Monday, September 2, 2019
Regulating The Internet: Whos In Charge :: essays research papers
 Regulating The Internet: Who's In Charge        The internet was started by the military in the late forties, and has since  grown to an incredibly large and complex web, which will no doubt effect all of  us in the years to come. The press has recently taken it upon themselves to  educate the public to the dark side of this web, a network which should be  veiwed as a tremendous resource of information and entertainment. Instead, due  to this negative image, more and more people are shying away from the internet,  afraid of what they may find there. We must find a way to regulate what is there,  protect ourselves from what is unregulatable, and educate the general populace  on how to use this tremendous tool.  "The reality exists that governance of global networks offers major  challenges to the user, providers, and policy makers to define their boundaries  and their system of govenment" (Harassim, p84)  The intemet is a group of networks, linked together, which is capable of  transmitting vast amounts of information from one network to another. The  internet knows no boundaries and is not located in any single country. The  potential the internet has of shaping our world in the future is inconceivable.  But with all its potential the internet is surrounded by questions of its usage.  The intemet was named the global village by McLuhan and Fiore in 1968, but  recently the internet has been more properly renamed the global metropolis.  Robert Fortner defines the internet as a place where people from all different  cultures and backgrounds come together to share ideas and information.  "Communication in a metropolis also reflects the ethnic, racial, and sexual  inequalities that exist generally in the society. '' (Fortner, p25)  When a person enters into a global metropolis to engage in communication  they do not know who they will interact with nor do they know what information  that they may come across. Which brings an important question to mind. If this  is a community, a global metropolis, should it not be governed to protect the  members of the community? But more importantly, can a community that knows no  boundaries and belongs to no country, be regulated? And who can or should  regulate it?  With the vast amounts of information transmitted through network to network,  with some information remaining at sites temporarily or disappearing within  seconds, how can one regulate it? In a meeting of the Senate Select Committee on  Community Standards in Australia, iiNet, an Australian intemet provider,  presented facts on how much information passes through their server daily.  "Our own network sees over 200,000 items of email between individuals every    					    
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