Law in the Internet Society

*Under Construction*

John Henry, The Internet, and the New Autonomy

-- By JustinColannino - 14 Jan 2010

Despite John Henry's best efforts, we now depend on mechanization to produce our railroads. Since then, mass production has poured into our culture - from railroads to automobiles, household goods, clothing, music, and books. [This essay will examine how this mass production has shaped us, and how the internet presents a way for us to reassert our autonomy.]

'A man ain't nothin' but a man' OR 'listen to my cold steel ring'

Human beings are made of culture. In many ways, each of us is a product of what we are exposed to. What we want, like, and believe varies depending on where we are born and who our parents are. Due to each of our particular experiences growing up, Holmes loves granite rocks and barberry bushes, while I prefer tree-lined side streets with cracks filled in with tar. What we choose to do effects the choices that others make. We react to what we experience in other - manners, gestures, clothing, and goods. What others wear influences our idea of fashion, what we make influences how others make things, and when you read my last sentience it interacts with your mental picture producing some new state, perhaps not the one I intended. An implication of this is that what we do ripples out around us to those we connect to shaping their world view, which in turn ripples back from them, shaping who we are in the dynamic system we call culture.

'The Captain said to John Henry, I'm gonna bring that steam drill 'round'

The mechanized production of goods, services, and artistic works in this system effects the way that culture is produced too. Instead of the democratic picture - with each of us producing the same amplitude of ripples throughout the system - mechanized production and delivery has the ability to create shockwaves through the culture system, so that those with control over such production have an asynchronous ability to shape who we all are. This ability has wide ranging effects into each and every portion of our lives. How we use computers, how we learn to think, what label (or lack thereof) we want to wear on our persons, our political views, what constitutes a 'normal' relationship or frame of mind, and what we laugh about with our friends. [this does not mean that we have no choice or no power, only that mass production is a huge force acting upon us.]

'That ain't no storm, Captain, that's just my hammer in the air'

http://disputefinder.cs.berkeley.edu/

Navigation

Webs Webs

r5 - 25 Mar 2010 - 15:49:59 - JustinColannino
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM