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Information society

An information society is a society or subculture where the usage, creation, distribution, manipulation and integration of information is a significant activity.[1] Its main drivers are information and communication technologies, which have resulted in rapid growth of a variety of forms of information. Proponents of this theory posit that these technologies are impacting most important forms of social organization, including education, economy,[2] health, government,[3] warfare, and levels of democracy.[4] The people who are able to partake in this form of society are sometimes called either computer users or even digital citizens, defined by K. Mossberger as “Those who use the Internet regularly and effectively”. This is one of many dozen internet terms that have been identified to suggest that humans are entering a new and different phase of society.[5]

Some of the markers of this steady change may be technological, economic, occupational, spatial, cultural, or a combination of all of these.[6] Information society is seen as a successor to industrial society. Closely related concepts are the post-industrial society (post-fordism), post-modern society, computer society and knowledge society, telematic society, society of the spectacle (postmodernism), Information Revolution and Information Age, network society (Manuel Castells) or even liquid modernity.

Definition edit

There is currently no universally accepted concept of what exactly can be defined as an information society and what shall not be included in the term. Most theoreticians agree that a transformation can be seen as started somewhere between the 1970s, the early 1990s transformations of the Socialist East[clarification needed] and the 2000s period that formed most of today's net principles and currently as is changing the way societies work fundamentally. Information technology goes beyond the internet, as the principles of internet design and usage influence other areas, and there are discussions about how big the influence of specific media or specific modes of production really is. Frank Webster notes five major types of information that can be used to define information society: technological, economic, occupational, spatial and cultural.[6] According to Webster, the character of information has transformed the way that we live today. How we conduct ourselves centers around theoretical knowledge and information.[7]

Kasiwulaya and Gomo (Makerere University) allude[where?][dubious ] that information societies are those that have intensified their use of IT for economic, social, cultural and political transformation. In 2005, governments reaffirmed their dedication to the foundations of the Information Society in the Tunis Commitment and outlined the basis for implementation and follow-up in the Tunis Agenda for the Information Society. In particular, the Tunis Agenda addresses the issues of financing of ICTs for development and Internet governance that could not be resolved in the first phase.

Some people, such as Antonio Negri, characterize the information society as one in which people do immaterial labour.[8] By this, they appear to refer to the production of knowledge or cultural artifacts. One problem with this model is that it ignores the material and essentially industrial basis of the society. However it does point to a problem for workers, namely how many creative people does this society need to function? For example, it may be that you only need a few star performers, rather than a plethora of non-celebrities, as the work of those performers can be easily distributed, forcing all secondary players to the bottom of the market. It is now common for publishers to promote only their best selling authors and to try to avoid the rest—even if they still sell steadily. Films are becoming more and more judged, in terms of distribution, by their first weekend's performance, in many cases cutting out opportunity for word-of-mouth development.

Michael Buckland characterizes information in society in his book Information and Society. Buckland expresses the idea that information can be interpreted differently from person to person based on that individual's experiences.[9]

Considering that metaphors and technologies of information move forward in a reciprocal relationship, we can describe some societies (especially the Japanese society) as an information society because we think of it as such.[10][11]

The word information may be interpreted in many different ways. According to Buckland in Information and Society, most of the meanings fall into three categories of human knowledge: information as knowledge, information as a process, and information as a thing.[12]

Thus, the Information Society refers to the social importance given to communication and information in today's society, where social, economic and cultural relations are involved.[13]

In the Information Society, the process of capturing, processing and communicating information is the main element that characterizes it. Thus, in this type of society, the vast majority of it will be dedicated to the provision of services and said services will consist of the processing, distribution or use of information.[13]

The growth of computer information in society edit

 
Internet users per 100 inhabitants
Source: International Telecommunication Union.[14][15]
 
The amount of data stored globally has increased greatly since the 1980s, and by 2007, 94% of it was stored digitally. Source

The growth of the amount of technologically mediated information has been quantified in different ways, including society's technological capacity to store information, to communicate information, and to compute information.[16] It is estimated that, the world's technological capacity to store information grew from 2.6 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 1986, which is the informational equivalent to less than one 730-MB CD-ROM per person in 1986 (539 MB per person), to 295 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2007.[17] This is the informational equivalent of 60 CD-ROM per person in 2007[18] and represents a sustained annual growth rate of some 25%. The world's combined technological capacity to receive information through one-way broadcast networks was the informational equivalent of 174 newspapers per person per day in 2007.[17]

The world's combined effective capacity to exchange information through two-way telecommunication networks was 281 petabytes of (optimally compressed) information in 1986, 471 petabytes in 1993, 2.2 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2000, and 65 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2007, which is the informational equivalent of 6 newspapers per person per day in 2007.[18] The world's technological capacity to compute information with humanly guided general-purpose computers grew from 3.0 × 10^8 MIPS in 1986, to 6.4 x 10^12 MIPS in 2007, experiencing the fastest growth rate of over 60% per year during the last two decades.[17]

James R. Beniger describes the necessity of information in modern society in the following way: “The need for sharply increased control that resulted from the industrialization of material processes through application of inanimate sources of energy probably accounts for the rapid development of automatic feedback technology in the early industrial period (1740-1830)” (p. 174) “Even with enhanced feedback control, industry could not have developed without the enhanced means to process matter and energy, not only as inputs of the raw materials of production but also as outputs distributed to final consumption.”(p. 175)[5]

Development of the information society model edit

 
Colin Clark's sector model of an economy undergoing technological change. In later stages, the Quaternary sector of the economy grows.

One of the first people to develop the concept of the information society was the economist Fritz Machlup. In 1933, Fritz Machlup began studying the effect of patents on research. His work culminated in the study The production and distribution of knowledge in the United States in 1962. This book was widely regarded[19] and was eventually translated into Russian and Japanese. The Japanese have also studied the information society (or jōhōka shakai, 情報化社会).

The issue of technologies and their role in contemporary society have been discussed in the scientific literature using a range of labels and concepts. This section introduces some of them. Ideas of a knowledge or information economy, post-industrial society, postmodern society, network society, the information revolution, informational capitalism, network capitalism, and the like, have been debated over the last several decades.

Fritz Machlup (1962) introduced the concept of the knowledge industry. He began studying the effects of patents on research before distinguishing five sectors of the knowledge sector: education, research and development, mass media, information technologies, information services. Based on this categorization he calculated that in 1959 29% per cent of the GNP in the USA had been produced in knowledge industries.[20][21][citation needed]

Economic transition edit

Peter Drucker has argued that there is a transition from an economy based on material goods to one based on knowledge.[22] Marc Porat distinguishes a primary (information goods and services that are directly used in the production, distribution or processing of information) and a secondary sector (information services produced for internal consumption by government and non-information firms) of the information economy.[23]

Porat uses the total value added by the primary and secondary information sector to the GNP as an indicator for the information economy. The OECD has employed Porat's definition for calculating the share of the information economy in the total economy (e.g. OECD 1981, 1986). Based on such indicators, the information society has been defined as a society where more than half of the GNP is produced and more than half of the employees are active in the information economy.[24]

For Daniel Bell the number of employees producing services and information is an indicator for the informational character of a society. "A post-industrial society is based on services. (…) What counts is not raw muscle power, or energy, but information. (…) A post industrial society is one in which the majority of those employed are not involved in the production of tangible goods".[25]

Alain Touraine already spoke in 1971 of the post-industrial society. "The passage to postindustrial society takes place when investment results in the production of symbolic goods that modify values, needs, representations, far more than in the production of material goods or even of 'services'. Industrial society had transformed the means of production: post-industrial society changes the ends of production, that is, culture. (…) The decisive point here is that in postindustrial society all of the economic system is the object of intervention of society upon itself. That is why we can call it the programmed society, because this phrase captures its capacity to create models of management, production, organization, distribution, and consumption, so that such a society appears, at all its functional levels, as the product of an action exercised by the society itself, and not as the outcome of natural laws or cultural specificities" (Touraine 1988: 104). In the programmed society also the area of cultural reproduction including aspects such as information, consumption, health, research, education would be industrialized. That modern society is increasing its capacity to act upon itself means for Touraine that society is reinvesting ever larger parts of production and so produces and transforms itself. This makes Touraine's concept substantially different from that of Daniel Bell who focused on the capacity to process and generate information for efficient society functioning.

