Better Data for a Better Internet
+ Author Affiliations
- ↵*Author for correspondence. E-mail: zittrain@law.harvard.edu
When people took to the streets across the UK in the summer of 2011, the Prime Minister suggested restricting access to digital and social media in order to limit their use in organizing. The resulting debate complemented speculation on the effects of social media in the Arab Spring and the widespread critique of President Mubarak's decision to shut off the Internet and mobile phone systems completely in Egypt (see the photo).
Decisions about when and how to regulate activities
online will have a profound societal impact. Debates underlying
such decisions touch upon fundamental problems related to
economics, free expression, and privacy. Their outcomes will
influence the structure of the Internet, how data can flow
across it, and who will pay to build and maintain it. Most
striking about these debates are the paucity of data available
to guide policy and the extent to which policy-makers ignore the
good data we do have.
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Continua qui:
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/334/6060/1210.full?ijkey=yLssWDbbr0ekI&keytype=ref&siteid=sci%2520