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This extraordinary book explains the engine that has catapulted the Internet from backwater to ubiquity—and reveals that it is sputtering precisely because of its runaway success. With the unwitting help of its users, the generative Internet is on a path to a lockdown, ending its cycle of innovation—and facilitating unsettling new kinds of control.

IPods, iPhones, Xboxes, and TiVos represent the first wave of Internet-centered products that can’t be easily modified by anyone except their vendors or selected partners. These “tethered appliances” have already been used in remarkable but little-known ways: car GPS systems have been reconfigured at the demand of law enforcement to eavesdrop on the occupants at all times, and digital video recorders have been ordered to self-destruct thanks to a lawsuit against the manufacturer thousands of miles away. New Web 2.0 platforms like Google mash-ups and Facebook are rightly touted—but their applications can be similarly monitored and eliminated from a central source. As tethered appliances and applications eclipse the PC, the very nature of the Internet—its “generativity,” or innovative character—is at risk.

The Internet’s current trajectory is one of lost opportunity. Its salvation, Zittrain argues, lies in the hands of its millions of users. Drawing on generative technologies like Wikipedia that have so far survived their own successes, this book shows how to develop new technologies and social structures that allow users to work creatively and collaboratively, participate in solutions, and become true “netizens.”

Future of the Internet Blog

  • FOI Topics and Links of the Week
  • The Extraordinaries Haiti Earthquake Support Center. A followup post on the Extraordinaries' efforts to use ubiquitous human computing to help find missing people after the Haiti earthquake -- a positive vision inspired by JZ's nightmare scenario of crowdsourced secret police ...
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  • In talks about ubicomp, JZ gives an example of a worst-case scenario involving ubicomp platforms. He imagines that the Iranian government could use Amazon Mechanical Turk to identify dissidents, simply by posting pictures of protestors and ID-card pictures of ...

RSS Tweets from Z

  • Hosting Cliff Stoll at the Berkman Center tonight http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/2010/02/stoll
  • Iranian internet+sms "conveniently" slowing down b4 planned protests: http://bit.ly/9YzC3m
  • RT @ruskin147: http://bit.ly/aLmScH New blog post - Apple - an open and shut case. Linking to the Zittrain piece in FT - and starting in ...
  • iPad: a fight over freedom at Apple's core http://bit.ly/bglwoG

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Creative Commons BY-NC-SA Jonathan Zittrain unless otherwise noted.
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