by Thomas Tresser © 1997, All Rights Reserved.
Reprinted by Permission
Note: This article was written in 1997 and makes reference to
"Napster" which was a file-sharing service that violated copyright law. Napster is
no longer in existence. Creative Way USA does not support copyright law vioations.
The information about Napster that appears in this article has been left intact to
demonstrate the capability of the Internet and is not intended to advocate the use
of the Internet to violate copyright laws.
The Internet Is Not A Mall
Contrary to popular practice, the Internet is not a store. It may
be used to sell and we may be using advertising terms like "click
through" and "customer" to describe and measure success on the
Internet today.
But the best use of this new technology may not be for commerce
but to accelerate social change—to give people new tools to change
policy, achieve social justice goals and celebrate victories.
The Internet is something new. It is much more than a 24-hour
infomercial. It is like a telephone, a megaphone, a bulletin board,
a meeting place, a block party, a library, a poll, a catalog, a
press release, a Help Desk—it is like that, and more, and all at the
same time.
How is the Internet Different?
It is a two-way street. It is interactive. It is always on. It
can store and index huge amounts of information. It is a multi-media
feast. It is the world’s biggest network.
And it respects no borders. The Internet connects anyone with a
computer and a phone line (plus the necessary software) to anyone
else with a computer and a phone line. Anywhere. Soon it will
connect anyone with a wireless device like a cell phone or handheld
digital assistant.
No borders. No censors. No Big Brother. This is upsetting a lot
of apple carts. Look at what happened with Napster, the online music
file sharing network created by a 19-year old college student.
In fact, the World Wide Web, the
most widely recognized and used feature on the Internet was designed
by programmer Tim Berners-Lee to do exactly that. In the early
(1995) days of the Web, groups were meeting to hammer out the
standards and protocols that would guide the development of the Web.
Mr. Berners-Lee was an advocate for the basic connectivity that made
the Internet and the Web so powerful:
"Whether inspired by free-market desires or
humanistic ideals, we all felt that control was the wrong
perspective. I made it clear that I had designed the Web so there
should be no centralized place where someone would have to
'register' a new server, or get approval for its contents. Anybody
could build a server and put anything on it. Philosophically, if the
Web was to be a universal resource, it had to be able to grow in an
unlimited way...Its being 'out of control' was very important."
(Weaving the Web: The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the
World Wide Web, p 99. For more info on Mr. Lee, go to: http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee)
Napster currently has over 40 million registered users and the
number is growing every day. Despite legal challenges, people around
the world have rushed to embrace this novel, fun and somewhat
addictive file sharing service.
Napster has the music and film industries in a real tizzy. What
to do as millions of people rip, share and play music (and soon
videos) over the Internet? These companies are in danger of loosing
control over the means of distribution for cultural content. This
means the power to choose, spotlight, reward and ultimately eclipse
creative artists will pass from a few corporations to
consumers.
The Napsterizing of America
The same conceivably could happen to public policy, elections,
and even government. Eliminate the middle man. Post it and debate
it. Tell the truth and unmask BS. Online networks might do for
public life what it is starting to do for commercial life.
It is becoming increasingly difficult to hoard information, hide
scandals, muzzle dissent, stifle good ideas and cover up official
misconduct.
The Internet could be a place to learn about issues, connect with
those affected by issues, start conversations about remedies, raise
funds for solutions, coordinate solution teams, post the whole
process and invite real-time feedback from participants around the
world.
Use the Internet Now
Organizations working for social change are already employing
technology and the Internet to achieve their goals.
Check out how these innovative websites are using the Internet to
get results.
Communication & Inspiration:
The Dalai Lama: www.tibet.com/DL
Greenpeace: www.greenpeace.org
Fundraising:
www.thehungersite.com
The granddaddy of all fundraisers is the United Way: http://uwonline.org/ - visit the
Contribute section.
Mobilization:
How the Internet helped stop the Multilateral Agreement on
Investment:
www.nsw.greens.org.au/campaigns/MAI.htm
Progressive networks: www.igc.org
Collaboration & Problem Solving:
www.netaid.org
www.voxcap.com
Accountability:
The Corporate Accountability Project: www.corporations.org
Reclaim Democracy:
www.reclaimdemocracy.org
But there are thousands more! A great directory and resource for
progressive causes is www.webactive.com. The
Kellogg Foundation compiled an annotated directory of nonprofit and
social change websites, "e-Philanthropy, Volunteerism & Social
Changemaking." You can the PDF file at their website, at www.wkkf.org. The follow-up
study, "e-Philanthropy v2.001: From Entrepreneurial Adventure to an
Online Community" along with a searchable database of 315 websites
is at www.actknowledgeworks.net/ephil.
It’s just the beginning. Climb on board, get plugged in and feel
the power of the network! If that sounds like a commercial for the
phone company or tech gear company, sorry. The forces of evil, greed
and divisiveness are using every tool available to achieve their
goals. Don’t you think the forces of justice, truth and unity should
do no less?
This article was originally
published at http://www.tresser.com/change.htm.
E-mail to: tom@tresser.com