653 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
653 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
########## ########## ########## | LIBERTY, EQUALITY, CONNECTIVITY! |
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########## ########## ########## | THE DECLARATION & BILL OF RIGHTS |
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#### #### #### | |
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######## ######## ######## | HOUSE TO NSF:RELAX ACCEPTABLE USE |
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######## ######## ######## | |
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#### #### #### | Howard Rheingold on |
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########## #### #### | VIRTUAL COMMUNITIES, 1992 |
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########## #### #### | (Third of three parts) |
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=====================================================================|
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EFFector Online JULY 4, 1992 Issue 3.0|
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A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation |
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ISSN 1062-9424 |
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|| LIBERTY, EQUALITY, CONNECTIVITY!
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|| A PEOPLE, UNITED, CAN NEVER BE DEFEATED!
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|| 216 FOURTHS AND STILL GOING STRONG!
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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In CONGRESS, July 4, 1776.
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A DECLARATION
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By the REPRESENTATIVES of the
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
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In GENERAL CONGRESS assembled.
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_ _
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\\ //HEN in the Course of human Events, it becomes necessary
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\\/\// for one People to dissolve the Political bands which have
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\/\/ connected them with another, and to assume among the
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Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal station to which the
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Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect
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to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the
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causes which impel them to the Separation.
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We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created
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equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
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rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of
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Happiness--That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among
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Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that
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whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is
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the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new
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Government, laying its foundation on such Principles and organizing its
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Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their
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Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments
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long established should not be changed for light and transient Causes;
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and accordingly all Experience hath shown, that Mankind are more
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disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves
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by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long
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train of Abuses and Ursurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object,
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evinces a Design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their
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Right, it is their Duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide
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new Guards for their future Security.
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* * * * * * * * * *
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WE, THEREFORE, The Representatives of the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
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in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the
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world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by
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Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and
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declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be FREE
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AND INDEPENDENT STATES; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to
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the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and
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the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and
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that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War,
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conclude Peace, contract Alliance, establish commerce, and to do all
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other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for
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the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection
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of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our
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Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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THE BILL OF RIGHTS
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1st Amendment
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Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
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prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
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speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
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assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
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2nd Amendment
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A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free
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state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be
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infringed.
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3rd Amendment
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No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house, without
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the consent of the owner; nor in time of war, but in a manner to be
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prescribed by law.
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4th Amendment
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The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
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and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
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violated; and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
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supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place
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to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.
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5th Amendment
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No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous,
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crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in
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cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in
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actual service, in time of war, or public danger; nor shall any person
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be subject, for the same offence, to be twice put in jeopardy of life or
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limb; nor shall be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness
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against himself; nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without
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due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use,
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without just compensation.
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6th Amendment
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In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a
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speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and district
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wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have
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been previously ascertained by law; and to be informed of the nature and
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cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against
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him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor;
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and to have the assistance of counsel for his defence.
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7th Amendment
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In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed
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twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved; and no
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fact, tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re- examined in any court of
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the United States than according to the rules of the common law.
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8th Amendment
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Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor
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cruel and unusual punishment inflicted.
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9th Amendment
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The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be
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construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
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10th Amendment
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The powers not delegated to the United States shall not be construed to
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extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one
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of the United States by citizens of another State or by citizens or
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subjects of any foreign state.
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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HOUSE ALLOWS NSF TO RELAX ACCEPTABLE USE POLICIES
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This Monday (6/29) the House passed by voice vote Rep. Boucher's (D-VA)
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bill to allow the NSF to relax current Acceptable Use Policies that
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limit NSFNet traffic to that which is "in support of research and
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education." This restriction prevent commercial traffic, such as the
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offering of commercial information services, from passing over the
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NSFNET backbone.
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Boucher's bill amends the National Science Foundation Act of 1950 (42
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USC 1862) to read:
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"the Foundation is authorized to foster and support the development and
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use of computer networks which may be used substantially for purposed
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related to research and education in the sciences and engineering, if
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the additional uses will tend to increase the overall capabilities of
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the networks to support such research and education activities."
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That is a long way of saying that commercial services may be offered for
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sale over the NSFNET backbone provided those services would be
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potentially valuable to the research and education community.
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The identical provision is attached to the NASA Reauthorization bill now
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pending before the Senate. Senate staff indicate they are hoping that
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the provision will move through without much fuss. However, there is
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some possible opposition from Department of Energy and other "mission
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agencies'" who run large nets that interconnect with the NSF. These
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agencies don't like to trend toward commercialization because, a) it
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puts pressure on them to do the same, and b) it puts them just one hop a
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away from an increasingly public network.
