Monday, January 5, 2009

Future of the Internet III: How the Experts See It

A survey of internet leaders, activists and analysts shows they expect major technology advances as the phone becomes a primary device for online access, voice-recognition improves, artificial and virtual reality become more embedded in everyday life, and the architecture of the internet itself improves.

They disagree about whether this will lead to more social tolerance, more forgiving human relations, or better home lives.

Here are the key findings in a new report based on the survey of experts by the Pew Internet & American Life Project that asked respondents to assess predictions about technology and its roles in the year 2020:

  • The mobile device will be the primary connection tool to the internet for most people in the world in 2020.
  • The transparency of people and organizations will increase, but that will not necessarily yield more personal integrity, social tolerance, or forgiveness.
  • Voice recognition and touch user-interfaces with the internet will be more prevalent and accepted by 2020.
  • Those working to enforce intellectual property law and copyright protection will remain in a continuing "arms race," with the "crackers" who will find ways to copy and share content without payment.
  • The divisions between personal time and work time and between physical and virtual reality will be further erased for everyone who is connected, and the results will be mixed in their impact on basic social relations.
  • "Next-generation" engineering of the network to improve the current internet architecture is more likely than an effort to rebuild the architecture from scratch.

Responding to an invitation to participate in an online survey, 578 leading internet activists, builders and commentators submitted their ideas about the impacts networked technologies may have on world societies by 2020, with an additional 618 stakeholders also participating, for a total of about 1,196 participants sharing their views.

The full report, "Future of the Internet III," the third in a series, is built around respondents' responses to scenarios stretching to the year 2020. Their written elaborations, numbering in the hundreds, address such topics as: the methods by which people will access information in the future; the fact that technology is expanding the potential for hate, bigotry and terrorism; the changes that will occur in human relationship as a result of hyper-connected communication; the future of work and employer-employee relationships; the evolution of the tools for and use of augmented reality and virtual reality; the strength of respondents' concerns that the global corporations and governments currently in control of most resources might impede or even halt the open development of the internet; and the challenges to come as issues tied to security, privacy, digital identities, tracking and massive databases collide.

A strong undercurrent of anxiety runs through these experts' answers: They are quite sure the internet and cell phones will continue to advance at an amazing clip, but they are not at all sure people will make the same kind of progress as they embrace better, faster, and cheaper gadgets. The picture they paint of the future is that technology will give people the power to be stronger actors in the political and economic world, but that won't necessarily make it a kinder, gentler world. In light of the continuing tension between security and privacy issues, the experts emphasize the importance of enhanced and enlightened cooperation between the leaders involved in decisions about internet architecture and policy.

The Pew Internet/Elon University survey was conducted online by invitation to experts identified in an extensive literature review and to active members of several key technology groups, among them: The Internet Society, The World Wide Web Consortium, the Multistakeholder Group on Internet Governance, ICANN, Internet2 and the Association of Internet Researchers. Many respondents are at the pinnacle of internet leadership. Some respondents are "working in the trenches" of building the Web; most of the people in this latter category came to the survey by invitation to those on the email list of the Pew Internet Project. The survey was an "opt in," self-selecting effort. That process does not yield a random, representative sample.

The following is a brief selection of the most provocative future visions shared by respondents to the survey scenarios -- these do not represent majority views.

The evolution of the device for connection:

"People in Africa turned paid telephone minutes into an ad-hoc, grassroots, e-currency ... There are already reasons why people at the bottom of the economic system need and can use cheap telecommunication. Once they are connected, they will think of their own ways to use connectivity plus computation to relieve suffering or increase wealth." 
Howard Rheingold, Internet sociologist and author of "Virtual Community" and "Smart Mobs"

"By 2020, we'll have standard network connections around the world ... Billions of people will have joined the internet who don't speak English. They won't think of these things as 'phones' either -- these devices will be simply lenses on the online world." 
Susan Crawford, founder of OneWebDay and an Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) board member

"The next five years will be rife with battles between carriers, municipal, and federal governments, handset makers, and content creators. I don't know who will win." 
danah boyd, Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet and Society

