World-Information City

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 WORLD-INFOSTRUCTURE > THE CONTENT INDUSTRY
  1. The Concept of the Public Sphere
  2. The Role of the Media
  3. Media Control and the Influence of Public Discourse
  4. Content Choice and Selective Reporting
  5. The Cassini Case
  6. "Project Censored"
  7. Commercial vs. Independent Content
  8. Commercial vs. Independent Content: Human and Financial Resources
  9. Commercial vs. Independent Content: Power and Scope
  10. Commercial Media and the Economic System
  11. Globalization of Media Power
  12. Centralization of the Content Industry
  13. Highlights on the Way to a Global Commercial Media Oligopoly: 1980s
  14. Highlights on the Way to a Global Commercial Media Oligopoly: 1990s
  15. The Big Five of Commercial Media
  16. AOL Time Warner
  17. Extract of AOL Time Warner’s Content Production and Distribution Holdings
  18. Disney
  19. Extract of Disney’s Content Production and Distribution Holdings
  20. Problems of Media Concentration
  21. Convergence
  22. Media Giants Online
  23. Commercial Content
  24. Content as Transport Medium for Values and Ideologies
  25. Digital Commercial Content
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World Wide Web (WWW)
Probably the most significant Internet service, the World Wide Web is not the essence of the Internet, but a subset of it. It is constituted by documents that are linked together in a way you can switch from one document to another by simply clicking on the link connecting these documents. This is made possible by the Hypertext Mark-up Language (HTML), the authoring language used in creating World Wide Web-based documents. These so-called hypertexts can combine text documents, graphics, videos, sounds, and Java applets, so making multimedia content possible.

Especially on the World Wide Web, documents are often retrieved by entering keywords into so-called search engines, sets of programs that fetch documents from as many servers as possible and index the stored information. (For regularly updated lists of the 100 most popular words that people are entering into search engines, click here). No search engine can retrieve all information on the whole World Wide Web; every search engine covers just a small part of it.

Among other things that is the reason why the World Wide Web is not simply a very huge database, as is sometimes said, because it lacks consistency. There is virtually almost infinite storage capacity on the Internet, that is true, a capacity, which might become an almost everlasting too, a prospect, which is sometimes consoling, but threatening too.

According to the Internet domain survey of the Internet Software Consortium the number of Internet host computers is growing rapidly. In October 1969 the first two computers were connected; this number grows to 376.000 in January 1991 and 72,398.092 in January 2000.

World Wide Web History Project, http://www.webhistory.org/home.html

http://www.searchwords.com/
http://www.islandnet.com/deathnet/
http://www.salonmagazine.com/21st/feature/199...