BOOK REVIEW: ‘Consent of the Networked’

By Nicole Russell - Special to The Washington Times

Friday, February 3, 2012

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/feb/3/book-review-consent-of-the-networked/

CONSENT OF THE NETWORKED: THE WORLDWIDE STRUGGLE FOR INTERNET FREEDOM
By Rebecca MacKinnon
Basic Books, $26.99, 320 pages

In the United States, a country that fosters innovation and upholds freedom, it 
can be difficult to imagine circumstances in which citizens use the Internet as 
anything but a platform for productivity via sites like Google, Twitter or 
Facebook. Within the first chapter of “Consent of the Networked,” author 
Rebecca MacKinnon shows that for some parts of the world, however, the Internet 
provides much more. A journalist and former CNN bureau chief in Tokyo and 
Beijing, Ms. MacKinnon sets out to determine “how digital technology can be 
structured, governed, and used to maximize the good it can do in the world, and 
minimize the evil.”

Through stories of revolutionary uprisings in countries such as Tunisia and 
Egypt that came about partly through organization and communication via 
Facebook, Twitter and WordPress, Ms. MacKinnon shows the Internet’s explosive 
power in the hands of determined political activists.

Ms. MacKinnon’s reported and personal stories about China are most insightful 
and moving in their detailed demonstration of how far people will go to be able 
to live freely. (In fact, between the lines, sections of the book read like a 
manifesto against communism, especially as it plays out online, something Ms. 
MacKinnon calls “networked authoritarianism.”)

Indeed, Ms. MacKinnon details Google’s complicated relationship with China and 
sounds relieved and encouraged to point out that their severed relationship is 
a sign of the increased possibility of a free and open Internet respectful of 
human rights. However, Ms. MacKinnon observes: “The Chinese Communist Party has 
created a system that keeps itself in power while engaging its citizens and 
helping them succeed economically. … [But] the Internet’s pervasive use in 
China will actually help prolong the Communist Party’s rule of China rather 
than hasten its demise.”

Ms. MacKinnon’s stories of the effort occurring worldwide as people harness the 
Internet, often with a political, socioeconomic or religious motivation, are 
discerning, harrowing and empowering. From Egypt’s record of torturing and 
jailing bloggers, China’s system of corporate-level censorship and South 
Korea’s strict requirements for real identification for online users, Ms. 
MacKinnon repeatedly strikes the appropriate balance between a technological 
discussion of the Net and the significance of human rights.

Because people are using the Internet for everything from a haven from abusive 
relationships to a way of communicating against authoritarian rule, she makes a 
case for the need for a cohesive system of law in cyberworld such as there is 
in the real world.

Interestingly, Ms. MacKinnon’s research pointedly and consistently shows a 
two-faced Internet: On one, the politically repressed find freedom; on the 
other, corporations and governments violate basic privacies. She surmises, “In 
the Internet age, it is inevitable that corporations and government agencies 
have access to detailed information about people’s lives. Without transparency 
and accountability in the use of this information, democracy will be eroded.”

Two-thirds of the book sets up the groundwork and relays examples of the 
fundamental problems of ensuring the Internet remains a free “place”; the last 
third describes several possible solutions. Anyone who has heard of Egyptians 
using Twitter to aid the overthrow of a government but who worries that his 
identity or privacy may be compromised when using Facebook or Gmail wants to 
know, as Ms. MacKinnon does, “How do citizens make sure that private agendas 
and pursuit of profit do not erode consumer choice and even democratic 
expression?”

The solutions are as multifaceted as the questions. Ms. MacKinnon suggests 
regulation of the Internet might help but admits that sometimes governments 
contribute to the problem, so they may not be completely unbiased when 
confronting the issues. In many of her examples that occur between “netizens” 
(citizens of the Net) and large corporations (such as Facebook or Google) the 
latter bears the burden to rise to the occasion, be more transparent and work 
with governments.

She argues, “[W]e must devise more effective and innovative ways to constrain 
all forms of digital power within reasonable limits, whether that power is 
exercised by governments, corporations, or activist hacker networks carrying 
ideological and religious stripes.”

Ms. MacKinnon mentions personal responsibility in passing - curious, especially 
given that people hop on the Internet of their own accord, and sites like 
Facebook, Google and Twitter are completely free of cost to users. She 
suggests, “The more we actively use the Internet to exercise our rights as 
citizens and to improve our societies, the harder it will be for governments 
and corporations to chip away at our freedoms, arguing as they so often do that 
we do not deserve them, and treating us like reprobates.”

Packed with thorough and impeccable research and persuasive, eye-opening 
anecdotes from around the world, “Consent of the Networked” should spearhead a 
robust debate and join the handful of other books that successfully guide the 
reader through the land mines surrounding responsible use of the Internet.

• Nicole Russell has written for TheAtlantic.com, Politico, National Review 
Online and the American Spectator.


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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