a research centre. It will probably produce studies.
Research on the geek creature should be next.... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Research on the geek creature should be next... (Score:1, Funny)
Now, with that out of the way, let's discuss what it may be about eating other things than pizza that causes all these heart problems.
well... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:well... (Score:1)
Normalization of Sexual 'Deviancy' (Score:5, Insightful)
While the above post was joking, the idea is true. The internet has done more to make sexuality and sexual practices that were 'deviant' before the mid 1990's into more normal every day things.
In some respects this is very good. People who were otherwise unable to express themselves now have an outlet. People can find partners and build relationships that they would never have had a chance to in the past.
In some respects this is very bad. People who are truly sick-- those who sexually molest children to get their jollies-- are lulled into a sense of normalcy by the apparent 'commonness' of their illness.
Re:Normalization of Sexual 'Deviancy' (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Normalization of Sexual 'Deviancy' (Score:2)
And don't forget, it's also okay for her to take a crap in your mouth too!
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Re:Normalization of Sexual 'Deviancy' (Score:2)
You might want to warn her the first time you do it though...
A conspiracy of perverts committing perversions (Score:2)
It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:1, Interesting)
Modern society is learning the hard way that you can't encourage perversion and expect people to act morally. When we all grasp this basic truth, the world will be a lot better off.
I'm bound to be flamed to death for this. Sometimes the truth is difficult, unpopular, and publicly termed 'intolerant.' It needs to be told nonetheless.
Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:1)
Very insightful. Please start whenever you're ready.
Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:1)
Do you only fuck your wife missionary style? ... and then pray to god for forgiveness after?
Just because sex embarrasses the oldfarts that write religious books doesn't make it evil.
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Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:3, Insightful)
Homosexuals don't get to choose who they're attracted to any more than heterosexuals do. My advice to you is to go find a gay or lesbian group, get to know some of its members, and hopefully you'll learn that they are, in most ways, the same as rest of us.
But then, that idea probably scares you, doesn't it?
Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:2)
Let's face it, sexual tendencies and related feelings in humans aren't there because it is evolutionarily useful to look at pr0n or have homosexual relations, just as the receptor sites in neurons aren't shaped the way they are in order to bind to LSD.
Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:3, Interesting)
You can find a study to point out the good merits of just about anything.
None of this silly crap really matters though.
Homos arn't nearly as much a threat as all the "good christian people" driving around in their SUVs, breeding like rabbits (condoms are the devil too ya know!), wasting resources, and then voting for their government to blast 2nd and 3rd world countries off the map to sustain their way of life.
Atleast pr0n freaks are only hurting themselves.
Predation probably more genetics than reading (Score:2, Insightful)
Reference?
> A few months ago, some pervert broke into a private home 50 miles north of mine in the middle of the night and kidnapped a preteen girl.
"Until the terrible events of June 20, Russell and Andrea Yates and their five children were the kind of family that a Ronald Reagan might have pointed to as a model for America, or that might have been paraded on the platform at a Republican national convention: responsible, professional father; "stay-at-home mom" and home-school teacher; well-scrubbed, neatly dressed, smiling children--a tribute to "traditional family values," as envisioned by the Christian right."
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/jul200
So do you call Christians "immoral perverts" since Andrea Yates was one? Maybe the Bible made her do it?
From my own review of the evidence, it seems to me that people who prey on other people generally have biochemical problems, probably mostly related to genetics. Certainly some drugs & experiences can exacerbate these problems (such as Yate's religious experiences that led her to claim her kids were possesed), but ultimately, there is simply something medically wrong with a human predator, blaming other folks who are superficially like them clouds the issue: just because a Christian drowned her kids doesn't mean that Christians tend to drown their kids. Nor do homosexuals tend to abuse children.
The fact is, folks who have biochemical problems tend to latch on to some experience in their life as the source of these problems, be it hearing about the devil in church or seeing pr0n on the 'net, these things tend to be _SYMPTOMS_ of an underlying biochemical problem, not CAUSES.
