Note 1

From Internet, Law & Politics 2007
Revision as of 14:49, 19 March 2007 by Kgarrett (talk | contribs)
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We are operating on the assumption that, in general, more information is better than less in a participatory democracy. This is not always true, however. One has to decide whether the benefits of extra information outweigh the costs.

Assuming we actually want people to be educated about the issues and decide how they want their government to act (see Note 2 for more on that topic), they need to get that information from somewhere. If there is already a reliable source of accurate and complete information that is not being filtered or controlled by those who have an interest in misinformation, there is no need for the internet.

But it is a widespread assumption that our normal media outlets are biased at the least. They also have limited information, since they only have so many reporters with so many connections. As explained in the main text of our argument, the internet provides more information, and of a different type.

Of course, the information is there, and that's not going to change. Unless we are prepared to place severe controls on freedom of speech online, it's pointless to ask whether more information is good. The information is here to stay. The more fruitful line of inquiry is whether