The History of the Internet: Difference between revisions
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''Lead'': [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jzittrain Jonathan Zittrain] | ''Lead'': [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jzittrain Jonathan Zittrain] | ||
The day will begin with a brief history of the Net and an introduction to the theory of generativity as a framework to understand the Internet’s disruptive power. Jonathan Zittrain’s opening lecture will focus on the Internet’s technical evolution and underlying architecture; the values that informed its early development, including principles related to consensus, openness, and non-discrimination; and the range of players, from users to computer scientists, governments and other bodies, and corporations, who engaged in the various activities, controls, and other arrangements that formed the initial distributed digital governance of the online space. | The day will begin with a brief history of the Net and an introduction to the theory of generativity as a framework to understand the Internet’s disruptive power. Jonathan Zittrain’s opening lecture will focus on the Internet’s technical evolution and underlying architecture; the values that informed its early development, including principles related to consensus, openness, and non-discrimination; and the range of players, from users to computer scientists, governments and other bodies, and corporations, who engaged in the various activities, controls, and other arrangements that formed the initial distributed digital governance of the online space. What characteristics make the evolution of the Internet so unique? What are the issues and organizations that characterize online governance and policy-making today? | ||
==Recommended Readings== | ==Recommended Readings== |
Revision as of 14:26, 23 August 2011
Overview
Tuesday, 9:15-11:00am
Format: Lecture, followed by discussion
Lead: Jonathan Zittrain
The day will begin with a brief history of the Net and an introduction to the theory of generativity as a framework to understand the Internet’s disruptive power. Jonathan Zittrain’s opening lecture will focus on the Internet’s technical evolution and underlying architecture; the values that informed its early development, including principles related to consensus, openness, and non-discrimination; and the range of players, from users to computer scientists, governments and other bodies, and corporations, who engaged in the various activities, controls, and other arrangements that formed the initial distributed digital governance of the online space. What characteristics make the evolution of the Internet so unique? What are the issues and organizations that characterize online governance and policy-making today?
Recommended Readings
- John Battelle, "The Future of the Internet (And How to Stop It) -- A dialog with Jonathan Zittrain updating his 2008 book," August 6, 2011.
Related Videos
See Jonathan's past iLaw videos
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- Zittrain explains the fundamental structure of the internet.