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- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!jrs
- From: jrs@netcom.com (John Switzer)
- Subject: USENET now an urban legend?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan1.052317.8292@netcom.com>
- Summary: Short article on USENET from the Economist
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Date: Fri, 1 Jan 1993 05:23:17 GMT
- Lines: 56
-
- Hey! Usenet and the Internet made it into the Economist's "The Good
- Network Guide," a list of secret and semi-secret "networks" or groups
- which include the Trilateral Commission and the Order of the
- Illuminati. I guess this means that USENET will soon be considered
- an urban legend in its own right.
-
- Usenet doesn't rate very highly, though. On a scale of 1 to 5, it rates:
-
- 2 for power
- 0 for secrecy
- 1 for organization
- 2 for strength of beliefs
- 1 for exclusivity
-
- Not very good, but we do get a 5 on "Peculiarity of Rituals." The
- complete text of the Economist blurb follows (reprinted without
- permission, but I know they won't mind).
-
- "The amount of travel trilateralists have to do underlines a problem
- with networking in the modern world. In future the best networks may
- be electronic, not personal, and their models will be USENET and
- Internet.
-
- "These really are networks, and even have wires. They link millions
- of computers around the world, and provide a global platform for
- everything from top-flight academic research to the distribution of
- salacious computer graphics. Internet grew out of a networking
- project started in the late 1960s by the Pentagon, to help its
- researchers share results. In the 1970s, having an electronic mailbox
- on the Internet was the mark of the true computer cognoscenti, the
- USDD-certified nerd. Today, however, Internet has become increasingly
- commercial. Various companies offer access to anyone with a computer,
- a modem, and a few dollars a month for subscriptions.
-
- "USENET, by contrast, was always populist. It began in the 1970sas a
- grass-roots effort to share information about the UNIX operating
- system - then , as now, the favourite of academics and serious
- wire-heads. It has grown by a simple rule: anybody who knows anybody
- on USENET can ask to be connected so long as he agrees to pay the
- price of his own telephone calls.
-
- "Internet's speciality is sharing software and computer services,
- which enables researchers to work closely with colleagues across the
- world. USENET specialises in argument. In addition to electronic
- mail, its principal offering is a few hundred "news groups," which
- serve as an electronic forum for the discussion of everything from
- the philosophy of artificial intelligence ("Is semiotics an informal
- logic?") to sex ("Shall I touch you where?"). In the high-tech world,
- if you're not on the net, you're not in the know."
-
- --- From the December 26th-January 8th issue of the Economist.
- --
- John Switzer | "What we have here is a failure to
- | masticate."
- Compuserve: 74076,1250 | -- MST3K's Dr. Clayton "Firebrand" Forrester,
- Internet: jrs@netcom.com | after TV's Frank is unable to eat his 13th turkey.
-