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The International and Scientific Origins of the Internet and the Emergence of the Netizen

This article explores the origins of the internet, debunking the myth that it was solely created by the US Department of Defense. It highlights the international collaboration and scientific vision that guided its development. The concept of netizens, individuals who actively contribute to the internet as a resource, is also discussed.

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The International and Scientific Origins of the Internet and the Emergence of the Netizen

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  1. The International and Scientific Origins of the Internet andthe Emergence of the Netizen Ronda Hauben ronda@panix.com

  2. WSIS

  3. The International and Scientific Origins of the Internet andthe Emergence of the Netizen Ronda Hauben ronda@panix.com

  4. The Myth “Internet was created within the US by the US Department of Defense as a way to have a communication system that would survive a nuclear war”

  5. The Realities • The Internet is a result of scientific and technical collaboration that was international in its earliest stages • There was a vision guiding and inspiring its international collaborative development • The Internet is a solution to the Multiple Network Problem - to connect dissimilar networks

  6. Multiple Networks Problem • NPL (National Physical Laboratories) U.K. • ARPANET - USA • CYCLADES - France

  7. International TCP/IP Research US Norway UK

  8. Josiah Macy Jr Conferences on Cybernetics Ten conferences 1942-1953

  9. 1915-1990

  10. In June 1954 the Conference on Problems in Human Communication and Control sponsored by the Foundation and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology brought together experimental psychologists, physicists, engineers, and mathematicians for discussion of Mutual benefit.

  11. Licklider’s PhD thesis: “An Electrical Investigation of The Frequency-Localization in the Auditory Cortex of the Cat”

  12. Licklider and Taylor wrote about modeling: “By far the most numerous, most sophisticated and most important models are those that reside in men's minds.” The Computer as a Communications Device

  13. Sutherland’s Sketchpad

  14. Sketchpad - being able to change complex sketches and to see the effects on other aspects of a complex model.

  15. Individual mental model "In richness, plasticity, facility and economy, the mental model has no peer, but in other respects it has shortcomings."

  16. Short comings of the individual mental model • It can be observed and manipulated only by one person • Society rightly distrusts the modeling done by a single mind

  17. Cooperative modeling • Individual models can be compared and brought into some degree of accord. • Cooperation in the construction, maintenance and use of a model • A plastic or moldable medium that can be modeled, a dynamic medium in which processes will flow into consequences • A common medium that can be contributed to and experimented with by all

  18. Sir Charles Percy Snow Brownian Motion

  19. Something like Brownian Motion • All kinds of people all over the place suddenly get smitten with the same sort of desire, with the same sort of interest at the same time. • This forms a concentration of pressure and of direction. • These concentrations of pressure gradually filter their way through to the people whose nominal responsibility it is to put the legislation into a written form.

  20. Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) 1962-1986 JCR Licklider Ivan Sutherland Bob Taylor Larry Roberts JCR Licklider . . . Robert Kahn . . . Saul Amarel JCR Licklider

  21. “Voting in the absence of understanding defines only the public attitude, not the public interest.”

  22. To determine the public interest • Many public spirited individuals must study, model, analyze, argue, write, criticize, and work out each issue and each problem until they reach consensus or determine that none can be reached • Only then may there be the reason to vote

  23. “Computer power to the people is essential to the realization of a future in which most citizens are informed about, and interested in, the process of government .”

  24. The concept of net.citizen or netizen to identify and describe the emergence of Netizens The Net and the Netizens: The Impact the Net has on People’s Lives Michael Hauben, July 6, 1993

  25. Netizens “They are people who understand it takes effort and action on each and everyone's part to make the Net a regenerative and vibrant community and resource. Netizens are people who decide to devote time and effort into making the Net, this new part of our world, a better place.” Michael Hauben, 1995

  26. “Netizens participate to help make the Net both an intellectual and a social resource.” Michael Hauben Further Thoughts about Netizens

  27. Tunis November 2005 There is a need for an appropriate model for the management of the Internet’s international infrastructure

  28. From www.seoprise.com, June 2005

  29. Conclusion • The online plastic, collaborative process which makes possible interactive modeling is a helpful analogy for the positive nature of the Internet • The social consciousness of users as netizens has evolved and spread as the Internet has evolved and spread

  30. “Netizens participate to help make the Net both an intellectual and a social resource.”

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