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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[Note: Because of the length of this essay, this is the third of three
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parts. Our readers are asked to take careful note of the author's
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remarks at the end of this article.]
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A SLICE OF LIFE IN MY VIRTUAL COMMUNITY
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(Part Two)
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by Howard Rheingold June 1992
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(hlr@well.sf.ca.us)
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[ Continued from EFFector Online 2.12 June 19, 1992. Available via
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ftp.eff.org or by email from eff@eff.org]
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Who Is The WELL?
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One way to know what the WELL is like is to know something about the
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kind of people who use it. It has roots in the San Francisco Bay Area,
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and in two separate cultural revolutions that took place there in past
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decades. The Whole Earth Catalog originally emerged from the
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counterculture as Stewart Brand's way of providing access to tools and
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ideas to all the communes who were exploring alternate ways of life in
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the forests of Mendocino or the high deserts outside Santa Fe. The Whole
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Earth Catalogs and the magazines they spawned, Co-Evolution Quarterly
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and Whole Earth Review, have outlived the counterculture itself, since
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they are still alive and raising hell after nearly 25 years. For many
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years, the people who have been exploring alternatives and are open to
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ideas that you don't find in the mass media have found themselves in
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cities instead of rural communes, where their need for new tools and
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ideas didn't go away.
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The Whole Earth Catalog crew received a large advance in the mid-
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1980s to produce an updated version, a project involving many
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geographically-separated authors and editors, many of whom were using
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computers. They bought a minicomputer and the license to Picospan, a
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computer conferencing program, leased an office next to the magazine's
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office, leased incoming telephone lines, set up modems, and the WELL was
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born in 1985. The idea from the beginning was that the founders weren't
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sure what the WELL would become, but they would provide tools for people
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to build it into something useful. It was consciously a cultural
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experiment, and the business was designed to succeed or fail on the
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basis of the results of the experiment. The person Stewart Brand chose
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to be the WELL's first director -- technician, manager, innkeeper, and
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bouncer -- was Matthew McClure, not-coincidentally a computer-savvy
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veteran of The Farm, one of the most successful of the communes that
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started in the sixties. Brand and McClure started a low- rules,
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high-tone discussion, where savvy networkers, futurists, misfits who had
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learned how to make our outsiderness work for us, could take the
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technology of CMC to its cultural limits.
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The Whole Earth network -- the granola-eating utopians, the solar-
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power enthusiasts, serious ecologists and the space-station crowd,
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immortalists, Biospherians, environmentalists, social activists -- was
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part of the core population from the beginning. But there were a couple
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of other key elements. One was the subculture that happened ten years
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after the counterculture era -- the personal computer revolution.
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Personal computers and the PC industry were created by young iconoclasts
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who wanted to have whizzy tools and change the world. Whole Earth had
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honored them, including the outlaws among them, with the early Hacker's
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Conferences. The young computer wizards, and the grizzled old hands who
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were still messing with mainframes, showed up early at the WELL because
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the guts of the system itself -- the UNIX operating system and "C"
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language programming code -- were available for tinkering by responsible
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craftsmen.
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A third cultural element that made up the initial mix of the WELL,
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which has drifted from its counterculture origins in many ways, were the
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deadheads. Books and theses have been written about the subculture that
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have grown up around the band, the Grateful Dead. The deadheads have a
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strong feeling of community, but they can only manifest it en masse when
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the band has concerts. They were a community looking for a place to
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happen when several technology-savvy deadheads started a "Grateful Dead
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Conference" on the WELL. GD was so phenomenally successful that for the
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first several years, deadheads were by far the single largest source of
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income for the enterprise.
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Along with the other elements came the first marathon swimmers in
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the new currents of the information streams, the futurists and writers
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and journalists. The New York Times, Business Week, the San Francisco
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Chronicle, Time, Rolling Stone, Byte, the Wall Street Journal all have
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journalists that I know personally who drop into the WELL as a listening
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post. People in Silicon Valley lurk to hear loose talk among the pros.
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Journalists tend to attract other journalists, and the purpose of
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journalists is to attract everybody else: most people have to use an old
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medium to hear news about the arrival of a new medium.
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Things changed, both rapidly and slowly, in the WELL. There were
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about 600 members of the WELL when I joined, in the summer of 1985. It
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seemed that then, as now, the usual ten percent of the members did 80%
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of the talking. Now there are about 6000 people, with a net gain of
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about a hundred a month. There do seem to be more women than other parts
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of cyberspace. Most of the people I meet seem to be white or Asian;
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African-Americans aren't missing, but they aren't conspicuous or even
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visible. If you can fake it, gender and age are invisible, too. I'd
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guess the WELL consists of about 80% men, 20% women. I don't know
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whether formal demographics would be the kind of thing that most WELL
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users would want to contribute to. It's certainly something we'd
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discuss, argue, debate, joke about.