"Telephones in 2020 will be archaic, relics of a bygone era -- like transistor radios are today. Telephony, which will be entirely IP-based by then, will be a standard communications chip on many devices. We'll probably carry some kind of screen-based reading device that will perform this function, though I assume when we want to communicate verbally, we'll do so through a tiny, earplug-based device." 
Josh Quittner, executive editor of Fortune Magazine and longtime technology journalist and editor

"I agree, but I don't see this as entirely positive, as it perpetuates 'soundbite' dissemination and thinking, and the continuing move toward shorter attention spans and dumbing-down of content." 
Anonymous respondent

The evolution of social tolerance:

"Sharing, interacting, and being exposed to ideas is great and all, but saying the internet will eventually make human beings more tolerant is like saying that the Prius will reverse global warming; a little too much of an idealistic leap in logic. People are people are people. And people are terrible." 
Matt Gallivan, senior research analyst for National Public Radio

"Polarization will continue and the people on the extremes will be less tolerant of those opposite them. At the same time, within homogenous groups (religious, political, social, financial, etc.) greater tolerance will likely occur." 
Don Heath, Internet pioneer and former president and CEO of the Internet Society

"Perhaps in the wired elite there will be less strife, but those who generally lean toward picking up a brick to solve a problem will continue to do so." 
Jeremy Shapiro, professor of critical social theory at Fielding Graduate University

"Tribes will be defined by social enclaves on the internet, rather than by geography or kinship, but the world will be more fragmented and less tolerant, since one's real-world surroundings will not have the homogeneity of one's online clan." 
Jim Horning, chief scientist for information security at SPARTA Inc. and a founder of InterTrust's Strategic Technologies and Architectural Research Laboratory

The evolution of intellectual property law and copyright:

"Many people want IP protection, but everyone wants to steal. Regardless of the legal mechanisms so far -- e.g., automatic damages, compulsory copyrights -- many people would prefer the illegal route, perhaps because it runs up their adrenaline." 
Michael Botein, founding director of the Media Law Center at New York University Law School

"Most people still don't understand the question and will only wake up when it's too late. I foresee a time where NOTHING is free and things like potatoes, chickens, counseling, cliches, and Scrabble will not be able to be accessed without paying a toll at every point." 
Anonymous respondent

"Governments will be strongly influenced by business conglomerates and will not do much to protect consumers. (Just think of the outrageous rates charged by cable and phone company TV providers and wireless phone providers today -- it will only get worse.)" 
Steve Goldstein, ICANN board member formerly of National Science Foundation

"You cannot stop a tide with a spoon. Cracking technology will always be several steps ahead of DRM and content will be redistributed on anonymous networks." 
Giulio Prisco, chief executive of Metafuturing Second Life, formerly of CERN

The evolution of privacy, identity, and forgiveness:

"We will enter a time of mutually assured humiliation; we all live in glass houses. That will be positive for tolerance and understanding." 
Jeff Jarvis, top blogger at Buzzmachine.com and professor at City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism

"Viciousness will prevail over civility, fraternity, and tolerance as a general rule, despite the build-up of pockets or groups ruled by these virtues. Software will be unable to stop deeper and more hard-hitting intrusions into intimacy and privacy, and these will continue to happen." 
Alejandro Pisanty, ICANN and Internet Society leader and director of computer services at Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

"By 2020, the internet will have enabled the monitoring and manipulation of people by businesses and governments on a scale never before imaginable. Most people will have happily traded their privacy -- consciously or unconsciously -- for consumer benefits such as increased convenience and lower prices. As a result, the line between marketing and manipulation will have largely disappeared." 
Nicholas Carr, author of the Rough Type blog and "The Big Switch"

"The volume and ubiquity of personal information, clicktrails, personal media, etc., will desensitize us. A super-abundance of transparency will lose its ability to shock. Maybe there will be software-driven real-time reputation insurance service, offering monitoring and repair to dinged reputations. This could be as ordinary as auto insurance or mortgage insurance is today, and as automated as the nightly backups performed by most online businesses. I don't agree that this will make us any kinder." 
Havi Hoffman, senior editor for product development at Yahoo and blogger

