
24/7
Description
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What does this mean for us as individuals and for society as a whole? What are the social implications of this technological revolution that we have witnessed in the short span of about 20 years? Do people of different generations use these technologies in the same ways, or do they adopt them to support their communication habits formed at different times of their lives? How does the illusion of control provided by these technologies affect the way we think about what is meaningful in our lives? Hanson examines the wide-ranging impact of this change. How do individuals posting their viewpoints on the Internet affect democracy? Is it possible to ever completely prevent identity theft over the Internet? How permanent is information stored on the Internet or on a hard drive? Do cell phones change the way people think about privacy or the way they communicate with others? Does email? Do videogames teach new social principles? Do cell phones and the Internet change traditional communication behaviors and attitudes? Hanson discusses these crucial issues and explores to what extent individuals do have control, and she assesses how social and governmental services are responding to (or running from) the problems posed by these new technologies.
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- One 24/7: Anytime, Anywhere
- Two A Cultural History of Cell Phones and the Internet
- Three The Haves, Have-Nots, and Don't Wants
- Four Time Bandits and Space Cadets: Intimacy and Illusions of Control
- Five Digital Democracy: Individuals and Society in Transition
- Six Social Spaces and Scary Places
- Seven Bites and Fragments: What Do We Know? What Do We Own?
- Eight Where Have All the Phone Booths Gone?
- Nine Living in the Global Village
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
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