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Republic.com by Cass R. Sunstein
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Republic.com

by Cass R. Sunstein

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101190,293 (2.85)3
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The outline of the book pose some very interesting questions regarding how democracy and citizenship relates to the increasing level of personalization and customization made possible by the advancement of information processing technology. While it is apparent that the author have a strong legal background, he clearly lack an understanding of not only how the Internet works but how it is reshaping our information consumption. The result is a book that is poorly researched in general and embarrassingly so in particular when it comes to computer security and intellectual property issues.

The language is strict and academic to the point of being unpleasant to read due to the lack of flow. ( )
  dege | Sep 5, 2007 |
"With 'deliberative domains' and various other possible policies, Sunstein presents thought-provoking ideas on how to expand democratic debate in the age of the Internet."
 
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0691070253, Hardcover)

The center does not hold. The rise of customizable media has mainstream thinkers, used to a near-monopoly on attention, running scared. Legal scholar Cass R. Sunstein makes the case for a more robust information diet from a slightly left of center point of view in Republic.com. Building on the ideas of the Technorealist movement, Sunstein focuses on the increasing volume of extremist voices as people choose to read or listen to only those points of view they already share. Though it seems that he occasionally overstates his case--it seems unlikely that we'll ever really be able to filter every unwanted or unexpected opinion--he does score some solid blows against the current, more or less laissez faire system. His prose is clear and accessible--exactly the kind of reasoned discourse he values and wants to preserve. His proposed program of government-sponsored and mandated public media spaces probably won't rouse many readers to wholehearted endorsement, but the suggestion that we have problems brewing ought to be enough to spur further thought. Since everyone from the American Nazi Party to the Zapatistas has found a stronger voice via the Internet, it's little wonder that we're starting to hear concerned prophets warning of a new Babel. Whether we can--or should--do anything beforehand is an open question; Republic.com makes a strong and pointed case against the status quo. --Rob Lightner

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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