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BOOK REVIEW FutureNet: The past, present, and future of the Internet as told by its creators and visionaries
Richards, Sally. (2002). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Review by Holly Alexander Agati Sally Richards’ FutureNet
explores the history of the Internet beginning with World War II through In Chapter 1,
“Withstanding…,” Richards compares the events of In her second
chapter, “Adolescence,” Richards discusses the important fact that the Internet
is constantly developing and the future of it is difficult to predict. She explores many of the ways in which the
Internet is being utilized from e-commerce to chat rooms to avatars. Although
much of the Internet is being used for communication and knowledge, the
Internet is still developing and the future is unknown. In Chapter 3,
“Issues,” Richards focuses primarily on three issues the Internet presents -
encryption, copyright, and patents. She
reflects on legislation which has been developed and how it impacts Internet
use. Even though several additional issues are briefly mentioned - privacy,
spam, viruses and worms, issues of taxation - Richards did not discuss these
important topics. In Chapters 4 and 5,
“Who Will? and “Futurescope,”
Richards interviews and asks for predictions from about a dozen influential
people in the industry. The overall
consensus is that the Internet’s future is difficult to predict. Some potential uses range from a
biotechnology interface to the Internet being transmitted by radio wave. From a student
affairs viewpoint, I did not find this book to be very helpful. The author was often anecdotal and unless you
were intimately familiar with the development of the Internet and the
infrastructure, you may not realize the significance of the contributors and
the future predictions. I also did not
find the book to be organized very well and found myself losing interest in the
book quickly.
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