This link has been bookmarked by 37 people . It was first bookmarked on 05 Oct 2007, by Benjamin Jörissen.
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E. Alana JamesDownes article on history of web - good link for futures
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Emphasizing the role of women whenever possible, this
history shows that the interests of those who used the Net as social platform
shaped it in the interplay of military,
scientific, entrepreneurial, activist, artistic, and altruistic agendas.
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Martin Lindnergood essay.
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Kevin LimTook Trebor's class, yet how did I not bookmark this one? Great historical reference on how the social web came about. Good for everyone!
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Martin Kosergeht sehr schön auf die historischen Wurzeln ein, toll
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Scott Lesliecould add this plus the slides at the end of the paper to the "Additional Reading" section
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This is a cross-cultural, critical history of social life on the Internet. It captures technical, cultural, and political events that influenced the evolution of computer-assisted person-to-person communication via the net. Acknowledging the role of grassroots movements, this history does not solely focus on mainstream culture with all its mergers, acquisitions, sales and markets, and the (mostly male) geeks, engineers, scientists, and garage entrepreneurs who implemented their dreams in hardware and software. This is a critical history as it traces the changing nature of labor and typologies of those who create value online as much as it searches for changing approaches toward control, privacy, and intellectual property. It shows strategies for direct social change based on the technologies and practices which already exist.
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This is a cross-cultural, critical history of social life on the Internet. It captures technical, cultural, and political events that influenced the evolution of computer-assisted person-to-person communication via the net. Acknowledging the role of grassroots movements, this history does not solely focus on mainstream culture with all its mergers, acquisitions, sales and markets, and the (mostly male) geeks, engineers, scientists, and garage entrepreneurs who implemented their dreams in hardware and software. This is a critical history as it traces the changing nature of labor and typologies of those who create value online as much as it searches for changing approaches toward control, privacy, and intellectual property. It shows strategies for direct social change based on the technologies and practices which already exist.
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David Feld"This is a cross-cultural, critical history of social life on the Internet. It captures technical, cultural, and political events that influenced the evolution of computer-assisted person-to-person communication via the net."
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The campaigns related to the establishment of protocols that run on the Internet were intense. The US government, for example, preferred another protocol but TCP/IP was non-proprietary and public domain and thus spread anarchically like a wild fire across small networks and in the end it would have been to expensive to switch to another standard.
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Gabriela GrosseckA History of the Social Web
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