Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Consent of the networked: the world-wide struggle for Internet freedom

539

Citations

0

References

2012

Year

Unknown Author(s)
Choice Reviews Online

TLDR

The Internet, promised to liberate, has instead been used by corporations and governments to erode civil liberties through censorship, surveillance, and corporate control, as illustrated by Facebook, Apple, Western surveillance vendors, and Google’s censorship challenges. The book calls for a shift from debating the Internet’s empowerment to actively governing technology to safeguard users’ rights and liberties worldwide. It argues that rights must be defended before they are sold, legislated, programmed, or engineered away, highlighting Google’s censorship struggles and public concerns over data collection.

Abstract

The Internet was going to liberate us, but in truth it has not. For every story about the webs empowering role in events such as the Arab Spring, there are many more about the quiet corrosion of civil liberties by companies and governments using the same digital technologies we have come to depend upon.Sudden changes in Facebooks features and privacy settings have exposed identities of protestors to police in Egypt and Iran. Apple removes politically controversial apps at the behest of governments as well as for its own commercial reasons. Dozens of Western companies sell surveillance technology to dictatorships around the world. Google struggles with censorship demands from governments in a range of countriesmany of them democraciesas well as mounting public concern over the vast quantities of information it collects about its users.InConsent of the Networked, journalist and Internet policy specialist Rebecca MacKinnon argues that it is time to fight for our rights before they are sold, legislated, programmed, and engineered away. Every day, the corporate sovereigns of cyberspace make decisions that affect our physical freedombut without our consent. Yet the traditional solution to unaccountable corporate behaviorgovernment regulationcannot stop the abuse of digital power on its own, and sometimes even contributes to it.A clarion call to action, Consent of the Networked shows that it is time to stop arguing over whether the Internet empowers people, and address the urgent question of how technology should be governed to support the rights and liberties of users around the world.