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One important social rule was built into Picospan, the software that
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the WELL lives inside: Nobody is anonymous. Everybody is required to
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attach their real "userid" to their postings. It is possible to use
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pseudonyms to create alternate identities, or to carry metamessages, but
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the pseudonyms are always linked in every posting to the real userid. So
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individual personae -- whether or not they correspond closely to the
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real person who owns the account -- are responsible for the words they
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post. In fact, the first several years, the screen that you saw when you
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reached the WELL said "You own your own words." Stewart Brand, the
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WELL's co-founder likes epigrams: "Whole Earth," "Information wants to
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be free." "You own your own words." Like the best epigrams, "You own
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your own words" is open to multiple interpretations. The matter of
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responsibility and ownership of words is one of the topics WELLbeings
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argue about endlessly, so much that the phrase has been abbreviated to
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"YOYOW," As in, "Oh no, another YOYOW debate."
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Who are the WELL members, and what do they talk about? I can tell
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you about the individuals I have come to know over six years, but the
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WELL has long since been something larger than the sum of everybody's
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friends. The characteristics of the pool of people who tune into this
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electronic listening post, whether or not they every post a word in
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public, is a strong determinant of the flavor of the "place." There's a
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cross-sectional feeling of "who are we?" that transcends the
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intersecting and non-intersecting rings of friends and acquaintances
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each individual develops.
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My Neighborhood On The WELL
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Every CMC system gives users tools for creating their own sense of
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place, by customizing the way they navigate through the database of
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conferences, topics, and responses. A conference or newsgroup is like a
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place you go. If you go to several different places in a fixed order, it
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seems to reinforce the feeling of place by creating a customized
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neighborhood that is also shared by others. You see some of the same
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users in different parts of the same neighborhood. Some faces, you see
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only in one context -- the parents conference, the Grateful Dead tours
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conference, the politics or sex conference.
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My home neighborhood on the WELL is reflected in my ".cflist," the
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file that records my preferences about the order of conferences I visit.
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It is always possible to go to any conference with a command, but with a
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.cflist you structure your online time by going from conference to
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specified conference at regular intervals, reading and perhaps
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responding in several ongoing threads in several different places.
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That's the part of the art of discourse where I have found that the
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computer adds value to the intellectual activity of discussing formally
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distinct subjects asynchronously, from different parts of the world,
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over extending periods, by enabling groups to structure conversations by
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topic, over time.
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My .cflist starts, for sentimental reasons, with the Mind
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conference, the first one I hosted on the WELL, since 1985. I've changed
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my .cflist hundreds of times over the years, to add or delete
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conferences from my regular neighborhood, but I've always kept Mind in
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the lede. The entry banner screen for the Mind conference used to
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display to each user the exact phase of the moon in numbers and ASCII
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graphics every time they logged in to the conference. But the volunteer
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programmer who had created the "phoon" program had decided to withdraw
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it, years later, in a dispute with WELL management. There is often a
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technological fix to a social problem within this particular universe.
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Because the WELL seems to be an intersection of many different cultures,
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there have been many experiments with software tools to ameliorate
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problems that seemed to crop up between people, whether because of the
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nature of the medium or the nature of the people. A frighteningly
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expensive pool of talent was donated by volunteer programmers to create
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tools and even weapons for WELL users to deal with each other. People
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keep giving things to the WELL, and taking them away. Offline readers
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and online tools by volunteer programmers gave others increased power to
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communicate.
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The News conference is what's next. This is the commons, the place
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where the most people visit the most often, where the most outrageous
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off-topic proliferation is least pernicious, where the important
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announcements about the system or social events or major disputes or new
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conferences are announced. When an earthquake or fire happens, News is
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where you want to go. Immediately after the 1989 earthquake and during
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the Oakland fire of 1991, the WELL was a place to check the damage to
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the local geographic community, lend help to those who need it, and get
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first-hand reports. During Tienamen square, the Gulf War, the Soviet
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Coup, the WELL was a media-funnel, with snippets of email from Tel-Aviv
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and entire newsgroups fed by fax machines in China, erupting in News
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conference topics that grew into fast-moving conferences of their own.
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During any major crisis in the real world, the routine at our house is
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to turn on CNN and log into the WELL.
