The Digital Hysterias of Decentralisation, Entrepreneurship and Open Community
Abstract
This paper investigates the central discourses that have constructed the internet as a democratic and public environment removed from state and corporate control. The aim is to call attention to the issues that have limited the development of the internet as a tool for socio-political empowerment. The paper first retraces the early discursive constructions that insist on representing the internet as a decentralised and open structure. It also questions the role played by the digerati (or cyber elite) in the formulation of contradictory demands for public interests, self-governance, and entrepreneurial rights. Finally, it examines the emergence of two early virtual communities and their attempts to facilitate free speech and self-regulation. In the context of activists advocating freedom of expression and government institutions re-organizing legislation to control the Internet, the examination of these discourses provides a useful starting point for the (re)assessment of the potential of direct online mobilization.
Author Biography
Fidele Vlavo
Fidele Vlavo is a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries at King's College London. Her research focuses on digital media theory and the development of cyberculture discourses. She recently completed her PhD which examines the concept of electronic civil disobedience and the practice of online activism.