__________________________________________________________________ [part 1] DEMOCRACY AND CYBERSPACE Copyright 1997 by Richard K. Moore Wexford, Ireland •••@••.••• http://www.iol.ie/~rkmoore/cyberjournal Presented at International Conference "Discourse and Decision Making in the Information Age" University of Teesside 18 September 1997 Digital cyberspace: a quick tour of the future ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Let's stand back for a moment from today's Internet and from the temporary lag in deployment of state-of-the-art digital technology. >>From a longer perspective, certain aspects of the future cyberspace are plain to see. As regards transport infrastructure - the pipes - cyberspace is simply the natural and inevitable integration/rationalization of the disparate, patched-together, special purpose networks that make up the nervous system of modern societies. Besides the _public_ distribution systems such as terrestrial and satellite broadcast, cable, and telephone (cellular and otherwise), this integration will also extend to dedicated _private_ systems, such as handle point-of- sale transactions, tickets and reservations, inter-bank transfers, CCTV surveillance, stock transfers, etc. The _cost savings_, _performance gains_, and _application flexibility_ brought by such total integration are simply too compelling for this integration scenario to be seriously doubted. Just as surely as the telegraph replaced the carrier pigeon, and the telephone replaced the telegraph, this integration is one bit of progress that is bound to happen, one way or another, sooner or later. Significant technical work is still required on the infrastructure, to provide efficiently and reliably such mandatory features as security, guaranteed bandwidth, accountability, authentication, and the prevention of "mail-bombs" and other Internet anomalies. But these features don't require rocket science - they are more a matter of selecting from proven technologies and agreeing on standards, interconnect arrangements, and implementation schedules. The global digital high-bandwidth network - the hardware of cyberspace - will in fact be the ultimate distribution mechanism for the mass-media industry: it will subsume broadcast (air and cable) television, video-tape rentals, and perhaps even audio cd's. These familiar niceties will go the way of vinyl records and punched cards. Cyberspace will be the universal connection of the individual to the world at large: "transactions on the net" will be the the way to access funds and accounts, make purchases and reservations, pay taxes, view media products (films, news, sports, entertainment, etc), initiate real-time calls, send and receive messages from individuals and groups, query traffic-congestion patterns, etc. ad infinitum. Each transaction will have an associated price - posted to your account - with some portion going to the ultimate vendor (eg, content provider) and some going to the various intermediaries - just as with credit card purchases today. __________________________________________________________________ [to be continued]
Share: