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A maximus ad minima: The Internet an...
~
Grothe, Andre.
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A maximus ad minima: The Internet and the state.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
A maximus ad minima: The Internet and the state./
Author:
Grothe, Andre.
Description:
91 p.
Notes:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-05, page: 1803.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International43-05.
Subject:
Engineering, System Science. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1425797
ISBN:
0542011085
A maximus ad minima: The Internet and the state.
Grothe, Andre.
A maximus ad minima: The Internet and the state.
- 91 p.
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-05, page: 1803.
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Colorado at Boulder, 2005.
Regulatory mandates will not adhere to the Internet. But the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has proposed to require providers of Internet telephony to make their systems accessible to government wiretapping. It is the ambition of the law enforcement community to extend to IP-based telephony the same capacity for surveillance that the analog telephone system allows. But the Internet operates on completely different terms. So, the follow-through to the FCC's regulatory effort compels a reality check. The Internet obligates states to recognize that people will use its communication facilities in ways that do not accede to a national agenda. In fact, borders assume the function of a foil against which that interconnectivity is defined. What border will the FCC's law enforcement access order stick to? Indeed, the interconnectivity of the world constitutes a permeability that profoundly reshapes opportunities and outcomes for power. These changed circumstances have made rule-making difficult for the U.S. government; but also, significantly, it is the state that gave shape to this evolution by its enthusiastic promotion of the technology market. With promises of greater individual agency, the technologies of interconnection proved an easy sell, but the evidence suggests that their denouement may do more to threaten personal freedom than to extend it.
ISBN: 0542011085Subjects--Topical Terms:
1018128
Engineering, System Science.
A maximus ad minima: The Internet and the state.
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Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-05, page: 1803.
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Regulatory mandates will not adhere to the Internet. But the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has proposed to require providers of Internet telephony to make their systems accessible to government wiretapping. It is the ambition of the law enforcement community to extend to IP-based telephony the same capacity for surveillance that the analog telephone system allows. But the Internet operates on completely different terms. So, the follow-through to the FCC's regulatory effort compels a reality check. The Internet obligates states to recognize that people will use its communication facilities in ways that do not accede to a national agenda. In fact, borders assume the function of a foil against which that interconnectivity is defined. What border will the FCC's law enforcement access order stick to? Indeed, the interconnectivity of the world constitutes a permeability that profoundly reshapes opportunities and outcomes for power. These changed circumstances have made rule-making difficult for the U.S. government; but also, significantly, it is the state that gave shape to this evolution by its enthusiastic promotion of the technology market. With promises of greater individual agency, the technologies of interconnection proved an easy sell, but the evidence suggests that their denouement may do more to threaten personal freedom than to extend it.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1425797
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