Elon University
The prediction, in brief:

What the Internet needs … is not rules and guidelines but a more fully functioning set of community standards. Although laws are certainly necessary for many sorts of things, community standards are better than laws because they are more flexible, more situational, cheaper, less dependent on supposedly objective authorities, and basically decentralized. Community standards are the best way to regulate a commmons. And that’s what the Internet is – a commons.

Predictor: Agre, Phil

Prediction, in context:

In the March 1994 issue of his online newsletter The Network Observer, Phil Agre wrote: ”What the Internet needs, then, is not rules and guidelines but a more fully functioning set of community standards. Although laws are certainly necessary for many sorts of things, community standards are better than laws because they are more flexible, more situational, cheaper, less dependent on supposedly objective authorities, and basically decentralized. Community standards are the best way to regulate a commmons. And that’s what the Internet is – a commons.”

Biography:

Phillip E. Agre was an associate professor of information studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, and has been the author of research studies on the Internet. He edited The Network Observer, an online newsletter on Internet issues. (Research Scientist/Illuminator.)

Date of prediction: March 1, 1994

Topic of prediction: Global Relationships/Politics

Subtopic: Government

Name of publication: The Network Observer

Title, headline, chapter name: The Internet as a Commons

Quote Type: Direct quote

Page number or URL of document at time of study:
http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/tno/march-1994.html

This data was logged into the Elon/Pew Predictions Database by: Baskerville, Justen Ramon