Its easy to blame the problem on some behavior we don't like for our own reasons (I tend not to enjoy the company of religious rightists, for instance) but the fact is that people who have tendancies toward doing violence to other people need to either learn to control those tendancies themselves or be put away. It's that simple.
As far as 'perversion' being the cause of violence, children were abused, people were raped, even back when folks who were 'different' were generally ostracized if not burned & I'm not sure the evidence suggests that there was less predatory violence in the past than there is today.
For instance:
History of Rape: A Bibliography
http://www.geocities.com/history_gu
Re:It is not 'deviancy' - it is 'perversion' (Score:2)
His point, poorly made, was not that the concept of society is fictional, bur rather that any given social structure is a fiction, existing only in the minds of those involved. A society is not a thing the way a house is a thing. If you have people, and they build a house, and then the people all die, the house still exists. If you have a society of people, and the people all die, the society no longer exists.
Re:Normalization of Sexual 'Deviancy' (Score:1)
Re:Normalization of Sexual 'Deviancy' (Score:1)
You just have to drag yourself away from your 'puter once in a while. I look forward to getting out of my somewhat comfortable computer chair, and onto my very comfortable sofa to read a deadtree book.
Granted, I seem to be buying anthologies more often these days (currently reading the Verner Vinge collection). It's a sign of the (accelerating) times that people only have patience for compressed info with so much out there.
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Whoa... (Score:1)
Re:Whoa... (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes. There it is. They know better than you what you should be done with the net.
Lots of people are thinking of the children... (Score:1, Offtopic)
www.thinkofthechildren.co.uk
Sure, it's off topic, but I have karma to burn.
Re:Lots of people are thinking of the children... (Score:1, Offtopic)
FAO : Moderators (Score:2)
Moderators,
Have you had an irony bypass today ?
The link is to a parody of mass media hysteria currently being stired up in the UK by the low-end tabloids and minor celeberaties about the 'corruption of children' by the Internet.
In my humble opinion, this is frighteningly ontopic for this article.
Political Debate Indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Political Debate Indeed (Score:3, Funny)
I think the idea is... (Score:1)
Re:I think the idea is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Pardon? Direct access? You mean being able to send an email to your local MP/governor/député? People have always been able to do this with snail mail. By "information about political topics" i guess you mean the stuff that newspapers and TV news have been reporting for years. Direct access to information is hearing it from the horses mouth, not reading it on Yahoo news.
I regret to say that the common man has no more direct access than, say, 20 years ago, especially the common man that doesn't have internet. All that has happened is the "lazy man" has found a way to send his opinions and read other people's without getting out of his house. I don't necessarily think of this as a good thing since the opinions of a great deal of people that cannot be pestered to go to the trouble of expressing them outside of their own homes are often, sadly, not worth listening to.
The change in political activism will, I think, be felt essentially by the broadening of the divide between people who read about things on the web and mouth off on Slashdot and those who, because they can't (no internet) or won't (having real beliefs) do this, get out and try and change things.
Got a mirror? (Score:2)
Sort of like posting to Slashdot?
Direct access (Score:1)
Case in point: Back when I lived in NC, I signed up to be on my Senator's [senate.gov] email mailing list. Even though I've moved to another state, I still get the messages, which include info like when he'll be appearing on various news shows and what cities in NC he'll be visiting that week.
I think it's the ability to get out timely information like that where the internet beats out traditional media. Newspapers and snail mail are more expensive and slower, TV and radio are here-and-gone so if you didn't write that information down, too bad. The internet is uniquely fast and long-lasting.
Re:Political Debate Indeed (Score:1)
But juxtaposing "could help improve political debate" with a picture of a demonstrator attacking a policeman sounds more like the customary addition of irony, whether it improves the story or not. I sometimes wonder whether budding journalists or presenters at the Beeb have to take some sort of entrance examination to demonstrate they can do this.
Re:Political Debate Indeed (Score:2)
Ummm, so it's OK if he puts his shirt back on?
Re:Political Debate Indeed (Score:1)
English debate (Score:2)
Social Engineering (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Social Engineering (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Social Engineering (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Social Engineering (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Social Engineering (Score:1)
Its now control vs freedom, but both sides are still confused about who is on their side.
