bookJan 1, 2004Closed access

Protocol: How Control Exists after Decentralization

Abstract

How Control Exists after DecentralizationIs the Internet a vast arena of unrestricted communication and freely exchanged information or a regulated, highly structured virtual bureaucracy? In Protocol, Alexander Galloway argues that the founding principle of the Net is control, not freedom, and that the controlling power lies in the technical protocols that make network connections (and disconnections) possible. He does this by treating the computer as a textual medium that is based on a technological language, code. Code, he argues, can be subject to the same kind of cultural and literary analysis as any natural language; computer languages have their own syntax, grammar, communities, and cultures. Instead of…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computer science
  • The Internet
  • Vision
  • Syntax
  • Protocol (science)
  • Subject (documents)
  • World Wide Web
  • Hacker
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