And Even More Good News From Labour.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i dont think anything legal should be stopped, morally or not i think it should be shown, however i do believe that illegal must have regulations. having said that, there does seem to be underhanded monitering of the web, for example, copyright infingements are constantly causing sights to face cease or desist warnings, a couple of examples are
1) George Bush and Tony Blair singing "Gay Bar" was a very popular and funny video that is now virtually vanished from all websites private or non private, i have so far only found one site with an active download and that claims it wil be closed down soon due to outside pressures,
2) a website that is dedicated to naked girls with piercings received a threat of action because a member of the public registered to the site and placed on her profile that she enjoyed playing on her nintendo gamecube as an interest, Nintendo, alerted to the word NINTENDO being placed on a mild soft porn site threatened the site with legal action over copyright infingement and using there name in a pornographic way.
Nintendo were later forced to retract that when it was pointed out that it was merely a member of the public stating what interests they had and was not in any way accountable to what the public writes. this lead to nintendo offering a substantial donation to the siteholders favourite registered charity and a free game console and selection of games to the member of the public caught up in this affair as way of apologising for heavy handed use if regulating its own copyright.
So it seems that someone somewhere is making sure that some things are not published and allowing other things to be published, we are all controlled by someone to how much information we view and receive, only sometimes it can take a while for them to stop us and the internet is so huge that some can slip the net (excuse the pun)
I agree. I think that one should always check the accuracy of the information, whether it was retrieved from the world wide web, a book, word of mouth, etc. However the interesting thing about the world wide web is that there is no underlying code of ethics that publishers of websites have to go by. For most other media types, such as news papers, magazines, scientific journals, etc. there is at least some type of internal quality control involved, usually in the form of a code of ethics of some type. In the sientific community, technical papers are peer reviewed before being published. This definitely does not mean that everything you read in the newspapers or journals is true. I'm sure these codes of ethics are broken by many, but at least there is an attempt to assure the quality of information being published. This suggests that using the world wide web as a reference requires much more responsibility by the user than using the other media types mentioned above. Unfortunately, this also suggests that as the amount of information on the world wide web increases, the value of the web as a reliable resource will decrease. I can already see this as being the case. When I am searching for specific information on the web, I end up spending a significant amount of time wading through a bunch of junk before I finally find what I am looking for. Obviously, the proper use of search engines and the improvement in search engine technology should decrease the amount of time spent searching for specific information, but I'm not sure how big a difference it will make.
I also think that the web will be more regulated in the future just because people like to make rules and regulations. Unfortuneately, the regulations will probably be based on morality rather than quality assurance.
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