• Remembering Netizens: An interview with Ronda Hauben

    From Tristan Miller@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 26 11:28:11 2022
    XPost: alt.culture.usenet

    Dear all,

    This year marks the 25th anniversary of Netizens, Michael and Ronda
    Hauben's book on the history and impact of Usenet and the Internet.

    To commemorate the anniversary, the journal Internet Histories has
    printed an interview with Ronda Hauben, along with a six-page
    introduction on the history and impact of the book (and of Usenet
    generally). I'm one of the co-interviewers/-authors, along with Camille Paloque-Bergès of the Conservatoire national des arts et métiers and
    Avery Dame-Griff of Gonzaga University.

    The publisher, Taylor & Francis, has agreed to make the article free to
    access for a limited time. You can read it in HTML, PDF, or EPUB
    formats at <https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24701475.2022.2123120>. Here's
    the abstract:

    Netizens, Michael and Ronda Hauben's foundational treatise on Usenet and
    the Internet, was first published in print 25 years ago. In this piece,
    we trace the history and impact of the book and of Usenet itself, contextualising them within the contemporary and modern-day scholarship
    on virtual communities, online culture, and Internet history. We discuss
    the Net as a tool of empowerment, and touch on the social, technical,
    and economic issues related to the maintenance of shared network infrastructures and to the preservation and commodification of Usenet
    archives. Our interview with Ronda Hauben offers a retrospective look at
    the development of online communities, their impact, and how they are
    studied. She recounts her own introduction to the online world, as well
    as the impetus and writing process for Netizens. She presents Michael
    Hauben's conception of "netizens" as contributory citizens of the Net
    (rather than mere users of it) and the "electronic commons" they built
    up, and argues that this collaborative and collectivist model has been overwhelmed and endangered by the privatisation and commercialisation of
    the Internet and its communities.

    Regards,
    Tristan

    --
    Dr.-Ing. Tristan Miller, Research Scientist
    Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence (OFAI)
    Freyung 6/6, 1010 Vienna, Austria | Tel: +43 1 5336112 12 https://logological.org/ | https://punderstanding.ofai.at/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From 5GyYap52yQ1UGMWD@21:1/5 to Tristan Miller on Mon Sep 26 18:29:26 2022
    Tristan Miller <tristan.miller@ofai.at> writes:

    Dear all,

    This year marks the 25th anniversary of Netizens, Michael and Ronda
    Hauben's book on the history and impact of Usenet and the Internet.

    To commemorate the anniversary, the journal Internet Histories has
    printed an interview with Ronda Hauben, along with a six-page
    introduction on the history and impact of the book (and of Usenet
    generally). I'm one of the co-interviewers/-authors, along with
    Camille Paloque-Bergès of the Conservatoire national des arts et
    métiers and Avery Dame-Griff of Gonzaga University.

    The publisher, Taylor & Francis, has agreed to make the article free
    to access for a limited time. You can read it in HTML, PDF, or EPUB
    formats at <https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24701475.2022.2123120>. Here's
    the abstract:

    [snip]

    Regards,
    Tristan

    Thanks, it looks like an interesting read.

    --
    Pointless meanderings in a bleak and lonely world.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)