E.g. 'black shirt'-anti-globalization anarchists and net-libertarian anarchists haven't figured out how to join up yet too well. And Pat Robertson and NOW really have to hold their nose when they join up to try to deny people their porn.
Surely this kind of study is redundant? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Net lowers the cost of communication.
This lets people create much larger and more efficient network.
Activities that depend on such networks (research, digital theft, collaborative research, free software development, certain kinds of commerce) have and will continue to boom.
Activities that depend on the high cost of communications (old media, encyclopedia salesmen, and other information cartels) have and will continue to decline.
This seems to be stating the obvious... what else will a study turn up? That we are evolving resistance to RSI?
Re:Surely this kind of study is redundant? (Score:2)
Look: human society is built on communications.
Communication defines what we are, what we can do.
People hunger for ways to communicate, and the Net gives them this.
Of course, no-one knows what the actual effects will be on our societies.
So maybe a study would be interesting to some extent.
But it's not hard to make good and accurate predictions...
Just look at current barriers to communication. Then imagine them gone!
Reach anyone you want, anytime you want, for almost no cost, anywhere in the world. This is where we are heading.
Me and the Net (Score:5, Funny)
Search engines are my friends!
So much data. So little HD space...
Cliff Stoll had some comments on this... (Score:3, Informative)
Check out the realvideo (yeah sorry) technetcast presentation here [ddj.com] . It's refreshing, to the point and funny. And oh so typically Cliff Stoll-ian. :)
Re:Cliff Stoll had some comments on this... (Score:2)
He also has the mannerisms of a hyperactive squirrel.
Re:Cliff Stoll had some comments on this... (Score:2)
a hyperactive squirrel on the virge on overdosing on caffeine you mean. But yes, Cliff is wise. He's also handy. Check out his Klein bottles [kleinbottle.com]
Far from showing any concrete value (Score:2, Insightful)
My 2gilders
d
Re:Far from showing any concrete value (Score:1)
Shock horror! An Institute holding it's LAUNCH CONFERENCE [oxfordevent.com] hasn't produced any results you've heard of yet...
I mean, give them a break, they haven't finished taking the plastic wrapping off their office chairs and you're demanding results already!
Re:Far from showing any concrete value (Score:1)
Am I the only one... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Am I the only one... (Score:1)
Eli Noam (Score:3, Insightful)
This is why I hate these social-engineering dweebs. It can never be enough that something is just there and people use it. They think that the common man is too stupid to "understand the ramifications" and that there has to be broad and sweeping "policies" on what to think of it and how to use it.
I'll blame it on leftists, you can blame it on whoever.
Re:Eli Noam (Score:1)
i.e. -- we need to pay politicians and bureaucrats to tell us what to do in cyberspace... the one place where the 1st Amendment should reign supreme...
Speak for yourself, I'm looking for motives (Score:4, Insightful)
Hmm, last I checked, I don't have a 1st Amendment in my Constitution, and "cyberspace," being, as nearly as I can define it, not really a "place" at all so much as a metaphor for a place, doesn't de facto or de jure fall under completely US jurisdiction (no matter what you all might think cough Sklyarov cough), that's an extremely Americocentric way of putting it.
Now free speech, on the other hand, freedom of the press, perhaps, and certainly multilateralism and international cooperation, I'll go for.
In any case, we don't need stodgy academics, consolidationist free-market wet-dream media moguls, or anyone else turning the internet into television with fewer moving parts (there's a reason I don't watch television!) -- nor in preaching the scripture that the freedom and openness of the internet are an illusion that should be dispelled as soon as possible (to what end?).
As with all agendists of every stripe, I have to ask what this guy's ulterior motives are. Can some kind Slashdotter with some time on their hands find out who's (which media company, dare I venture?) paying him?
Yeah, right! (Score:2, Funny)
Who else thinks these guys just want to view pr0n, visit chatrooms and play games all day?
Sounds like a research grant I would think up :)
What the Net Did To Me (Score:5, Funny)
Now, The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes? Classic!
