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This guide provides a brief history of the internet, including its origins and commercialization. It also explains the technical basis of internet protocols and applications. Furthermore, it explores theories of cyberspace regulation, self-regulatory mechanisms, and regulatory models for cyberspace. Finally, it delves into the concept of "Code" as regulation, as advocated by Lawrence Lessig.
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1. What is the Internet? What is 'cyberspace'? • Leiner et al A Brief History of the Internet http://www.isoc.org/Internet/history/brief.shtml) • William Gibson Neuromancer, Ace Books, 1984. text http://lib.ru/GIBSON/neuromancer.txt • Study Guide for Neuromancerhttp://project.cyberpunk.ru/idb/neuromancer_study_guide.html
2. Technical basis - The Internet protocols (TCP/IP) and Internet applications • Roger Clarke, Gillian Dempsey, Ooi Chuin Nee and Robert F. O'Connor A Primer on Internet Technology (1998) http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/II/IPrimer.html • Clarke also provides a very simple introduction The Internet as a Postal Service: A Fairy Story (1998) http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/II/InternetPS.html • Cliff Green An Introduction to Internet Protocols for Newbies (1996) http://codewrangler.home.comcast.net/tech_info/internet_protocols.html
3. Origins and history of the Internet • The pre-commercial Internet (to 1996) • Vinton Cerf, Computer Networking: Global infrastructure for the 21st Century http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/lazowska/cra/networks.html • Howard Rheingold ‘Visionaries and Convergences: The Accidental History of the Net’ Chapter Three of The Virtual Community (1994) http://www.rheingold.com/vc/book/3.html • Robert Hobbes' Zakon Hobbes' Internet Timeline v5.6 http://www.zakon.org/robert/Internet/timeline/
3.2 The commercial Internet (since 1996) - The 'new economy'Kevin Kelly's ‘New Rules for the New Economy’ WIRED archive 5.09 (1997) http://www.wired.com/wired/5.09/newrules.html • The Law of Connection - Embrace dumb power • The Law of Plentitude - More gives more • The Law of Exponential Value - Success is nonlinear • The Law of Tipping Points - Significance precedes momentum • The Law of Increasing Returns - Make virtuous circles • The Law of Inverse Pricing - Anticipate the cheap • The Law of Generosity - Follow the free • The Law of the Allegiance - Feed the web first • The Law of Devolution - Let go at the top • The Law of Displacement - The net wins • The Law of Churn - Seek sustainable disequilibrium • The Law of Inefficiencies - Don't solve problems
3.3 Origins and history of the Internet • The Internet in Australia • Roger Clarke A Brief History of the Internet in Australia v3.1 (2001) http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/II/OzIHist.html • National Office for the Information Economy (NOIE) Current State Of Play (April 2002) http://www2.dcita.gov.au/ie/framework/benchmarking/csop Chapters 1-23 - statistics on Internet penetration and use.
4. Theories of cyberspace regulation 5. `Virtual communities' and self-regulation: Digital libertarianism • Johnson and Post - 'Net federalism‘ David R. Johnson and David G. Post ‘Law and Borders--The Rise of Law in Cyberspace’ 48 Stanford Law Review 1367 (1996) http://www.cli.org/X0025_LBFIN.html Shorter version: Johnson and Post And How Shall the Net be Governed? - A Meditation on the Relative Virtues of Decentralized, Emergent Law (1996) http://www.cli.org/emdraft.html
5.2 Self-regulatory mechanisms – ADR in cyberspace disputes? • Consumers International study http://www.consumersinternational.org/document_store/Doc35.pdf • OECD’s Guidelines for Consumer Protection in the Context of Electronic Commerce (1999) • Online Ombuds Officehttp://www.ombuds.org/center/ombuds.html
6. Regulatory models for cyberspace 7. Lawrence Lessig – 'Code' as regulation • Lawrence Lessig, Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace, Basic Books 1999 http://code-is-law.org/ • Lawrence Lessig ‘The Law of the Horse: What Cyberlaw Might Teach' 113 Harvard Law Review 501 (1999)http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/works/lessig/finalhls.pdf • Graham Greenleaf, ‘An Endnote on Regulating Cyberspace: Architecture vs Law?’ (1998) University of New South Wales Law Journal Volume 21, Number 2 (Parts III – V) (http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/unswlj/thematic/1998/vol21no2/greenleaf.html) 'Electronic Commerce: Legal Issues For The Information Age'
Lawrence Lessig – 'Code' as regulation (cont) • Critiques/commentaries on Lessig's arguments Reviews http://code-is-law.org/reviews.html • Karen Coyle, Information Technology and Libraries, September 2000 http://www.kcoyle.net/lessig.html • Mark S. Nadel "Book Review: Computer Code vs. Legal Code: Setting the Rules in Cyberspace" Federal Communications Law Journalhttp://code-is-law.org/nadel_review.pdf • Charles C. Mann "The Unacknowledged Legislators of the Digital World" Atlantic Unbound, December 15, 1999 http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/digicult/dc991215.htm
Lawrence Lessig – 'Code' as regulation (cont.) • The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World Random House (2001)http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/future/ Tom Zillner, Information Technology and Libraries http://www.lita.org/ital/2103_books.html summary • Free Culturehttp://free-culture.org/freecontent/
Other theoretical approaches to cyberspace regulation • James Boyle's critique of 'digital libertarianism’:‘Surveillance, Sovereignty, and Hard-Wired Censors’ (1997) http://www.law.duke.edu/boylesite/foucault.htm • Joel Reidenberg - "Lex Informatica: The Formulation of Information Policy Rules through Technology" (1998) 76 Texas Law Review 553-593 (http://reidenberg.home.sprynet.com/lex_informatica.pdf • Trotter Hardy's presumption of decentralised controlI Trotter Hardy 'The proper legal regime for cyberspace' University of Pittsburg Law Review, 1994, 55:993 http://www.wm.edu/law/facultyadmin/faculty/hardy-16.htm • Johnson and Post - net federalism