[Download this release in pdf format]
Sept. 25, 2006 - Technology
builders, entrepreneurs, consultants, academicians and
futurists from around the world share their newest
observations about key issues in "The Future of
the Internet II," a survey conducted by the Pew
Internet & American Life Project and Elon
University.
Nearly 750 people submitted their
ideas about the impacts networked technologies may have
on world societies by 2020. Among the themes in the
predictions:
-
Continued serious erosion of
individual privacy
-
Improvement of virtual reality
and problems associated with ever-more-compelling
synthetic worlds
-
Greater economic opportunities
for those in developing nations
-
Changes in languages and the
rise of autonomous machines that operate beyond human
control
The release of the report
coincides with the first OneWebDay, Sept.
22, a celebration of the human collaboration
and connection the internet makes possible.
"The people who look over
the horizon are a pretty contentious group," said
Lee Rainie, Director of the Pew Internet &
American Life Project. "Many know from history
and personal experience that technologies can have good
and bad effects. You can see them toting up the pluses
and minuses in their answers. I come away with a sense
that the future is still up for grabs, even as everyone
agrees that it will be very different from
today."
"People responding to the
survey expressed deep concern over who controls
internet architecture," said the report's
principal author Janna Anderson,
director of the Imagining the Internet Project (www.imaginingtheinternet.org)
and assistant professor of communications at Elon University.
"They also expressed the incredibly deep feelings
of connection they experience when using this unrivaled
communications tool. They see it as a way for the world
to benefit from collaboration, creativity and the
wisdom of crowds, but they also see it as a disruptive
technology that will bring significant changes –
some negative – throughout human
networks."
Researchers at the Pew Internet
Project and Elon University's School of
Communications conducted the survey of internet
luminaries and builders from November 2005 to April
2006. This second survey follows a January 2005 report
that detailed forecasts by technology experts about the
next decade of Internet development.
"The Future of the Internet
II" asked selected participants to react to
variety of networked information technology scenarios
related to national boundaries, human languages,
artificial intelligence and other topics. Among the
questions implicit in the scenarios were: Will more
people choose to live "off the grid"? Will
autonomous machines leave people out of the loop? Will
English be the lingua franca? Will national boundaries
be displaced by new groupings? Following is a brief
selection of a few of the most provocative future
visions shared by respondents to the survey scenarios
– these do not represent majority views.
"We are constructing architectures of
surveillance over which we will lose control. It's
time to think carefully about 'Frankenstein,'
The Three Laws of Robotics, 'Animatrix,' and
'Gattaca.'" – Marc
Rotenberg, executive director of the
Electronic Privacy Information Center
"Privacy is a thing of the
past. Technologically it is obsolete. However, there
will be social norms and legal barriers that will
dampen out the worst excesses." –
Hal Varian, University of
California-Berkeley and Google
"Before 2020, every newborn
child in industrialized countries will be implanted
with an RFID or similar chip. Ostensibly providing
important personal and medical data, these may also be
used for tracking and surveillance." –
Michael Dahan, a professor at
Sapir Academic College in Israel
"A system with too much
public-domain info about individuals will limit the
type of people who enter politics to those who grew up
in convents and abbeys." – James
Schultz, principal partner, Pretty Good
Consulting
"English will be a prominent language on
the internet because it is a complete trollop willing
to be remade by any of its speakers (after all, English
is just a bunch of mispronounced German, French, and
Latin words). … That said – so what?