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Damn the Emperor!
think of the children (Score:2)
Why the Brits didnt invent the net (Score:2)
Too much academic naval watching. This stuff already happened five human years ago, or 35 "Internet years" ago. Excerpt from article:
"But academics are starting to find out how important an agent of social change the internet is, the opportunities it presents for researchers and how to frame policy and practice to cope with its associated changes."
Any 15 year old kid could could have told this five years ago. Adults, especially academics, are clueless.
Re:Why the Brits didnt invent the net (Score:1, Funny)
> five years ago.
15 year old kids will tell you lots of things. The trick is simply this - knowing what nugget of truth lies in the 10,000 other completely irrelevant things they'll tell you about fashion trends and who's going to be with whom like for-ever.
> Adults, especially academics, are clueless.
As one of my former teachers would say: "Hey you! Quick! Move out, get a job, and raise a family while you still know everything!"
Re:Why the Brits didnt invent the net (Score:2)
I think you'll find he means Donald Davies, the inventor of the packet switched Network, and not Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the Web.
The Net (Score:1)
Does this statement make sense? (Score:5, Insightful)
Does anyone else see a logical flaw in that argument? It's not like knowledge == control. If knowledge was measurable in quantity and quality, then the statement might make sense. But I've yet to see compelling proof that such measurement is practicle or desireable. Since when did we have control over technology? The statement in that context almost implies we have control over "it" and that some how we will loose "control over it."
It seems like they still have a lot of work to do, like defining what "it" is and how to go about measuring "it". Otherwise, it will just be a truck load of political jargons.
Re:Does this statement make sense? (Score:1, Interesting)
However, knowledge most certainly is control.
Do we have control over technology? I can certainly control my VCR, and I have the ability to stop it from blinking 12:00 if I so choose. (I'm lazy, and rarely do.)
Do we have control over nuclear energy? The average citizen doesn't (Thank goodness!), but I'd argue the fact that nuclear power plants and nuclear weapons, harnessing the power of the atom, demonstrate control.
Who controls the net? Not politicians. Not corporations. Not yet. For the time being, end users still control the net. Why? Knowledge. Look at the RIAA's doomed campaign against file sharing. They can kill Napster, but can they kill Kazaa? If they kill that, can they kill IRC? FTP? HTTP? The cat of knowledge is out of the bag in terms of that battle, and the users have thus won, and are in control.
Re:Re:Does this statement make sense? (Score:1)
Do we have control over technology? I can certainly control my VCR, and I have the ability to stop it from blinking 12:00 if I so choose. (I'm lazy, and rarely do.) Do we have control over nuclear energy? The average citizen doesn't (Thank goodness!), but I'd argue the fact that nuclear power plants and nuclear weapons, harnessing the power of the atom, demonstrate control.
But one could play devil's advocate and argue that all things considered, human's do not have control. Someone could play a trick on you and set your VCR to 12:00 when you're not looking. Control at best is temporary. The article also implies control is a state that is maintainable with sufficient knowledge, which it obviously isn't. But that's my opinion, which by no means is true.
Re:Re:Does this statement make sense? (Score:1)
(hmm... that didn't make much sense).
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Biblical Analogy... (Score:2, Interesting)
But these bums who obsess on controlling the internet and all knowlege would be like a Bureaucrat, a Politician, and an Entrepreneur who entered the Garden, kicked G-d out and set up Garden of Eden Apples Lmt. They would then eat apple-sauce, apple cider, and apple apples.
Meanwhile GOAL would contract out to the timber industry for sawdust and the slop industry for protein, and use a Red #5 and a factory to produce Consumer Renewable Apple Protien-Supplement for consumption by the general populace.
Ohhh, and somewhere along the way, they would also convince everyone that due to G-d's absence, they in fact were G-d.
Gold Member (Score:2, Funny)
Austin Powers: "Well it's called the internet, and it's completely revolutionized the way we live and access vital information. For example have a look at this...
monkey.mpg [methodshop.com]
Foxy: "Wow... now that's vital information."
