Week 1: Response to Tim Berners-Lee (Cecilia Cai)

Besides Berners-Lee’s article “Long Live the Web”, I chose to read Burrington’s “A Network of Fragments”. These two readings both discuss the features of the present Web, presenting me with new understandings.

 I’ve been confused by the concepts of the Web, the Internet, and Networks, and thought of them as the same thing – the so-called online state. From I learned that the Internet is an electronic network providing an environment for the Web, an application, to run. In fact, we are so accustomed to living with the Web today that we always follow its trends unconsciously without recognizing the changes they brought to our lives. I want to highlight here is the openness of the Web. As Berners-Lee states, universality and decentralization have become key features of the Web and are indispensable for its future development. Internet connections are usually easily accessible, enabling anyone to message others anywhere and anytime. One thing that Berners-Lee mentions that strikes me is, “the Web is yours”. Indeed, as long as one is connected to the internet, he or she can equally access and use the resources. I read about some papers discussing people’s identities and the common psychology when negotiating self and others, and learned that people’s identities are usually socially constructed and varies among environment. We tend to behave in the way that corresponds to the image we built previously when interacting with that group of people, revealing parts of our personalities and intentionally cater for their expectations for us. Different from the reality, where our codes and behaviors are affected by our multiple interpersonal relationships, we can choose to anonymize and reconstruct our identities. We can behave more freely, and easily escape the responsibilities — simply by cutting off the network connection. Therefore, we can create more things that we want with less considerations to others’ opinions about our identities in this open environment. However, being open and decentralized doesn’t mean there are no restrictions. As a kind of medium, the hidden messages of the Internet encourage certain behaviors and affect our habits. For instance, the instantaneity of online information changes the way we communicate. We tend to send short and direct messages, cutting full sentences into pieces, and using emojis instead of words to describe our emotions. Different Webs, such as different social media websites, also have their own encouraging style, such as Instagram’s preference for picture sharing and Twitter’s for small pieces of words and news. Moreover, hierarchy still exists on the Web, and wealth and power can be largely exaggerated. Moreover, as internet companies pursuing profits, they will certainly try to raise the conditions to gain access to their websites.

Another idea I want to further discuss is the value of data-sharing. Although it feels like that our identities on the Webs are virtual, we are constantly being tracked. I once browsed a website which can record the move of our censors once we log on to the page, and I was shocked about how the Webs capture and analyze our data so accurately all the time. In fact, more and more Webs are asking for our personal information in order to enlarge their data base. I know that these data are valuable, but never thought in depth why and how they are useful until reading about Berners-Lee’s discussions on the value-added service of sharing personal data. I learned from his article about how information is stored and shared within and between sites, and realize that, in my daily life, by clicking “log-in with Google” or “log-in with Facebook”, which I often do out of convenience, I am actually isolating my information to Google or Facebook. I realize that accessing information is different from possessing them, especially for companies, that also explains why many sites limits our access to its contents when log-in with an existing personal account on other websites or apps. I believe it is important to find the balance between sharing data and maintaining the universality of the Web.

Finally, being open and universal, the Web functions crucially as a public space. As Berners-Lee describes, a new trend of using the Web is as a “public machine” where people get information from others’ reviews and ratings. The mass collaborates to contribute to the Webs, altering the authority from the experts’ words to the majorities’ views.

I personally am excited about the future of the Webs. As predicted by Berners-Lee, the basic principles for the Web in the future will basically remain the same, while its trends and functionalities will surely develop greatly.

Week 2- Response to “Long Live the Web” by Tim Berners Lee and “The Room Where the Internet was Born” by Burrington – Madi Eberhardt

Tim Berners-Lee article, “Long Live the Web,” brings into the picture the web as this expansive tool created through “egalitarian principles” in which individuals from everywhere would work together in improving it. With this came the threatening of principles in which built the web at the start. The web is a democratic, public space, and open community for the world to access, and this has to be protected by its original principles by the people from these companies, governments and more. Universality, decentralization, and the separation of layers are the keys to ensuring, “that the technological protocols and social conventions we set up respect basic human values” (Lee 85).

