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The Control Revolution: How the Internet Is Putting Individuals in Charge and Changing the World We Know
 
 
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The Control Revolution: How the Internet Is Putting Individuals in Charge and Changing the World We Know [Anglais] [Broché]

Andrew L. Shapiro

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Descriptions du produit

Amazon.com

Where do you want to go today? This slogan/mantra is the centerpiece of a Microsoft advertising campaign and the central dilemma of our times, says technorealist Andrew L. Shapiro in The Control Revolution, a warning of the potentially dismal consequences of the uninhibited personalization afforded by the Internet. By putting individuals in charge of their own information gathering, Shapiro suggests that we might find ourselves imprisoned within our increasingly narrow choices or "oversteering" into a corporate-controlled Net environment not unlike network television. His aim is to alert us to the problems and help us steer a middle course to fully realize the benefits of worldwide networking.

What will happen to encryption, copyright, and free speech in our brave new world? How can we seize the power of unrestricted choice without giving in to the temptation of ignoring diverse opinions? How will governmental and business authorities respond to these threats to their power? Shapiro addresses these questions and others forcefully and eloquently, offering prescriptions for thoughtful leaders such as limiting certain intellectual property rights to free the market for new operating systems and creating incentives for virtual "public squares" where everyone can have their 15 nanominutes of fame. Thoughtful, entertaining, and substantial, The Control Revolution is essential reading for those charged with creating the future. --Rob Lightner --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

From Publishers Weekly

Noting that the Internet is reshaping society and giving the individual unprecedented power, Shapiro, a Nation contributing editor, lawyer and director of the Aspen Institute Internet Policy Project, offers a sophisticated look at the Net and the ramifications of its current and potential uses. When the first graphical browsers came on the scene and made the Web accessible to anyone with a PC, optimists trumpeted the arrival of an era in which power would flow back to individuals after years of residing with corporations and institutions. Five years later, Shapiro sees that libertarian promise coming to fruition in many ways: day traders are bypassing stockbrokers; persons living under repressive regimes are using the Web to circumvent the Big Lie of state-controlled media; musicians and wordsmiths are self-publishing on the Web. Shapiro celebrates these freedoms, but his book is much more than a breathless booster's vision of digital utopia. Governments and corporations, he notes, are already striking back, and he documents some of the most egregious examples of censorship and attempts by companies to get a choke hold on Net technologies. And, most honestly, he addresses how too much digital autonomy might be harmful to civil society, in his critiques of "The Drudge Factor" (unaccountable pseudojournalism), "friction-free capitalism" (digital commerce freed from the restraints of taxation and regulation) and "push-button politics" (direct, electronic voting by citizens on matters currently decided by elected officials or appointed professionals). With scrupulous documentation and a knowledgeable but unpatronizing tone, Shapiro delivers a penetrating analysis of both the promise and peril of the digital future. (June)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

Industry Standard

There are enough Internet books out there to crash Amazon's servers, an explosion of volumes promising untold wealth or documenting the minutiae and mythologies of individual Net companies. For all that, it's surprising so few authors have attempted what writer and lawyer Andrew Shapiro achieves with The Control Revolution: a comprehensive, sober analysis of how the Internet differs from conventional forms of communication.

Shapiro shares certain core beliefs with some of the Net's earliest and most far-reaching advocates. He approves of the use of "revolution" to describe the Internet's effects, focusing his scope on the increased control afforded to individuals' choices "about intake of news and other information, social interactions, education and work, political life and collective resources." Indeed, he maintains that the "control revolution" can in important ways be compared to the agricultural and industrial revolutions.

But Shapiro parts company with those he labels "Panglossian futurists" on whether such change will be universal or inevitable. Building on the work of communications theorists such as Langdon Winner and Ithiel de Sola Pool, Shapiro smartly insists that technologies like the Internet are never indivisible from the politics of the societies in which they grow up. Thus, the precise dimensions of the control revolution will be hammered out in perpetual, and sometimes nasty, debates across all sectors of human society.

In a dynamic familiar to Internet Economy observers, Shapiro describes the freedom and control available to Internet users in several areas: politics (Webcasts from independent Radio B92 in Belgrade), shopping (Amazon.com) and commerce (day trading). He then documents the ways in which powerful interests resist these changes, whether in the form of blatantly unconstitutional laws, censorship or monopoly ownership.

Then in concise chapters, Shapiro discusses what he calls the "oversteer," or the tendency of Internet companies and users to overcompensate for resistance. This section details the darker side that Net romantics prefer to ignore, and it nicely showcases Shapiro's patient, yet insistent, reasoning.

While personalization of Internet material is almost certainly good, using the Net to filter out unwanted messages might well destroy important community and democratic values. Allowing e-commerce to flourish untaxed may benefit certain sectors of the economy, but carving out the Net as an eternal duty-free zone can erode the public good.

The Control Revolution's only shortcoming is one beyond the author's "control": The time between most books' conception and publication is several years, and in that period some of Shapiro's examples and arguments have become overly familiar. But that doesn't make them any less compelling, and even the best-trodden examples benefit from Shapiro's scholarly, but accessible, treatment.

In the end, he offers sensible formulas for public and private Net policy: Protect individual privacy; limit the intellectual-property rights of potential software monopolists; and create intermediary bodies that can straddle issues that neither government nor markets handle well. Shapiro_s book will provide thoughtful challenges and excellent resources for Net experts; it is also ideally suited for the beginner trying to figure the whole thing out.