Chinese is every bit as plausible a winner. Spanish,
too. Russian! Korean!" – Cory
Doctorow, blogger and co-founder of Boing
Boing
"English will not displace
or replace the other major languages in the world,
including French, Spanish, Japanese, Germanic, Hindu,
etc. It is likely that English will become (as it
already has in most domains) lingua franca, and a
requirement that everybody learn English as a second
language to have a common language to communicate
with." - Stewart Alsop,
investor and analyst; former editor of InfoWorld and
Fortune columnist; internet user since 1994
"Of course, a lot of 2020
English will sound Mandarinish." - Bob
Metcalfe, Ethernet inventor, founder of 3Com
Corporation, former CEO of InfoWorld, now a venture
capitalist and partner in Polaris Venture Partners;
internet user since 1970
"It seems paradoxical that
the Internet can be a powerful force for memorializing
and evangelizing local languages and cultures and
differences and still lead to a great homogenization as
the thirst for knowledge leads one invariably into
Chinese and English. In 2020, many more people will be
bilingual, with a working web-interaction knowledge of
English to go with their native tongue." -
Glenn Ricart, executive director,
Price Waterhouse Coopers Advanced Research; member of
the board of trustees of the Internet Society; internet
user since 1968
"I do not
see a commitment from national legislatures and from
international bodies to control commercial exploitation
of networks … Global regulation of networks that
privileges public good over commercial reward must
occur." – Andy
Williamson, managing director of Wairua
Consulting, New Zealand
"Profit motives will impede
data flow … Networks will conform to the public
utility model, with stakeholders in generation,
transmission, and distribution. Companies playing in
each piece of the game will enact roadblocks to collect
what they see as their fair share of tariff
revenue." – Peter Kim,
senior analyst, Forrester Research
"The information age needs
the flow of ideas, the political form always follows
the economic need. We will see a flattening of the
nation-state in Western society. In third-world
countries and networks of ethnic grouping such as the
Arab world, we will see a desperate attempt to hold
onto the framework as is." –
Amos Davidowitz, Institute of
World Affairs
"By becoming a valuable
infrastructure, the internet itself will become a
target. For some, the motivation will be the
internet's power (and impact), for others it will
just be a target to disrupt because of potential impact
of such a disruption." – Thomas
Narten, IBM and the Internet Engineering Task
Force
"We really need a series of
well-supported, lower-level watchdog organizations to
ensure that ICTs are not utilized by those in power to
serve the interests of profit at the expense of human
rights." – Lynn Schofield
Clark, director of the Teens and the New Media
@ Home Project at the University of
Colorado
"If you look
at [autonomous technology and] the way products are
currently developed and marketed, you'd have to say
human beings have been taken out of the equation. Human
intervention will soon be recognized as a necessary
part of developing and maintaining a society."
– Douglas Rushkoff, author,
social commentator and teacher
"Fear of enslavement by our
creations is an old fear, and a literary tritism. But I
fear something worse and much more likely – that
sometime after 2020 our machines will become
intelligent, evolve rapidly, and end up treating us as
pets. We can at least take comfort that there is one
worse fate – becoming food – that
mercifully is highly unlikely." –
Paul Saffo, forecaster and
director of The Institute for the Future
"The more autonomous agents
the better. The steeper the 'J curve' the
better. Automation, including through autonomous
agents, will help boost standards of living, freeing us
from drudgery." – Rob
Atkinson, Progressive Policy
Institute
"While area
codes might still define geographic locations in 2020,
reality codes may define virtual locations. Multiple
personalities will become commonplace, and
cyberpsychiatry will proliferate." –
Daniel Wang, principal partner,
Roadmap Associates
"In 2020, it may no longer
be 'screens' with which we interact. What I
mean by 'screen time' in 2020 is time spent
thinking about and interacting with
artificially-generated stimuli. Human-to-human
non-mediated interaction counts as 'face time'
even if you do it with a telephone or video wall."
– Glen Ricart, Internet
Society board member, formerly of DARPA
"A human's desire to
reinvent himself, live out his fantasies, overindulge,
addiction will definitely increase. Whole
communities/subcultures, which even today are a growing
faction, will materialise. We may see a vast blurring
of virtual/real reality with many participants living
an in-effect secluded lifestyle. Only in the online
world will they participate in any form of human
interaction." – Robert
Eller, technology consultant
"Instead of dealing with the
challenges and fears of teen-identity definition, more
and more youth are creating multiple 'virtual'
personalities and losing themselves to each of those
game scenarios …Do we end up with much more
mature, experientially compassionate people, or even
more anxious, fearful, and disassociative
personalities? It seems that even minimal intervention
at appropriate stages of virtual personality creations
could dramatically improve positive over negative
long-term outcomes." – Ed
Lyell, internet education expert
"These technologies allow us to find
cohorts that eventually will serve to decrease mass
shared values and experiences. More than cultural
fragmentation, it will aid a fragmentation of deeper
levels of shared reality." –
Denzil Meyers, founder and
president of Widgetwonder
“Behavior is the function
of learning, and the networks shall be the common
source of learning, a common platform where all
netizens stand equal." – Alik
Khanna, Smart Analyst Inc., India
"The greater the gap between
the digital haves and have-nots, the greater the
tension … We can imagine the UN (and Bono?)