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After News is Hosts, where the hottest stuff usually happens. The
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hosts community is a story in itself. The success of the WELL in its
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first five years, all would agree, rested heavily on the efforts of the
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conference hosts -- online characters who had created the character of
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the first neighborhoods and kept the juice flowing between one another
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all over the WELL, but most pointedly in the Hosts conference. Some
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spicy reading in the Archives conference originated from old hosts'
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disputes - and substantial arguments about the implications of CMC for
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civil rights, intellectual property, censorship, by a lot of people who
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know what they are talking about, mixed liberally with a lot of other
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people who don't know what they are talking about, but love to talk
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anyway, via keyboard and screen, for years on end.
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In this virtual place, the pillars of the community and the worst
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offenders of public sensibilities are in the same group -- the hosts.
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At their best and their worst, this ten percent of the online population
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put out the words that the other ninety percent keep paying to read.
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Like good hosts at any social gathering, they make newcomers welcome,
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keep the conversation flowing, mediate disputes, clean up messes, and
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throw out miscreants, if need be. A WELL host is part salon keeper, part
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saloon keeper, part talk-show host, part publisher. The only power to
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censor or to ban a user is the hosts' power. Policy varies from host to
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host, and that's the only policy. The only justice for those who misuse
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that power is the forced participation in weeks of debilitating and
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vituperative post-mortem.
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The hosts community is part long-running soap opera, part town
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meeting, bar-room brawl, anarchic debating society, creative groupmind,
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bloody arena, union hall, playpen, encounter group. The Hosts conference
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is extremely general, from technical questions to personal attacks. The
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Policy conference is supposed to be restricted to matters of what WELL
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policy is, or ought to be. The part-delusion, part-accurate perception
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that the hosts and other users have strong influence over WELL policy is
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part of what feeds debate here, and a strong element in the libertarian
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reputation of the stereotypical WELLite. After fighting my way through a
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day's or hour's worth of the Hot New Dispute in News, Hosts, and Policy,
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I check on the conferences I host -- Info, Virtual Communities, Virtual
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Reality. After that my .cflist directs me, at the press of the return
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key, to the first new topic or response in the Parenting, Writers',
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Grateful Dead tours, Telecommunication, Macintosh, Weird, Electronic
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Frontier Foundation, Whole Earth, Books, Media, Men on the WELL,
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Miscellaneous, and Unclear conferences.
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Grabbing attention in the Commons is a powerful act. Some people
|
|
seem drawn to performing there; others burst out there in acts of
|
|
desperation, after one history of frustration or another. Dealing with
|
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people who are so consistently off-topic or apparently deeply grooved
|
|
into incoherence, long-windedness, scatology, is one of the events that
|
|
challenges a community to decide what its values really are, or ought to
|
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be.
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Something is happening here. I'm not sure anybody understands it
|
|
yet. I know that the WELL and the net is an important part of my life
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|
and I have to decide for myself whether this is a new way to make
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genuine commitments to other human beings, or a silicon-induced illusion
|
|
of community. I urge others to help pursue that question in a variety of
|
|
ways, while we have the time. The political dimensions of CMC might lead
|
|
to situations that would pre-empt questions of other social effects;
|
|
responses to the need for understanding the power- relationships
|
|
inherent in CMC are well represented by the Electronic Frontier
|
|
Foundation and others. We need to learn a lot more, very quickly, about
|
|
what kind of place our minds are homesteading.
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|
|
|
The future of virtual communities is connected to the future of
|
|
everything else, starting with the most precious thing people have to
|
|
gain or lose -- political freedom. The part played by communication
|
|
technologies in the disintegration of communism, the way broadcast
|
|
television pre-empted the American electoral process, the power of fax
|
|
and CMC networks during times of political repression like Tienamen
|
|
Square and the Soviet Coup attempt, the power of citizen electronic
|
|
journalism, the power-maneuvering of law enforcement and intelligence
|
|
agencies to restrict rights of citizen access and expression in
|
|
cyberspace, all point to the future of CMC as a close correlate of
|
|
future political scenarios. More important than civilizing cyberspace is
|
|
ensuring its freedom as a citizen-to-citizen communication and
|
|
publication medium; laws that infringe equity of access to and freedom
|
|
of expression in cyberspace could transform today's populist empowerment
|
|
into yet another instrument of manipulation. Will "electronic democracy"
|
|
be an accurate description of political empowerment that grows out of
|
|
the screen of a computer? Or will it become a brilliant piece of
|
|
disinfotainment, another means of manipulating emotions and
|
|
manufacturing public opinion in the service of power.