The evolution of augmented and virtual reality:

"Mirror worlds are multi-dimensional experiences with profound implications for education, medicine, and social interaction. 'Real life' as we know it is over. Soon when anyone mentions reality, the first question we will ask is, 'Which reality are you referring to?' We will choose our realities, and in each reality there will be truths germane to that reality, and so we will choose our truth as well." 
Barry Chudakov, principal with the Chudakov Company

"Augmented reality will become nearly the de facto interface standard by 2020, with 2-D and 3-D overlays over real-world objects providing rich information, context, entertainment, and (yes) promotions and offers. At the same time, a metaverse (especially when presented in an augmented-reality-overlay environment) provides compelling ways to facilitate teamwork and collaboration while reducing overall travel budgets." 
Jason Stoddard, managing partner at Centric/Agency of Change

"For some reason I've never been able to comprehend, certain pundits can seriously propose that the wave of the future is chatting using electronic hand-puppets. Flight Simulator is not an aircraft, and typing at a screen is not an augmentation of the real world." 
Seth Finkelstein, author of the Infothought blog, writer and programmer

"A map is not the territory and a letter is not the person. We have always had multiple facades, for most, most common, work, home and play. The extension into more immersive 'unreal' worlds is going to happen." 
Hamish MacEwen, consultant at Open ICT in New Zealand

The evolution of user interfaces:

"There will be 'subvocal' inputs that detect 'almost speech' that you will, but do not actually voice. Small sensors on teeth will also let you tap commands. Your eyeballs will track desires, sensed by your eyeglasses. And so on." 
David Brin, futurist and author of "The Transparent Society"

"WiFi- and WiMax-enabled badges with voice recognition will act as personal assistants -- allowing you to talk with someone by saying their name, to post a voice blog, or access directions from the internet for the task at hand." 
Jim Kohlenberger, director of Voice on the Net Coalition; senior fellow at the Benton Foundation

"I could see a whole physical way of communicating with our technology tools that could be part of our health and exercise. A day answering e-mails could be a full-on physical workout. 
Tiffany Shlain, founder of the Webby Awards

"While air-typing and haptic gestures are widespread and ubiquitous, the arrival of embedded optical displays, thought-transcription, eye-movement tracking, and predictive-behavior modeling will fundamentally alter the human-computer interaction model." 
Sean Steele, CEO and senior security consultant for infoLock Technologies

The evolution of network architecture:

"The control-oriented telco (ITU) next-generation network will not fully evolve, the importance of openness and enabling innovation from the edges will prevail; i.e. the internet will essentially retain the key characteristics we enjoy today, mainly because there's more money to be made." 
Adam Peake, executive research fellow and telecommunications policy analyst at the Center for Global Communications

"Some parts of the internet may fragment, as nations pursue their own technology trajectories. The internet is so vastly complex, incremental upgrades seem to be the only way to get anything done ... Places like China may make big leaps and bounds because there is less legacy." 
Anthony Townsend, research director, The Institute for the Future

"The Web must still be a messy, fabulous, exciting, dangerous, poetic, depressing, elating place .. akin to life; which is not a bad thing." 
Luis Santos, Universidade do Minho-Braga, Portugal

"The internet is not magical; it will be utterly over-managed by commercial concerns, hobbled with 'security' micromanagement, and turned into money-shaped traffic for business, the rest 90% paid-for content download and the rest of the bandwidth used for market feedback." 
Tom Jennings, University of California-Irvine, creator of FidoNet and builder of Wired magazine's first online site

The evolving concept of time for work, leisure:

"Corporate control of workers' time -- in the guise of work/family balance -- [in 2020] now extends to detailed monitoring of when people are on and off work. The company town is replaced by 'company time-management,' and it is work time that drives all other time uses. This dystopia challenges the concept of white-collar work, and unionism is increasingly an issue." 
Steve Sawyer, associate professor in the College of Information Sciences and Technology, Penn State University

"The real-world interaction of the internet and the 'long tail' of the Semantic Web will enable everyone to find the perfect job for them, the right opportunity, so that people in general are happier, healthier, and more productive." 
Anonymous respondent

"The result may be longer, less-efficient working hours and more stressful home life." 
Victoria Nash, director of graduate studies and policy and research officer, the Oxford Internet Institute

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The current report is No. 3 in a series of surveys/reports in which the Pew Internet & American Life Project and Elon University ask experts to react to scenarios about the future of the internet and cell phones.

