Government Control of the Internet
During the past decade, our society has become based solely on the ability to move large amounts of information across large distances quickly. Computerization has influenced everyone's life. The natural evolution of computers and this need for ultra-fast communications has caused a global network of interconnected computers to develop. This global net allows a person to send E-mail across the world in mere fractions of a second and enables to access information worldwide. Software that allows users with a sound card to use the Internet as a carrier for long distance voice calls and video conferencing is the key to the future of our society. Our democratic government sensing the growing power of the Internet that is not so easy to control is doing all it can to get on the top of the wild horse. The government is dreaming to have the control: to view all the information circulating the web, to read our private e-mails, to peek into chat rooms, and to restrict us, the Internet people, in any way possible. The government wishes to be the next big brother who will be watching you! No matter how small, any attempt at government intervention in the Internet will stifle the greatest communication innovation of this century.
Echelon is another secret organization that operates on the same basis as the Menwith Hill does. The outcome proved once more that Internet is something that has to be left alone. If we ask about it, the government will deny it; and we, in our turn, will exhale with great relief, swallowing every lie it throws at us. The government should rethink its approach to the censorship and its restrictions, allowing the Internet to continue to grow and mature on their own. Where is that you ask? It seems the government has allowed us to have their leftover technology; so that we may put our private lives on public display, where they monitor it with their now more advanced technology, and we've paid for it all. It allows the Internet to overcome any kind of barriers put in its way. "Censoring Cyberspace: Carnegie Mellon's Attempt to BanSex from its Campus Computer Network Sends A Chill along the Info Highway. Data held in foreign computers is just as accessible as data in America; all it takes is the click of a mouse to access. It is the largest electronic monitoring station in the world. Many on-line sites such as Playboy and Penthouse have started to regulate themselves. Most of the major on-line communication companies have restrictions on what their users can "say. If too many regulations are incited the Internet, as a tool, will become nearly useless; and the Internet as a mass communication device and a place for freedom of mind and thoughts, will become non existent. 2000Communication Intelligence 14 Mar.
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