
Originally Posted by
Morning Glory
I see your point, but I think I don't think we will be able to agree on a middle ground of impact. People who live in western Europe, and North America have a tendency to forget that there really is no such thing as free speech. They have leased speech. For someone to think that the Internet offers anonymity they are really quiet a skilled technician, or else they underestimate technology. There's an old rebellious statement that says If voting changed anything, then it would be illegal. Likewise, if weblogs challenged the authority of power structures that quelled free speech, then they would shut them down. That just goes to show that they don't consider it of any significant threat, and not worth bothering with.
Obviously the use of Internet tracking, like cell phone monitoring, plays a huge role in the war on terror, they just don't talk about it because it that's the entire point of espionage, for people not to know about it. In other words, all the information that's exchanged has someone's hand dipping into it. From military Intel, to local news, it's all political (albeit, on varying levels of seriousness).
blogs may be useful for entertainment, but I just can't imagine them having any serious credible journalistic potential. the point of all this is that there's far more that goes on behind the scenes in intelligence and broadcasting then simply point, shoot and publish. it's not a job of the layman and anyone who already is connected, would be playing it in the big leagues, not buying a 29.99 dot com
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