Full results of the survey, including additional quotes from hundreds of respondents as well as brief biographies of many of them, can be found at Imagining the Internet: A History and Forecast by using the "Predictions Surveys" link. Visitors to the site are invited to share their own visions for the future of the internet in the section of the site labeled "Voices of the People".

Read the full report at pewinternet.org

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Internet Overtakes Newspapers as News Outlet


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The internet, which emerged this year as a leading source for campaign news, has now surpassed all other media except television as an outlet for national and international news.

Currently, 40% say they get most of their news about national and international issues from the internet, up from just 24% in September 2007. For the first time in a Pew survey, more people say they rely mostly on the internet for news than cite newspapers (35%). Television continues to be cited most frequently as a main source for national and international news, at 70%.

For young people, however, the internet now rivals television as a main source of national and international news. Nearly six-in-ten Americans younger than 30 (59%) say they get most of their national and international news online; an identical percentage cites television. In September 2007, twice as many young people said they relied mostly on television for news than mentioned the internet (68% vs. 34%).

Figure

The percentage of people younger than 30 citing television as a main news source has declined from 68% in September 2007 to 59% currently. This mirrors a trend seen earlier this year in campaign news consumption. (See "Internet Now Major Source of Campaign News," News Interest Index, Oct. 31, 2008.)

The survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, conducted Dec. 3-7 among 1,489 adults, finds there has been little change in the individual TV news outlets that people rely on for national and international news. Nearly a quarter of the public (23%) says they get most of their news from CNN, while 17% cite Fox News; smaller shares mention other cable and broadcast outlets.

Top News Stories of 2008

While the 2008 presidential campaign attracted high levels of public attention, the economy was the top story of the year in terms of news interest, according to Pew's Weekly News Interest Index. In late September, as the nation's financial crisis deepened, 70% said they were following news about the economy very closely. That ranks among the highest levels of news interest for any story in the past two decades.

Figure

News about gas prices, both rising and falling, also attracted considerable public attention. In early June, two-thirds of Americans (66%) said they were tracking news about the rising price of gasoline very closely.

The rising price of gasoline was the top news story in 2007, but far fewer followed news about rising gas prices very closely (52% in May). This year, the falling price of gas also drew broad interest (53% very closely in October).

The congressional debate over legislation to stabilize financial markets also drew extensive interest. In early October, just after President Bush signed the financial rescue measure, 62% followed this story very closely.

Interest in election news remained at historically high levels throughout the lengthy campaign. Interest in the general election peaked in mid-October (at 61%), but approached that level at other points in the campaign. Public interest in the primary campaigns also was higher than during previous primary contests. In mid-February, 44% said they were following news about the candidates for the presidential election very closely.

Notably, the war in Iraq was not among this year's 15 most closely followed news stories. In mid-July, a third of Americans (33%) said they were following news about the current situation and events in Iraq, the highest percentage measured this year. In 2007, interest in news about the war reached 40% in early January, just before President Bush announced his troop surge; the war in Iraq was the sixth-ranked story last year.

In Pew's final Weekly News Interest Index for 2008, nearly four-in-ten Americans (37%) say they followed news about the Bush administration's plan to provide emergency loans to U.S. automakers. That is in line with previous measures of public interest in the debate over whether to aid the struggling automakers. Three-in-ten (30%) paid very close attention to news about a Wall Street investor, Bernard Madoff, who allegedly cheated people out of billions of dollars. Nearly as many (28%) tracked news about an Iraqi journalist throwing his shoes at President Bush very closely, and 25% said they followed news about slumping retail sales during the holiday season very closely.

