Will cyberanarchy rule the net? And if we do find a way to regulate our cyberlife will national borders dissolve as the Internet becomes the first global state? In this provocative new work, Jack L. Goldsmith and Tim Wu dismiss the fashionable talk of both a 'borderless' net and of a single governing 'code'. Territorial governments can and will, they contend, exercise significant control over all aspects of Internet communications. Examining policy puzzles from e-commerce to privacy, speech and pornography, intellectual property, and cybercrime, Who Controls the Internet demonstrates that individual governments rather than private or global bodies will play that dominant role in regulation. Accessible and controversial, this work is bound to stir comment.
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an ok book, not much pungency wrt the topic
评分an ok book, not much pungency wrt the topic
评分以前还挺喜欢吴修铭写的书,但是作为学术书籍,这种论述和结论都太保守。
评分本国政府、外国政府、跨国公司、工程师、黑客。全球化和信息化背景下,不同行为体利益诉求和交织,政府仍然管理着互联网的边界,同时在跨国互联网事件处理中扮演最重要的角色。精彩的故事表现了网络扁平化和边界化的张力。
评分说的太好了!
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