Austin: "I know, it's amazing!"
mole.sig
The Net (Score:1)
Thanks, Eli (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, is *that* why we need to be told what to do? For DEMOCRACY?
Eli Noam [columbia.edu] is an academic who moonlights as a beurecrat. Based on his webpage, he doesn't seem to advocate censorship exactly - he wants to somehow use regulation to encourage people to talk one another when they have diverse social backgrounds. This is a laudable goal, and I'm certainly no anti-government nut - but this is a stupid target for regulation. Like regulation to make people be nice.
He complains about centralization of information. This has NOT been my experience with the web - EXCEPT for academic journals. If he wants regulation to require peer-reviewed academic journals to make their content available for free online; well, that would be great. I'd support that 100%. A journal that wants money shouldn't publish publically funded research.
The fact is - the protocols (TCP/IP, http/html) fascilitate free, open and DIVERSE exchanges of communication. I can't think of any changes I'd make that would encourage people to interact with people of diverse experience. If there were improvements to these fundamental protocols, there would some justification in legislating them (you'd get them no other way), but I don't think his goals are well enough defined, or the effects well enough understood, to even talk about this as an option at this juncture.
His op-ed pieces [columbia.edu] are particularly enlightening if you really care what he thinks.
Re:Thanks, Eli (Score:1, Informative)
CowboyNeal as a research subject? (Score:1)
Only Research Center?? (Score:3, Informative)
http://dir.yahoo.com/Social_Science/Science__Te
Seriously...most places that do cultural analysis of science are also looking at the effects of the internet.
Re:Only Research Center?? (Score:2, Informative)
Indeed! At the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto, this sort of examination is "standard fare" in our graduate courses, and for our post-grad fellows. In fact, Marshall McLuhan was doing this sort of investigation nearly 40 years ago, in looking at the cultural and societal effects of instantaneous, multi-way communications around the world.
In 1969, for example, executives at IBM thought he was crazy when he explained how there would be networked computers in every home, and how we would be able to buy groceries and other household items online!
Disabled (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Disabled (Score:2)
True
Actually that reminded me of something I read a while back, might have been an "I, Cringely". Basically there was a guy who due to some physical disability would not be able to hold down a regular job and so would probably be a financial burden on his family and society. Instead he got onto Ebay and is now the primary earner of the family, trading catering equipment on Ebay. Something like that anyhow.
Personally, the biggest advantage the net has for me is that I'm able to argue with people much farther afield than I would have been previously so have much more interesting arguements. It also gives me free and easy access to Buffy fanfic, especially femslash.
Stephen
ObQuestion (Score:3, Funny)
The net. (Score:3, Funny)
It taught me that humanity itself is plagued with idiots; not just the populace of the United States.
On the plus side, because of the net, I learned what real music sounds like. On the down side, the RIAA is now more determined than ever before to shove crap into my ears, all because of the net.
I think, however, that the most important thing that has happened to me because of the net is this: Because of the internet, I've been able to 'own' camping bitches all the way over in France.
Cheese eating quad-camping surrender monkeys.
It's the economy, stupid (Score:3, Funny)
Then we ran out of funding and went broke. But it was a fun couple-a-few years.
Re:It's the economy, stupid (Score:3, Funny)
(I cashed out my synergy when the market on that was high.)
Re:It's the economy, stupid (Score:1)
This is known as the B2T (business to toilet) model.
We didn't fail, we just changed business models.
AHH! The wise and powerful net!!!! (Score:1)
"Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain!"
One man's info babble becomes another man's reality?
Just think of what H.G. Wells could have done with the Net!
They got paid for this??? (Score:1)
Here are the results:
Social effects: Porn distributions reach an all time high. Minors are exposed to porn as soon as they learn how to type "http://". Divorse is at an all time high because a woman from Ohio can chat with a "rich guy" from Texas while her "hard" working hubby is at work all day (masturbating to the new porn sites he found on his son's computer last night).
Political: People finally realized how much fun the President really gets to have in the oval office - we impeached him (jellousy!!)! People also excahnged a record number of politcal cartoons via email - Al Gore looses election!
