The Manifesto of the Internet
The chaotic epiphany called the internet, the dark universal manifest of society, an anarchist society without bounds or regulation, has raised strong concern among many governmental officials and corporate entities. Its structure allows for any user to truly remain anonymous thus removing any sense of ethics, responsibilities and civics from our actions. Its size gives us access to nearly all the data in existence. It is a true example of the paradox of mercantilist society with a truly informed population; any attempt to create a corporate enterprise relying on the ignorance of a large demographic of the population will be unsuccessful, yet our unsuppressed barbaric instinct creates the transcendent wonders of lolcats.
Fear of losing a humble hardworking population has led to medial censorship in second-world countries such as China, a well intuitive move for a country relying on third-rate labour to make its mark on the economy.
The internet has hung a permanent ornament on all those who have experienced its awe; with the proposal on an internet kill switch from US senator, the world saw the imperious rage of the millions when their freedom was threatened.
Now with that said, does one still trust that they can make successful enterprise selling data when another can easily retrieve this data if they so wished at his or her leisure from online sources “illegally”?
I believe that my point has been proved thoroughly, long live /b/.
-Taras Kolomatski