One of the most important aspects of the web and internet that was brought up was about human rights. It should be the user of the web’s right to have no interference while using this open and fair space, yet this is being threatened by topics such as net neutrality. The web is so crucial to our daily lives, that this isn’t a topic that should just be avoided as Lee brings up. It is the users, us, who hold the power in protecting its principles.

Just as Burrington describes in her article, specifically describes how the web or the cloud is not just something that can be seen as being created as a whole, but in fragments. The future is envisioned by Lee as being one in which the web is used openly and to serve all of humanity. Burrington is describing this notion as she explains how the web wouldn’t have even advanced without being distributed throughout to different individuals, networks, etc.

Week 1: Response to “Long Live the Web” and “The Room Where the Internet Was Born” – Oona Pecson

In “Long Live the Web”, the advancement of both the web and internet is discussed, but the fact that the web and the internet are both separate from each other is what is mainly emphasized. Berners-Lee compares the internet to an electronic network, and the web can be compared to household appliances that feed off of the electricity brought to them via the electronic network. This analogy is important because, while the internet exists in the background, the web can continuously be changed and altered. As we progress into the modern era, there is constantly new web pages, sites, or other phenomenons being created. In fact, it is miraculous to look back and see how far we have come. However, with the positives of advancement comes realities that some may not want to face. This stems from how much is on the web, and how some items are not full deleted forever as users may think, or that there are people out there with potential access to hundreds of thousands of pools of personal data and a mind that could think of equally as many ways to use that data. This article brought up this reality of web security, and the connection to human rights (personal information being stolen, and the worries of snooping in general, etc). It was interesting to read through, because most people look at the internet and the web with excitement, without actually knowing what any of it means, or what the reality is. As we progress with development of internet and the web, we also need to progress with the protection of human rights on this platform, as well as educating people about it as much as possible. 

When reading “The Room Where the Internet Was Born”, it was just so interesting to picture a single room where the first breakthrough message was sent out via ARPANET. What is even more interesting is that this happened exactly 50 years ago this year in 1969! I think that a lot of young people today, including myself, don’t fully understand how young the phenomenon of the internet really is. For most of us grew up knowing about the internet, mobile devices, and a general idea of how to use those things. In reality, it was just when we were growing up, that development began to pick up speed. I remember when iPhones started coming out, and when wireless options were becoming more and more popular. But, reading this article and realizing that the breakthrough of all of this came from a single message being sent, gave me a bit of a shock. It is so cool to think that, from that one message (and who knows what that message was) we are able to use the internet to complete every day tasks from school to work, and even at home. it almost reminds me of the rapid urbanization of cities such as Shanghai, that massively grew and changed over a course of only 20 years from the 80s to the 2000s. Just as Shanghai changed into the global city it is today, the internet also grew in a similar fashion on its own. It is so cool to read this article, and look back to see just how far we have come.

Week 1 – HTML Portfolio Page – Jamie (Ziying Wang)

Project: My HTML Portfolio Page

Documented by: Jamie (Ziying Wang)

Webpage link:  http://imanas.shanghai.nyu.edu/~zw1745/week1/hw1.html

Date: Feb. 15, 2019

Description:

This portfolio page of mine isn’t hard to make but I came across two problems when making it.

The first one is the img function. I save my pictures in an img file inside the original file and when I put <img src=”name.png” alt=”name”> the image was broken and cannot appear on the site. Then I realized that html needs to look for my picture through files, therefore I put an “img/” before “name.png” to fix the problem.

The second one is not yet solved. I used many ios emoji in my websites, and they appear normally when I open it from local files, but when logging in through the link, the emojis turn into scrambled code. I haven’t figured out how to correct it yet.