Economic: The Internet brought the world economy out of the early 90's depression, created stocks with price earnings ratios of 50x and up, people could trade stocks online - which further drove up the over inflated stocks. Poor people became millionaires overnight - and are now poor again because they spent all their money on a super bowl commercial. Now the economy has collapsed around itself and unemployment is at an all time high (except for the people that are doing this study
And who said you need a PhD to document the effects of the net?
Re:They got paid for this??? (Score:1)
It's called sarcasim and exageration my friend
BTW: I'm still laughing at this (so called) study!!!! It is still the best joke in this thread!
Better than our US "studies" (Score:3, Insightful)
Our U.S. equivalent, of course, might be Carnegie Mellon University -- from which we got all sorts of The Internet is Soooooo Scary "studies" for a while. (Remember the Time Magazine article back in 1994 or so that claimed 75% of all Web traffic was pRon? That was based on a C-M U paper. The more recent "study" that said people who browsed a lot tended to be depressed and socially isolated? Guess what University published it. Somebody at Carnegie Mellon has a hateful thing going on, seems like.)
It's advocacy over actual information, as far as U.S. pop media's appetite for "studies" goes.
Re:Better than our US "studies" (Score:2)
For those of us who were lucky enough to miss this experience back in 1995, you may find this link [eff.org] to be educational, and this link [cmu.edu] to be amusing.
- Tim
Re:Better than our US "studies" (Score:1)
Consider:
Study "A" states that the Capital_I_Internet is a nice, cozy place with lots of interesting things, and this is a "Good Thing" (tm). They suggest that a lack of regulation is also a Good Thing.
Study "B" says the Internet is an evil place, where 3/4 of the traffic is pr0n, and 1/2 the users are child molesters lurking in the shadows for Your Children! Dear Lord, Someone Please Save The Children!
Study A will perhaps get you a few more hits from the ACLU domain, and if you're really lucky, your dean may get invited to a conference in Buttf*ck, Nebraska to discuss how the Internet can improve bovine fertility.
Study B ensures that you get massive media coverage, your own segment on CNN, at least 1/2 page articles in every major newspaper, and every moral and religious group that hears about this study donating money based on the headline. Your dean gets invited to a half dozen major conferences and meetings, all expenses paid, and you get to appear on "Larry King Live" or some such thing. Your face, your university, and everything possibly associated with this study ensures not just your 15 minutes of fame, but that when the devoutly religious VP of BigCorp sees your smiling face on CNN denouncing the evils of the net, that you get a nice, cushy position producing BigCorp-brand studies to say the same thing.
So, which one would you do? Or better yet, which one would you be allowed to publish? Controversy breeds cash, ladies and gentlemen, and places that are barely breaking even like universities need every bit they can get.
(Of course, there is always the ubiquitous option "C", wherein you publish a study suggesting that pr0n isn't a bad thing, and that perhaps it serves as a release for potential peds and other assorted unmentionables. When going with this option, the normal result is flaming bottles being thrown at your house, followed by regular mob-crowd beatings, loosing your job and every bit of captial you have, getting arrested for coughing in the general direction of Washington [Germ Warfare!], and being thrown in a 6x8 cell with "Ted", who will happily help you gather mounds of empirical evidence on whether lube is *really* neccessary.
Not that that ever happens, of course, right?)
we made google (Score:2)
http://news.google.com/news/gntechnologyleftnav
I'll tell you what the Net is doing to me... (Score:1)
Just begging to be a survey (Score:2)
- Case of beer
- Case of Scotch
- Case of Maalox
- Case of SPF 90
- Case of depression
- Case of anxiety
- Case of Cowboy Neal's Genuine Imitation Butter Substitute
My other sig is a Mercedes
definitely _not_ one of the first (Score:1)
Here are a just a few others off top on my head (all of those have existed for several years):
Other News in Oxford (Score:1)
A very important question.... (Score:2)
click on slashdot story Jan 1, 2003 ... (Score:2)
-5 offtopic (Score:1)
non-christian faiths.
Your comment has nothing to do with the topic.