Jean-François Lyotard[26] has argued that "knowledge has become the principle [sic] force of production over the last few decades". Knowledge would be transformed into a commodity. Lyotard says that postindustrial society makes knowledge accessible to the layman because knowledge and information technologies would diffuse into society and break up Grand Narratives of centralized structures and groups. Lyotard denotes these changing circumstances as postmodern condition or postmodern society.

Similarly to Bell, Peter Otto and Philipp Sonntag (1985) say that an information society is a society where the majority of employees work in information jobs, i.e. they have to deal more with information, signals, symbols, and images than with energy and matter. Radovan Richta (1977) argues that society has been transformed into a scientific civilization based on services, education, and creative activities. This transformation would be the result of a scientific-technological transformation based on technological progress and the increasing importance of computer technology. Science and technology would become immediate forces of production (Aristovnik 2014: 55).

Nico Stehr (1994, 2002a, b) says that in the knowledge society a majority of jobs involves working with knowledge. "Contemporary society may be described as a knowledge society based on the extensive penetration of all its spheres of life and institutions by scientific and technological knowledge" (Stehr 2002b: 18). For Stehr, knowledge is a capacity for social action. Science would become an immediate productive force, knowledge would no longer be primarily embodied in machines, but already appropriated nature that represents knowledge would be rearranged according to certain designs and programs (Ibid.: 41-46). For Stehr, the economy of a knowledge society is largely driven not by material inputs, but by symbolic or knowledge-based inputs (Ibid.: 67), there would be a large number of professions that involve working with knowledge, and a declining number of jobs that demand low cognitive skills as well as in manufacturing (Stehr 2002a).

Also Alvin Toffler argues that knowledge is the central resource in the economy of the information society: "In a Third Wave economy, the central resource – a single word broadly encompassing data, information, images, symbols, culture, ideology, and values – is actionable knowledge" (Dyson/Gilder/Keyworth/Toffler 1994).

At the end of the twentieth century, the concept of the network society gained importance in information society theory. For Manuel Castells, network logic is besides information, pervasiveness, flexibility, and convergence a central feature of the information technology paradigm (2000a: 69ff). "One of the key features of informational society is the networking logic of its basic structure, which explains the use of the concept of 'network society'" (Castells 2000: 21). "As an historical trend, dominant functions and processes in the Information Age are increasingly organized around networks. Networks constitute the new social morphology of our societies, and the diffusion of networking logic substantially modifies the operation and outcomes in processes of production, experience, power, and culture" (Castells 2000: 500). For Castells the network society is the result of informationalism, a new technological paradigm.

Jan Van Dijk (2006) defines the network society as a "social formation with an infrastructure of social and media networks enabling its prime mode of organization at all levels (individual, group/organizational and societal). Increasingly, these networks link all units or parts of this formation (individuals, groups and organizations)" (Van Dijk 2006: 20). For Van Dijk networks have become the nervous system of society, whereas Castells links the concept of the network society to capitalist transformation, Van Dijk sees it as the logical result of the increasing widening and thickening of networks in nature and society. Darin Barney uses the term for characterizing societies that exhibit two fundamental characteristics: "The first is the presence in those societies of sophisticated – almost exclusively digital – technologies of networked communication and information management/distribution, technologies which form the basic infrastructure mediating an increasing array of social, political and economic practices. (…) The second, arguably more intriguing, characteristic of network societies is the reproduction and institutionalization throughout (and between) those societies of networks as the basic form of human organization and relationship across a wide range of social, political and economic configurations and associations".[27]

Critiques edit

The major critique of concepts such as information society, postmodern society, knowledge society, network society, postindustrial society, etc. that has mainly been voiced by critical scholars is that they create the impression that we have entered a completely new type of society. "If there is just more information then it is hard to understand why anyone should suggest that we have before us something radically new" (Webster 2002a: 259). Critics such as Frank Webster argue that these approaches stress discontinuity, as if contemporary society had nothing in common with society as it was 100 or 150 years ago. Such assumptions would have ideological character because they would fit with the view that we can do nothing about change and have to adapt to existing political realities (kasiwulaya 2002b: 267).

