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Oxf Rev Econ Policy 2001; 17:159-187
© 2001 Oxford University Press and Oxford Review of Economic Policy Ltd
Article |
The Evolving Accidental Information Super-Highway
All Souls College, Oxford, and Stanford University
Abstract
The technology of the Internet is not static. Although its end-to-end architecture has made this connection-less communications system readily extensible, and highly encouraging to innovation both in hardware and software applications, there are strong pressures for engineering changes. Some of these are wanted to support novel transport services (e.g. voice telephony, real-time video); others would address drawbacks that appeared with the opening of the Internet to public and commercial traffice.g. the difficulties of blocking delivery of offensive content, suppressing malicious actions (e.g. denial of service attacks), pricing bandwidth usage to reduce congestion. The expected gains from making improvements in the core of the network should be weighed against the loss of the social and economic benefits that derive from the end-to-end architectural design. Even where technological fixes can be placed at the networks' edges, the option remains to search for alternative, institutional mechanisms of governing conduct in cyberspace.
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