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Faculty
Publications
Communications
Policy and Information Technology: Promises, Problems, Prospects
edited
by: Lorrie Faith Cranor and Shane
Greenstein
Buy
Online
New technologies,
although developed with optimism, often fall short of their
predicted potential and create new problems. Communications
technologies are no different. Their utopian proponents claim
that universal access to advanced communications technologies
can help to feed the hungry, cure the sick, educate the illiterate,
improve the global standard of living, and ultimately bring
about world peace. The sobering reality is that while communications
technologies have a role to play in making the world a better
place, the impact of any specific technological advance is
likely to be modest.
The limitations
of new technologies are often not inherent in the technologies
themselves but the result of regulatory or economic constraints.
While the capability may exist to deliver any information
anywhere in the world, many people lack the money to pay for
it, the equipment to access it, the skills to use it, or even
the knowledge that it might be useful to them. This book examines
the complex ways in which communication technologies and policies
affect the people whose lives they are intended to improve.
The areas of discussion include Internet regulation, electronic
voting and petitioning, monopoly and competition in communications
markets, the future of wireless communications, and the concept
of universal service.
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