These findings are based on the most recent installment of the weekly News Interest Index, an ongoing project of the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press. The index, building on the Center's longstanding research into public attentiveness to major news stories, examines news interest as it relates to the news media's coverage. The weekly survey is conducted in conjunction with The Project for Excellence in Journalism's News Coverage Index, which monitors the news reported by major newspaper, television, radio and online news outlets on an ongoing basis. The most recent survey was conducted December 19-22 from a nationally representative sample of 1,013 adults.

Find more about news interest and the campaign at people-press.org.

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UNITED STATES: Internet Advertising Revenues in Q3 ''08 at Nearly $5.9 Billion

The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) today announced that Internet advertising revenues reached almost $5.9 billion for the third quarter of 2008, representing an 11 percent increase over the same period in 2007. While double-digit annual growth continues, the quarter-to-quarter curve remains relatively flat compared to recent past performance. The Q3 2008 figures, published in the IAB Internet Advertising Revenue Report, are 2 percent higher than the Q2 2008 results. Set against strong economic headwinds in the U.S. economy, Q3 ''''''''08''''''''s $5.9 billion represents nonetheless the second-highest quarter results ever. For the first nine months of 2008, revenues totaled $17.3 billion, up from $15.2 billion in the same period a year ago and surpassing the record set in the first nine months of 2007 by nearly 14 percent. 

The growth of interactive advertising that we''''''''ve been experiencing over the past few years has stabilized due in large part to the difficult current economic climate," said Randall Rothenberg, President and CEO of the IAB. "Interactive advertising continues to be the most measurable and cost-effective way to reach consumers, and we see more and more marketers seeking to harness its power."

David Silverman, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, added that, "a weakening economy will continue to be a challenge to all forms of advertising-supported media. However, the Internet should be better poised to withstand the storm given its ability to combine performance-based advertising along with broad-based branding."

Conducted by the New Media Group of PricewaterhouseCoopers, the Internet Advertising Revenue Report was launched in 1996 by the IAB and aggregates data from all companies that report meaningful online advertising revenues. The results are considered the most accurate measurement of interactive advertising revenues as the data are compiled directly from information supplied by companies selling advertising on the Internet. The survey includes data concerning online advertising revenues from Web sites, commercial online services, ad networks, free e-mail providers, and other companies selling online advertising. First- and third-quarter revenue reports are estimates, with actual figures released with the second- and fourth-quarter data respectively. PwC does not audit the information and provides no opinion or other form of assurance with respect to the information.

By New Media Group of PricewaterhouseCoopers, published by IAB.
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EU: Cyber patrols and Internet investigation teams to reinforce the EU strategy against cyber crime

The Council of Ministers of the European Union recently adopted a strategy in order to reinforce the fight against cyber crime with a series of operational measures, i.e. cyber patrols, joint investigation teams and remote searches, which will be applied within the next five years. The strategy also introduces concrete steps for closer cooperation and information exchange between law enforcement authorities and the private sector.

The new strategy, a product of close collaboration of the European Commission and the Member States, has as its principal idea the reinforcement of the partnership between the police and the private sector. The key to this idea would be the knowledge-sharing on investigation methods and trends in cyber crime, encouraging both parties to respond quickly to information requests, organize remote searches as well as cyber patrols for online tracking of criminals and joint investigations across borders. 

An alert platform will also be set up in the near future hosting reports on crime committed on the Internet, such as posting of illegal content, within the European Union in straight collaboration and cross-checking by Europol. The platform, a project necessary for the success of the strategy in question, will receive the financing of the European Commission with an amount reaching 
300 000 Euro and will be implemented by Europol. 

Jacques Barrot, the Vice-President of the European Commission and European Commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security, highlighted the importance of this strategy by saying: 

"The strategy encourages the much needed operational cooperation and information exchange between the Member States. It gives a shared responsibility to the Commission, the Member States and other stakeholders to introduce the different measures. If the strategy is to make the fight against cyber crime more efficient, all stakeholders have to be fully committed to its implementation. We are ready to support them, also financially, in their efforts." 

Further information:

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