Digital Freedom: How Much Can You Handle?

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Rowman & Littlefield, 2008 - Computers - 265 pages
In Digital Freedom, N. D. Batra explores the tension between the boundlessness of the Internet and the boundaries of the marketplace, as well as the resulting impact on human expression, privacy, and social controls. Digital Freedom is an exploration of and meditation on the question: How much freedom does a person need? The question evokes Tolstoy's parable, "How much land does a man need?" Is freedom an acquired taste, much like one's love for symphony orchestra? Or, is it a necessity? After all, civilizations in the past have produced monumental works in all fields of human endeavor without as much obsession with individual freedom as we have today. Digital Freedom explores these issues--including surveillance, intellectual property, and copyright--from the perspective of an evolutionary, self-organizing social system. This system both creates and assimilates innovations and, in the process, undergoes reorganization and renewal.

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Contents

Introduction
1
Scanning Digital Horizons
13
Changing View of Privacy
43
Surveillance in Cyberspace
77
How the Marketplace Shapes Creativity
123
Free Expression in the Digital Age
155
How Does the Ring of Freedom Sound to You?
203
Notes
219
Index
247
About the Author
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

N. D. Batra, the author of A Self-Renewing Society and The Hour of Television, is professor of communications at Norwich University, where he teaches media law, ethics, television criticism, and new media and the Internet. He also teaches corporate diplomacy in the graduate program in diplomacy at Norwich University and writes a weekly column, Cyber Age, for The Statesman.

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