Liberating Cyberspace: Civil Liberties, Human Rights & the Internet

Voorkant
Pluto Press, 1999 - 290 pagina's
Does the exponential growth of the Internet really mark a revolution in human interaction and communication, providing truly democratic access to information and ideas? Or, compounded by a growing number of competing interests now arguing for the introduction of more rigorous controls, will the full potential of the Internet fail to be recognised? Liberating Cyberspace is the first volume to assess the impact of the Internet on our basic civil rights. Addressing the key questions, contributors from Britain and the United States examine a range of topics, from copyright and encryption to free speech, privacy and freedom of information. A series of critical case studies considers the potential of the Internet for promoting international women's rights, its the role in the McLibel trial, and to what extent the Internet can or should create new copyright and property laws of its own. Controversial and topical, Liberating Cyberspace sheds valuable new light on some of the fundamental issues of modern global communication.
 

Geselecteerde pagina's

Inhoudsopgave

Censorship in Private Hands
13
an Electronic Window onto
44
Liberty on the Line
68
Cryptography and Democracy
81
Copyright Civil Rights and the Internet
125
European Policy on Regulation of Content
140
Political Participation and the Internet
161
The Womens World Wide Web
187
Tinysex and Gender Trouble
206
Racism
237
Freedom of Speech and the Internet
258
Glossary of Internet Terms
278
Copyright

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Over de auteur (1999)

Liberty (the National Council for Civil Liberties) is Britain's leading campaign body working for the promotion of civil rights. Their guide to civil liberties, Your Rights is also published by Pluto Press.

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