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Millions Of People People Around The World
1,338 wordsDay by day cyberspace is becoming a more intricate part of our society. As it does, we rely on it more to manage finances, research, and to communicate. Communication in cyberspace has developed a new community for people around the world. The ability to freely communicate with people around the world through a computer has raised many questions about the reality of cyberspace. Since it is a tool of communication that millions of people use every day to converse with friends, family, and busines...
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Corn Revere Core Values
1,214 words... gots the original group. In reviewing the incident the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) found that on balance both sides were able to express their viewpoints. [Electronic Frontier Foundation, Letter to Office of Policy Analysis and Development NTIA, US Department of Commerce, by Shari Steel, staff attorney, 4 - 26 - 93 ]. Due to the interactive nature of Cyberspace more people are able to express themselves. Unlike printed press where there are publishers and readers or television where...
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Taking Into Account Simon And Schuster
1,669 wordsInternet network gave birth to the entirely new information space cyberspace, and even the new type of culture - cyber culture. Cyberspace is a new information medium that allows communicating in a more efficient, and unique way. What does it mean? Communication, indeed is the most important "mineral wealth that can be found in internet. Information medium offers to the users not only the possibility to find any kind of data, but, above all, it offers new possibilities of communication. Can we r...
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Communications Decency Act Elmer Dewitt
2,096 wordsImproving Cyberspace Thesis: Though governments cannot physically regulate the Internet, cyberspace needs regulations to prevent illegal activity, the destruction of morals, and child access to pornography. I. Introduction. II. Illegal activity online costs America millions and hurts our economy. A. It is impossible for our government to physically regulate cyberspace. 1. One government cannot regulate the Internet by itself. 2. The basic design of the Internet prohibits censorship. B. It is pos...
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Multinational Corporations Mona Lisa
3,684 wordsAmazon. com The author of Neuromancer takes you to the vividly realized near future of 2005. Welcome to No Cal and SoCal, the uneasy sister-states of what used to be California. Here the millennium has come and gone, leaving in its wake only stunned survivors. In Los Angeles, Berry Rydell is a former armed-response renta cop now working for a bounty hunter. Chevette Washington is a bicycle messenger turned pick-pocket who impulsively snatches a pair of innocent-looking sunglasses. But these are ...
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Crimes Committed Chat Rooms
489 wordsWhen Cyberspace Computers and Cyberspace When does reality end and cyberspace begin? Can crimes committed in cyberspace be punished in reality? Can a cyber relationship have the same rules as a relationship in reality? Basically, is cyberspace part of regular life or is it a world created by us with ever changing and moving norms? Often, people make comment that they become so focused on something and it becomes a part of their life, an extension of them. I feel the same can be said of cyberspac...
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Seven Dirty Words Communications Decency Act
2,659 wordsReno v. ACLU The conflict began on February 8, 1996, when President Clinton signed the CDA law and ACLU, along with EPIC and eighteen other plaintiffs, immediately filed its legal challenge. ACLU v. Reno represents the first legal challenge to censorship provisions of the Communications Decency Act (CDA). The CDA makes it a crime, punishable by up to two years in jail and / or a $ 250, 000 fine, for anyone to engage in speech that is? indecent? or? patently offensive? on computer networks if the...
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