organizing 'upgrades' for countries with a
disproportionate number of digitally disadvantaged
people." – Ralph
Blanchard, information services entrepreneur
and investor
"Corporation-based cultural
groupings may actually be one of the most destructive
forces if not enough cultural, relational, and
bottom-up social forces are built up. This does not
detract from the prediction that a lot more people than
today will have a good life through extensive networked
collaboration." – Alejandro
Pisanty, vice chairman of the board for ICANN
and CIO for the National University of
Mexico
Many top internet leaders, activists, and commentators
participated in the survey, including David Clark,
Gordon Bell, Esther Dyson, Fred Baker, Scott
Hollenbeck, Robert Shaw, Ted Hardie, Pekka Nikander,
Alejandro Pisanty, Bob Metcalfe, Peng Hwa Ang, Hal
Varian, Geert Lovink, Cory Doctorow, Anthony Rutkowski,
Robert Anderson, Ellen Hume, Howard Rheingold, Douglas
Rushkoff, Steve Cisler, Marilyn Cade, Marc Rotenberg,
Alan Levin, Eugene Spafford, Veni Markovski, Franck
Martin, Greg Cole, Paul Saffo, Thomas Narten, Alan
Inouye, Seth Finkelstein, Teddy Purwadi, Luc Faubert,
John Browning and David Weinberger, to name just a
few.
Participants include people from
VeriSign, BBN Technologies, Yahoo Japan, France
Telecom, the International Telecommunication Union,
Nanyang Technological University, the Electronic
Frontier Foundation, MIT, AfriNIC, Qualcomm, Electronic
Privacy Information Center, Nortel, Disney, Harvard,
RAND, IBM, Princeton, Sony, Google, Telematica
Instituut, Habitat for Humanity, Cisco, Greenpeace,
AT&T, Jupiter Research, CNET, Microsoft, Intel,
Amazon.com, Sprint, Intuit, HP Laboratories, Centre for
Policy Modelling, ICT Strategies, Bipolar Dream, the
Benton Foundation, Semacode, Warner, Hearst, Adobe
Systems, Forrester Research and many other top
groups.
Respondents were asked to agree
or disagree with each of a set of eight scenarios, and
they were given the opportunity to elaborate on their
answers. The scenarios – woven from data
collected in recent industry and research reports and
predictive public statements by leaders in science,
technology, business, and politics – were
designed to spur discussion.
-
57% said English will not crowd
out other languages on the internet. English will not
become the dominant language of the internet,
crowding others into obscurity; instead as the
internet continues to be improved and appears in
future language-spanning forms it will help people
preserve and use their regional dialects while still
communicating globally.
-
58% said people who don't
participate in digital communications networks will
form their own cultural group that self-segregates
from "modern" society. Resistance to
technological change may inspire some acts of
violence, but most struggles will still be inspired
by politics and economics, and many people will
remain unconnected due to these. Some people will
choose to be off the network – all the time
(going totally "off the grid") or
sometimes.
-
56% said online virtual reality
will lead to some addiction problems. Those who are
connected online will spend more time immersing
themselves in more-sophisticated, networked synthetic
worlds; while this will foster productivity and
connectedness and be an advantage to many, it will
lead to addiction problems for some.
-
54% said autonomous networked
technology (robots, control systems, etc.) will not
move beyond human control by 2020, and it does not
raise concern; the humans who are wielding technology
in search of wealth and power are, however, seen by
many respondents as likely to cause serious
concerns.
-
46% agreed and 49% disagreed
with the proposal that by 2020 transparency (brought
by networked communications sensing and storage) will
build a better world despite a loss of privacy. Most
respondents said some level of privacy must be
protected, either by law or by social contract. They
expect that governments and corporations will
escalate surveillance and "own" access to
information; the powerful/privileged will find
growing transparency more to their advantage than
others in society.
-
78% identified building network
capacity and the knowledge base to help people of all
nations use it as the first or second priority for
the world's policymakers and the technology
industry to pursue.
The online internet predictions
survey was conducted by Princeton Survey Research
Associates. Since it is a non-random sample, a margin
of error cannot be computed.
Visitors to www.imaginingtheinternet.org
are invited to share their own visions for the future
of the Internet in the section of the site labeled
"Voices of the People"
(www.elon.edu/predictions/RecentPredictions.aspx).
For more information about the
Internet Society's OneWebDay, consult the OneWebDay
wiki
(www.onewebday.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page) for
collaborating on projects.
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