– James Ledbetter


OTHER NEW TITLES OF INTEREST

The Clickable Corporation: Successful Strategies for Capturing the Internet Advantage
by Jonathan Rosenoer, Douglas Armstrong and J. Russell Gates
(Free Press, $26)
Get advice from Arthur Andersen e-commerce experts at a fraction of the usual rate. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

Book Description

So much of what we read or hear about the Internet points to extremes t hat have little to do with our actual experience of this new technology. A whole vocabulary has developed that reflects hysteria ("cyberstalker," "Y2K bug") and hype ("virtual reality"). But how do we really make sense of the Internet and its impact on our day-to-day lives? What is it doing to our sense of self and society? How is it affecting our relationships with family and friends, with neighbors and far-flung fellow citizens, and with the powers that be in government and the corporate world? The Control Revolution addresses these questions in a way that everyone will find relevant.

In this masterful exploration of the meaning of the Internet, journalist and legal scholar Andrew Shapiro weaves a narrative through events that are occurring all around us: Dissidents use the Net to evade censorship to get their message out. Cyber-gossips send dispatches to thousands via email. Musicians bypass record companies and put their songs on the world wide web for fans to download directly. "Day traders" roil the stock market, buying securities online with the click of a mouse and then sell minutes later when the price jumps.

Shapiro argues that there is a common thread underlying these developments. It is not just a change in how we compute or communicate. Rather, it is a potentially radical shift in who is in control--of information, experience, and resources. With a mix of anecdote and analysis, Shapiro explains how:

* new technology is allowing individuals to take power from large institutions such as government, corporations, and the media;

* powerful entities are resisting this change and limiting our new digitally enabled autonomy;

* individual control can be pushed too far, threatening personal well-being and democratic values; and

* we can reap the benefits of the new control without succumbing either to resistance or to excess.

Along the way, The Control Revolution explores electronic commerce, cyberporn and censorship, customized news delivery, online democracy, Microsoft's market power, encryption and law enforcement, copyright in the digital age, virtual communities, Matt Drudge, privacy, and the role of interactive technology in struggles against political tyranny. The result is a penetrating exploration of how the Internet shapes our lives--often more than we realize--and how the question of who is in control will determine its influence all the more. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

JA Majors Book Info

Argues that there is a common thread underlying the developments of the electronic media, suggesting that it is not just a change in how we communicate, but a potentially radical shift in who is control of information, experience and resources. DLC: Information society.

Publisher comments

Reviews
"With scrupulous documentation and a knowledgeable but unpatronizing tone, Shapiro delivers a penetrating analysis of both the promise and peril of the digital future." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Shapiro has this brilliantly nailed.... It's hard to imagine a more timely book about the real significance of the Internet." --Jon Katz, Slashdot --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

Back Cover copy

"A reservoir of civic reason in our tumultuous age...Shapiro is a de Tocqueville of the information society." David Shenk, author of Data Smog: Surviving the Information Glut

"Finally, a book that can help even a novice like me understand what the Internet revolution is all about. Kudos to Andrew Shapiro!" Laurence A. Tisch, former Chairman and CEO of CBS

"This is an extraordinarily powerful and mature story of the hopeful side of the Internet's revolution. Rich with insight, and surprisingly new conclusions, Shapiro's book is the best 'second-generation' thought on the questions the Net will raise. His account foreshadows the challenges for a liberal democracy in the networked future, and his analysis provides pragmatic and realistic responses for citizens today. Beautifully written, and tightly argued, the book is certain to become a classic." Lawrence Lessig, Berkman Professor, Harvard Law School

"Lucid and provocative from page one, The Control Revolution offers a rare perspective on the high-tech frontier: an enthusiast's understanding of the digital world, tempered by a pragmatist's sense of the limitations of the new media. Shapiro gives us a powerful glimpse of what works in cyberspace--and how to fix what doesn't. The Control Revolution is bound to shape the terms of cyber-debate for years to come." Steven Johnson, editor of Feed Magazine and author of Interface Culture

"While I may be more hyperbolic in my optimism than Shapiro, The Control Revolution is a lean and well-founded argument for a belief we share, namely that electronic networks are returning to individual human beings much of the authority we have lost to institutions during the Industrial Period. The Powers that Be are shortly to become the Powers that Were." John Perry Barlow, Cognitive Dissident, Co-Founder & Vice Chairman, Electronic Frontier Foundation

"Shapiro presents a compelling explanation of why we love the Internet-the control and access it gives us-while also reminding us of the obligations this new power brings us to preserve what is good about America. It's important for each of us to read The Control Revolution, and to take up his call for a balance between personal and public interest." Zoe Baird, President, The Markle Foundation

A thoughtful and balanced treatment of the Internet.... Shapiro celebrates the enhancement of individual freedoms the Internet enables, while pointedly diagnosing its dangers to our collective well-being." Mitchell Kapor, founder Lotus Development Corporation, co-founder Electronic Frontier Foundation --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

About the author

Andrew L. Shapiro, a writer and lawyer, is director of the Aspen Institute Internet Policy Project and the First Amendment Fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law. He has recently been a lecturer at Columbia Law School, a resident fellow at Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet & Society, and a fellow at The Century Foundation. A contributing editor at The Nation, Shapiro has also written for publications including Wired, New York, The New Republic, and The New York Times. This is his second book. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.
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