English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Please offer your insight in regards to what might have come to be if the internet was never made available to the public.
What might the world be like?
What problems or lack there of would we face?
Major differences from today?
Please offer as much insight into this scenario as you can!
Thanks so much in advance

2007-09-28 17:30:14 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Other - Politics & Government

9 answers

The internet was a joint venture between the military and some research universities. The military funded the universities to build a rudimentary network across the continent - and then the universities taught the military how to do the make its own networks and secure them.

I suppose the technology could have been kept secret, but it would have been likely "rediscovered" a few years later by private businesses. It isn't much different than normal networking technology, it just covers a larger distance and works across more varied platforms. Its a natural evolution of the computer industry, so its not something that could have been prevented, in my opinion. The internet that exists today was basically popularized and constructed by AOL, MSN, and Prodigy.

The vast majority of the content is user-driven, and all the funding and expense is covered through your voluntary payments to your internet service provider. As its untaxed, its one of the things the government is LEAST involved with - and that probably has a lot to do with why its so successful.

2007-09-28 17:38:50 · answer #1 · answered by freedom first 5 · 2 0

We would be writing letters to editors rather than posting our ideas on the Internet.

Your credit card would be safer.

Print, TV and radio would have less competition.

The Internet was under the control of the military at one time. It was developed so that there would be a way for survivors of a nuclear war to communicate with each other by allowing messages to be routed via many different paths to a destination.

However, if the military didn't release it, it would have evolved without them. Before the military developed the current system, a few colleges were using email and that would have developed into an internet anyway.

2007-09-28 17:43:16 · answer #2 · answered by Yaktivistdotcom 5 · 0 0

We does now not be attentive to approximately Ron Paul, or any of the flaws that the mainstream media does not approve of. The networks and the main considerable classes are affiliated with the Council on distant places family members. flow to the Council on distant places family members internet site and seem at their club record. you will see lots well-known names in mainstream media, academia, the main considerable firms, and a great variety of of the biggest names in politics. that ought to strike me as a conflict of pastime. How can the yank human beings particularly be attentive to what is going on while exceptionally much all the main considerable media belong to the comparable club? in case you desire to be attentive to what that club advocates, examine their magazine: distant places AFFAIRS. The CFR has been working our distant places coverage because of the fact that worldwide conflict 2. The CFR can take credit for the Korean conflict, Viet Nam, and the present mess in Iraq. Thank God for the internet. Now, the yank human beings have a source of information that isn't Council on distant places family members licensed.

2017-01-02 19:32:58 · answer #3 · answered by sievert 3 · 0 0

What a pleasure to read an intelligent question here.

My view is that, in the last couple of years, the US Government hasn't been 'functioning' very well, so I reckon the US Government/Military contributed little or nothing beyond money.
The private sector develped the whole shebang.

2007-09-28 18:01:18 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The government and the military didn't release the internet to the public.

The PUBLIC developed the internet. The US government and the military later adopted it.

2007-09-28 17:37:10 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

They had it in 1969,albeit a crude form of it.And if it were not released to the general public they would've lost the greatest opportunity in history in monitoring every user on the planet.The Beast in Belgium is only one of many supercomputers in the world that tracks our every move.The NSA has the best and latest ones.

2007-09-28 18:17:34 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I live overseas I hear a little tone down Anti-Am at work and on the street "don't get me wrong I have nothing against you yanks But don't you think..." that type of thing But Good God on here It's "you yank are sh#T YOUR STUPID ETC" I wish some day to meet those that post this kind of talk Please God in haven just once

2007-09-28 17:54:01 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I didn't know that the military or the Government had any control over it in the first place.

2007-09-28 17:34:11 · answer #8 · answered by smsmith500 7 · 1 0

Then we wouldn't be playing in Yahoo Answers tonight.

2007-09-28 18:42:03 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers