A liberal hegemony?
6.6 A liberal hegemony?
A final point briefly worth making is that the Web is a space designed to let information flow, and to create opportunities for cooperation and collaboration. It is worth asking why freer information flow is a good thing, and the answers are pretty straightforward. It is good to have the freedom to express oneself in order that one can pursue one’s own autonomous and authentic projects. Unhindered criticism of gov- ernments and other power centres tends to lead to better governance; information drives democracy. Both of these reasons have their roots in a liberal, individualistic view of the world, in the tradition of Locke, Mill and Rawls. Perhaps the Web is a liberal artefact?
106 Web Governance, Security and Standards
There is certainly opposition to the Web from many sources (most of these sources, it is fair to say, are more than happy to employ the Web as a tool for organisation, communication and dissemination). Many illiberal governments restrict their citizens’ use of the Web, often using adaptations of firewall technology to create what is in effect a giant intranet within their borders. Even non-liberal democracies have some- thing of a problem with the Web. For instance, the government of Sin- gapore has a relatively light touch in its regulation of the Internet, but still blocks 100 or so pornographic sites, requires political and religious websites to be registered and licensed with the Singapore Broadcasting Authority, and bans election activity on the Web during election cam- paigns [197], even though it has a powerful vision of a knowledge-based economy and is one of the most enthusiastic governments in the world with respect to IT [273].
In the realm of non-governmental activity, the Web has also been seen as an agent of globalisation, and so views of the Web have been conditioned by authors’ political views about that trend. Many see the Internet as a wonderful anarchistic paradise while the Web, with its slick websites and mass appeal, has destroyed all that and normalised the online world. Online is just as grim and unjust, for such writers, as offline [241]. Marketing has replaced democracy. In these discourses, neologisms such as ‘cyberhegemony’ and ‘cyberdependency’ abound [226].
For the Web to be a contributor to global well-being its developers have to pick their way through a number of tricky debates such as this; it is essential that the Web does not become a global monoculture, while also avoiding the alternative of decomposing into several cultish mini- webs with little or no connectivity in between. The balance of respect for others’ points of view and proper defence of one’s own has always been a difficult one to strike in any sphere of human activity. At the moment, the Web surprises us with the fruitfulness of its connectivity. It is important that this is retained [30]. It may be that the fractal structure of the Web, if it can be nurtured, will be part of a solution [29]. We also need to understand the way that the Web is used in developing nations, rather than focusing on the Western democracies,
107 in order to ensure that it can serve as wide a set of constituencies as
6.6. A liberal hegemony?
possible [83]. Given all these worries, it is perhaps unsurprising that the US gov- ernment has recently come under pressure about the prominence of its role in Web governance, despite the obvious success of the Internet and the Web so far. The United Nations Working Group on Internet Governance’s 2005 report made a number of recommendations that all stakeholders should be involved in Internet governance [288]. This might change the liberalism of the Web. The likely effects of this on the Web itself are unknown (cf. [274]).