The interplay of equally audible voices

Fred Evans’ Cyberspace and the Concept of Democracy: “We often speak of democracy as a mere decision-making procedure rather than as a “form of life.” Part of the reason for this formalism is the difficulty of revealing the aspects of individual and social existence that provide the impetus toward democracy and that democratic practices should reflect and augment. I argue that the Internet’s status as a “virtual” rather than actual reality (its status as a serendipitous form of what phenomenologists call an epochéor a “placing within brackets” of our standard beliefs) reveals some of the more important aspects underlying democracy. In particular, the Internet’s virtual status indicates that society is what I term a “metamorphosing multi-voiced body.” This implies that democracy off-line and online must support the interplay or solidarity among the “voices” of this body (as opposed to their mere plurality) and simultaneously respect their heterogeneity. It must adopt the “interplay of equally audible voices” as its political ideal. Because this interplay among voices produces new discourses, democracy’s valorization of the multi-voiced body must also affirm the metamorphosis that society’s creativity brings about. I also consider what this view of democracy means for current issues concerning the fate and character of the Internet as well for the clash between the liberal, communitarian, and deliberative views of online democracy.
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Microsoft’s killer app for the Two-Way-Web

ZDNet News: Netdocs: Microsoft’s .Net poster child?According to sources, Netdocs is a single, integrated application that will include a full suite of functions, including e-mail, personal information management, document-authoring tools, digital-media management, and instant messaging.” Could be good, could be crap. Fortunately, there are other interests in Two-Way-Web development.
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What is it good for?

The Magazine on Information Impacts, October 2000 issue is themed: Is Digital Government Good Government? “Since the days of the early 20th-century Progressives, we Americans have sought good government — efficient, responsive and effective with the “right” balance between intervention and individuals’ rights. Does migrating services online change what it means to be “good”?”
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Perhect!

e-2 “As word processing software becomes ever more advanced, with the ability to correct syntax and spelling errors, these familiar programmes begin to impose a standardised corporate language onto our writing – subtly altering its meaning. Working with the programmer Jon Pollard, Takahashi has produced a new and fully functioning online version of these platforms which undermines this dehumanising process. Reclaiming the initiative back from the software, Word Perhect presents an idiosyncratic hand drawn interface leading to a set of functioning but strangely altered tools.”

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