|
|
|
|
Who controls what kinds of information is communicated in the
|
|
international networks where virtual communities live? Who censors, and
|
|
what is censored? Who safeguards the privacy of individuals in the face
|
|
of technologies that make it possible to amass and retrieve detailed
|
|
personal information about every member of a large population? The
|
|
answers to these political questions might make moot any more abstract
|
|
questions about cultures in cyberspace. Democracy itself depends on the
|
|
relatively free flow of communications. The following words by James
|
|
Madison are carved in marble at the United States Library of Congress:
|
|
"A popular government without popular information, or the means of
|
|
acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy, or perhaps
|
|
both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance, and a people who mean to
|
|
be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which
|
|
knowledge gives." It is time for people to arm themselves with power
|
|
about the future of CMC technology.
|
|
|
|
Who controls the market for relationships? Will the world's
|
|
increasingly interlinked, increasingly powerful, decreasingly costly
|
|
communications infrastructure be controlled by a small number of very
|
|
large companies? Will cyberspace be privatized and parceled out to those
|
|
who can afford to buy into the auction? If political forces do not seize
|
|
the high ground and end today's freewheeling exchange of ideas, it is
|
|
still possible for a more benevolent form of economic control to stunt
|
|
the evolution of virtual communities, if a small number of companies
|
|
gain the power to put up toll-roads in the information networks, and
|
|
smaller companies are not able to compete with them.
|
|
|
|
Or will there be an open market, in which newcomers like Apple or
|
|
Microsoft can become industry leaders? The playing field in the global
|
|
telecommunications industry will never be level, but the degree of
|
|
individual freedom available through telecommunication technologies in
|
|
the future may depend upon whether the market for goods and services in
|
|
cyberspace remains open for new companies to create new uses for CMC.
|
|
|
|
I present these observations as a set of questions, not as answers.
|
|
I believe that we need to try to understand the nature of CMC,
|
|
cyberspace, and virtual communities in every important context --
|
|
politically, economically, socially , culturally, cognitively. Each
|
|
different perspective reveals something that the other perspectives do
|
|
not reveal. Each different discipline fails to see something that
|
|
another discipline sees very well. We need to think as teams here,
|
|
across boundaries of academic discipline, industrial affiliation,
|
|
nation, to understand, and thus perhaps regain control of, the way human
|
|
communities are being transformed by communication technologies. We
|
|
can't do this solely as dispassionate observers, although there is
|
|
certainly a huge need for the detached assessment of social science.
|
|
But community is a matter of the heart and the gut as well as the head.
|
|
Some of the most important learning will always have to be done by
|
|
jumping into one corner or another of cyberspace, living there, and
|
|
getting up to your elbows in the problems that virtual communities face.
|
|
|
|
References:
|
|
|
|
Sara Kiesler, "The Hidden Messages in Computer Networks," Harvard
|
|
Business Review, January-February 1986.
|
|
|
|
J.C.R. Licklider, Robert Taylor, and E. Herbert, "The Computer as a
|
|
Communication Device," International Science and Technology, April 1978.
|
|
|
|
Ray Oldenburg, "The Great Good Place: Cafes, Coffee Shops, Community
|
|
Centers, Beauty Parlors, General Stores, Bars, Hangouts, and How They
|
|
Get You Through The Day," New York: Paragon House, 1991.
|
|
|
|
M. Scott Peck, M.D., "The Different Drum: Community Making and
|
|
Peace," New York: Touchstone, 1987.
|
|
|
|
Howard Rheingold, "Tools for Thought," Simon & Schuster 1986.
|
|
|
|
Note: In 1988, _Whole Earth Review_ published my article, "Virtual
|
|
Communities." Four years later, I reread it and realized that I had
|
|
learned a few things, and that the world I was observing had changed.
|
|
So I rewrote it. The original version is available on the WELL as
|
|
/uh/72/hlr/virtual_communities88.
|
|
|
|
Portions of this will appear in "Globalizing Networks: Computers and
|
|
International Communication," edited by Linda Harasim and Jan Walls for
|
|
MIT press. Portions of this will appear in "Virtual Communities," by
|
|
Howard Rheingold, Addison-Wesley. Portions of this may find their way
|
|
into Whole Earth Review.
|
|
|
|
This is a world-readable file, and I think these are important issues;
|
|
encourage distribution, but I do ask for fair use: Don't remove my name
|
|
from my words when you quote or reproduce them, don't change them, and
|
|
don't impair my ability to make a living with them.
|
|
|
|
Howard Rheingold
|
|
Editor, Whole Earth Review
|
|
27 Gate Five Road
|
|
Sausalito, CA 94965
|
|
Tel: 415 332 1716
|
|
Fax: 415 332 3110
|
|
Internet: hlr@well.sf.ca.us
|
|
|
|
(This is the last of three parts.)
|
|
|
|
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