Posted April 13, 2011
lightnica: Take a look at the information GOG requires when creating an account:
(desired) username
(desired) password
email address
date of birth
I don't think that GOG processes transaction differently based on where your from. In fact I'm not entirely sure that they even know where your from.
So? You forget that when you pay, either by credit/debit card or PayPal a whole other slew of information regarding you is sent, and I'm fairly certain that the transactions are processed differently based on where you're from, even though you, as a customer, don't see that part of the operation. (desired) username
(desired) password
email address
date of birth
I don't think that GOG processes transaction differently based on where your from. In fact I'm not entirely sure that they even know where your from.
That's the thing, I'm talking here about commercial blockage of access. Governmental censorship is a whole other type of pie, and one which I am fiercely against.
That's why I'm saying that applying physical concepts such as sovereignty, to which democracy pertains, to a conceptual and non-restrictive space such as the internet at large is a silly idea, because no matter how much you try and mold and change that concept it won't fit.
In fact, categorizing online denizens can be, in my opinion, made extremely easily: you either own your own corner of the internet, or you don't and are just a guest. If you do, it's your own kingdom and can do with it whatever you please, as by and large it won't affect the other internet connected people around you; if you don't, you just visit other people's houses, add to them (understanding that what you create there will belong to the owner and that you're just a guest) and respect their rules, or buy your own piece of virtual land.
As for the entire context of the network, are you referring to the old ARPANET or the internet as it has evolved now? Because the technical basis for both is, mostly, the same. Of course, ARPANET was built around the idea of being controlled because it was a network linking initially defense systems, but that idea didn't coincide with the realities of the underlying technology.
But yes, we're sharing mostly the same view on the subject.
As for Ryan's book, I liked it more than my CS courses because it also touched on the human aspect of the internet and the way it influenced individuals, groups of people and even businesses.
But to be honest, my job mostly caters to specific subsets of the whole CS/IT field and networking was never that interesting after getting a CCNA cert. I more than enjoy doing my database work and code optimization than working on the OSI stack or network topologies.