These critics argue that contemporary society first of all is still a capitalist society oriented towards accumulating economic, political, and cultural capital. They acknowledge that information society theories stress some important new qualities of society (notably globalization and informatization), but charge that they fail to show that these are attributes of overall capitalist structures. Critics such as Webster insist on the continuities that characterise change. In this way Webster distinguishes between different epochs of capitalism: laissez-faire capitalism of the 19th century, corporate capitalism in the 20th century, and informational capitalism for the 21st century (kasiwulaya 2006).

For describing contemporary society based on a new dialectic of continuity and discontinuity, other critical scholars have suggested several terms like:

  • transnational network capitalism, transnational informational capitalism (Christian Fuchs 2008, 2007): "Computer networks are the technological foundation that has allowed the emergence of global network capitalism, that is, regimes of accumulation, regulation, and discipline that are helping to increasingly base the accumulation of economic, political, and cultural capital on transnational network organizations that make use of cyberspace and other new technologies for global coordination and communication. [...] The need to find new strategies for executing corporate and political domination has resulted in a restructuration of capitalism that is characterized by the emergence of transnational, networked spaces in the economic, political, and cultural system and has been mediated by cyberspace as a tool of global coordination and communication. Economic, political, and cultural space have been restructured; they have become more fluid and dynamic, have enlarged their borders to a transnational scale, and handle the inclusion and exclusion of nodes in flexible ways. These networks are complex due to the high number of nodes (individuals, enterprises, teams, political actors, etc.) that can be involved and the high speed at which a high number of resources is produced and transported within them. But global network capitalism is based on structural inequalities; it is made up of segmented spaces in which central hubs (transnational corporations, certain political actors, regions, countries, Western lifestyles, and worldviews) centralize the production, control, and flows of economic, political, and cultural capital (property, power, definition capacities). This segmentation is an expression of the overall competitive character of contemporary society." (Fuchs 2008: 110+119).
  • digital capitalism (Schiller 2000, cf. also Peter Glotz):[28] "networks are directly generalizing the social and cultural range of the capitalist economy as never before" (Schiller 2000: xiv)
  • virtual capitalism: the "combination of marketing and the new information technology will enable certain firms to obtain higher profit margins and larger market shares, and will thereby promote greater concentration and centralization of capital" (Dawson/John Bellamy Foster 1998: 63sq),
  • high-tech capitalism[29] or informatic capitalism (Fitzpatrick 2002) – to focus on the computer as a guiding technology that has transformed the productive forces of capitalism and has enabled a globalized economy.

Other scholars prefer to speak of information capitalism (Morris-Suzuki 1997) or informational capitalism (Manuel Castells 2000, Christian Fuchs 2005, Schmiede 2006a, b). Manuel Castells sees informationalism as a new technological paradigm (he speaks of a mode of development) characterized by "information generation, processing, and transmission" that have become "the fundamental sources of productivity and power" (Castells 2000: 21). The "most decisive historical factor accelerating, channelling and shaping the information technology paradigm, and inducing its associated social forms, was/is the process of capitalist restructuring undertaken since the 1980s, so that the new techno-economic system can be adequately characterized as informational capitalism" (Castells 2000: 18). Castells has added to theories of the information society the idea that in contemporary society dominant functions and processes are increasingly organized around networks that constitute the new social morphology of society (Castells 2000: 500). Nicholas Garnham[30] is critical of Castells and argues that the latter's account is technologically determinist because Castells points out that his approach is based on a dialectic of technology and society in which technology embodies society and society uses technology (Castells 2000: 5sqq). But Castells also makes clear that the rise of a new "mode of development" is shaped by capitalist production, i.e. by society, which implies that technology isn't the only driving force of society.

Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt argue that contemporary society is an Empire that is characterized by a singular global logic of capitalist domination that is based on immaterial labour. With the concept of immaterial labour Negri and Hardt introduce ideas of information society discourse into their Marxist account of contemporary capitalism. Immaterial labour would be labour "that creates immaterial products, such as knowledge, information, communication, a relationship, or an emotional response" (Hardt/Negri 2005: 108; cf. also 2000: 280-303), or services, cultural products, knowledge (Hardt/Negri 2000: 290). There would be two forms: intellectual labour that produces ideas, symbols, codes, texts, linguistic figures, images, etc.; and affective labour that produces and manipulates affects such as a feeling of ease, well-being, satisfaction, excitement, passion, joy, sadness, etc. (Ibid.).

Overall, neo-Marxist accounts of the information society have in common that they stress that knowledge, information technologies, and computer networks have played a role in the restructuration and globalization of capitalism and the emergence of a flexible regime of accumulation (David Harvey 1989). They warn that new technologies are embedded into societal antagonisms that cause structural unemployment, rising poverty, social exclusion, the deregulation of the welfare state and of labour rights, the lowering of wages, welfare, etc.

Concepts such as knowledge society, information society, network society, informational capitalism, postindustrial society, transnational network capitalism, postmodern society, etc. show that there is a vivid discussion in contemporary sociology on the character of contemporary society and the role that technologies, information, communication, and co-operation play in it.[citation needed] Information society theory discusses the role of information and information technology in society, the question which key concepts shall be used for characterizing contemporary society, and how to define such concepts. It has become a specific branch of contemporary sociology.

Second and third nature edit

Information society is the means of sending and receiving information from one place to another.[31] As technology has advanced so too has the way people have adapted in sharing information with each other.

"Second nature" refers a group of experiences that get made over by culture.[32] They then get remade into something else that can then take on a new meaning. As a society we transform this process so it becomes something natural to us, i.e. second nature. So, by following a particular pattern created by culture we are able to recognise how we use and move information in different ways. From sharing information via different time zones (such as talking online) to information ending up in a different location (sending a letter overseas) this has all become a habitual process that we as a society take for granted.[33]

However, through the process of sharing information vectors have enabled us to spread information even further. Through the use of these vectors information is able to move and then separate from the initial things that enabled them to move.[34] From here, something called "third nature" has developed. An extension of second nature, third nature is in control of second nature. It expands on what second nature is limited by. It has the ability to mould information in new and different ways. So, third nature is able to ‘speed up, proliferate, divide, mutate, and beam in on us from elsewhere.[35] It aims to create a balance between the boundaries of space and time (see second nature). This can be seen through the telegraph, it was the first successful technology that could send and receive information faster than a human being could move an object.[36] As a result different vectors of people have the ability to not only shape culture but create new possibilities that will ultimately shape society.

Therefore, through the use of second nature and third nature society is able to use and explore new vectors of possibility where information can be moulded to create new forms of interaction.[37]

Sociological uses edit

 
Estonia, a small Baltic country in northern Europe, is one of the most advanced digital societies.[38]

In sociology, informational society refers to a post-modern type of society. Theoreticians like Ulrich Beck, Anthony Giddens and Manuel Castells argue that since the 1970s a transformation from industrial society to informational society has happened on a global scale.[39]

As steam power was the technology standing behind industrial society, so information technology is seen as the catalyst for the changes in work organisation, societal structure and politics occurring in the late 20th century.

In the book Future Shock, Alvin Toffler used the phrase super-industrial society to describe this type of society. Other writers and thinkers have used terms like "post-industrial society" and "post-modern industrial society" with a similar meaning.

Related terms edit

A number of terms in current use emphasize related but different aspects of the emerging global economic order. The Information Society intends to be the most encompassing in that an economy is a subset of a society. The Information Age is somewhat limiting, in that it refers to a 30-year period between the widespread use of computers and the knowledge economy, rather than an emerging economic order. The knowledge era is about the nature of the content, not the socioeconomic processes by which it will be traded. The computer revolution, and knowledge revolution refer to specific revolutionary transitions, rather than the end state towards which we are evolving. The Information Revolution relates with the well known terms agricultural revolution and industrial revolution.

  • The information economy and the knowledge economy emphasize the content or intellectual property that is being traded through an information market or knowledge market, respectively. Electronic commerce and electronic business emphasize the nature of transactions and running a business, respectively, using the Internet and World-Wide Web. The digital economy focuses on trading bits in cyberspace rather than atoms in physical space. The network economy stresses that businesses will work collectively in webs or as part of business ecosystems rather than as stand-alone units. Social networking refers to the process of collaboration on massive, global scales. The internet economy focuses on the nature of markets that are enabled by the Internet.
  • Knowledge services and knowledge value put content into an economic context. Knowledge services integrates Knowledge management, within a Knowledge organization, that trades in a Knowledge market. In order for individuals to receive more knowledge, surveillance is used. This relates to the use of Drones as a tool in order to gather knowledge on other individuals. Although seemingly synonymous, each term conveys more than nuances or slightly different views of the same thing. Each term represents one attribute of the likely nature of economic activity in the emerging post-industrial society. Alternatively, the new economic order will incorporate all of the above plus other attributes that have not yet fully emerged.
  • In connection with the development of the information society, information pollution appeared, which in turn evolved information ecology – associated with information hygiene.[40]

Intellectual property considerations edit

One of the central paradoxes of the information society is that it makes information easily reproducible, leading to a variety of freedom/control problems relating to intellectual property. Essentially, business and capital, whose place becomes that of producing and selling information and knowledge, seems to require control over this new resource so that it can effectively be managed and sold as the basis of the information economy. However, such control can prove to be both technically and socially problematic. Technically because copy protection is often easily circumvented and socially rejected because the users and citizens of the information society can prove to be unwilling to accept such absolute commodification of the facts and information that compose their environment.

Responses to this concern range from the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in the United States (and similar legislation elsewhere) which make copy protection (see DRM) circumvention illegal, to the free software, open source and copyleft movements, which seek to encourage and disseminate the "freedom" of various information products (traditionally both as in "gratis" or free of cost, and liberty, as in freedom to use, explore and share).

Caveat: Information society is often used by politicians meaning something like "we all do internet now"; the sociological term information society (or informational society) has some deeper implications about change of societal structure. Because we lack political control of intellectual property, we are lacking in a concrete map of issues, an analysis of costs and benefits, and functioning political groups that are unified by common interests representing different opinions of this diverse situation that are prominent in the information society.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Soll, Jacob, 1968- (2009). The information master : Jean-Baptiste Colbert's secret state intelligence system. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-02526-8. OCLC 643805520.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Hilbert, M. (2015). Digital Technology and Social Change [Open Online Course at the University of California] freely available at: https://youtube.com/watch?v=xR4sQ3f6tW8&list=PLtjBSCvWCU3rNm46D3R85efM0hrzjuAIg 2020-08-01 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Hilbert, M. (2015). Digital Technology and Social Change [Open Online Course at the University of California] https://youtube.com/watch?v=KKGedDCKa68&list=PLtjBSCvWCU3rNm46D3R85efM0hrzjuAIg 2020-08-01 at the Wayback Machine freely available at: https://canvas.instructure.com/courses/949415 2018-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Hilbert, M. (2015). Digital Technology and Social Change [Open Online Course at the University of California] freely available at  :https://canvas.instructure.com/courses/949415 2018-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Beniger, James R. (1986). The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
  6. ^ a b Webster, Frank (2002). Theories of the Information Society. Cambridge: Routledge.
  7. ^ Webster, F. (2006). Chapter 2: What is an information society? In Theories of the Information Society, 3rd ed. (pp. 15-31). New York: Routledge.
  8. ^ "Magic Lantern Empire: Reflections on Colonialism and Society", Magic Lantern Empire, Cornell University Press, pp. 148–160, 2017-12-31, doi:10.7591/9780801468230-009, ISBN 978-0-8014-6823-0
  9. ^ Buckland, Michael (March 3, 2017). Information in Society. MIT Press.
  10. ^ James Boyle, 1996, 6[vague]
  11. ^ Kasiwulaya and Walter, Makerere University. Makerere University Press.[vague]
  12. ^ Buckland, Michael (2017). Information and Society. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 22.
  13. ^ a b Polo Roca, Andoni (2020-06-29). "Information Society, Digital Society, Control Society". Basque Journal of Sociology and Political Science (68): 53. doi:10.18543/inguruak-68-2020-art05. ISSN 0214-7912. S2CID 225651269.
  14. ^ "Individuals using the Internet 2005 to 2014" 2015-05-28 at the Wayback Machine, Key ICT indicators for developed and developing countries and the world (totals and penetration rates), International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  15. ^ "Internet users per 100 inhabitants 1997 to 2007" 2015-05-17 at the Wayback Machine, ICT Data and Statistics (IDS), International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  16. ^ Hilbert, M.; Lopez, P. (2011-02-10). "The World's Technological Capacity to Store, Communicate, and Compute Information". Science. 332 (6025): 60–65. Bibcode:2011Sci...332...60H. doi:10.1126/science.1200970. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 21310967. S2CID 206531385.
  17. ^ a b c "The World’s Technological Capacity to Store, Communicate, and Compute Information" 2013-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, Martin Hilbert and Priscila López (2011), Science, 332(6025), 60-65; free access to the article through here: martinhilbert.net/WorldInfoCapacity.html
  18. ^ a b ""video animation on The World's Technological Capacity to Store, Communicate, and Compute Information from 1986 to 2010". YouTube. from the original on 2013-02-21. Retrieved 2016-11-29.
  19. ^ Crawford, S. (1983). "The origin and development of a concept: The information society". Bulletin of the Medical Library Association. 71 (4): 380–385. PMC 227258. PMID 6652297.
  20. ^ Rooney, Jim (2014). Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Intellectual Capital, Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning. UK: Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited. p. 261. ISBN 978-1-910309-71-1.
  21. ^ Machlup, Fritz (1962). The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  22. ^ Peter Drucker (1969) The Age of Discontinuity. London: Heinemann
  23. ^ Marc Porat (1977) The Information Economy. Washington, DC: US Department of Commerce
  24. ^ Karl Deutsch (1983) Soziale und politische Aspekte der Informationsgesellschaft. In: Philipp Sonntag (Ed.) (1983) Die Zukunft der Informationsgesellschaft. Frankfurt/Main: Haag & Herchen. pp. 68-88
  25. ^ Daniel Bell (1976) The Coming of Post-Industrial Society. New York: Basic Books, 127, 348
  26. ^ Jean-François Lyotard (1984) The Postmodern Condition. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 5
  27. ^ Darin Barney (2003) The Network Society. Cambridge: Polity, 25sq
  28. ^ Peter Glotz (1999) Die beschleunigte Gesellschaft. Kulturkämpfe im digitalen Kapitalismus. München: Kindler.
  29. ^ Wolfgang Fritz Haug (2003) High-Tech-Kapitalismus. Hamburg: Argument.
  30. ^ Nicholas Garnham (2004) Information Society Theory as Ideology. In: Frank Webster (Ed.) (2004) The Information Society Reader. London: Routledge.
  31. ^ Wark 1997, p. 22.
  32. ^ Wark 1997, p. 23.
  33. ^ Wark 1997, p. 21.
  34. ^ Wark 1997, p. 24.
  35. ^ Wark 1997, p. 25.
  36. ^ Wark 1997, p. 26.
  37. ^ Wark 1997, p. 28.
  38. ^ "Welcome to E-stonia, the world's most digitally advanced society". Wired. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  39. ^ Grinin, L. 2007. Periodization of History: A theoretic-mathematical analysis. In: History & Mathematics 2012-02-06 at the Wayback Machine. Moscow: KomKniga/URSS. P.10-38. ISBN 978-5-484-01001-1.
  40. ^ Eryomin A.L. Information ecology - a viewpoint 2014-11-02 at the Wayback Machine// International Journal of Environmental Studies. - 1998. - Vol. 54. - pp. 241-253.
  41. ^ Boyle, James. “A Politics of Intellectual Property: Environmentalism for the Net?” Duke Law Journal, vol. 47, no. 1, 1997, pp. 87–116. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/1372861.

Works cited edit

  • Wark, McKenzie (1997). The Virtual Republic. Allen & Unwin, St Leonards.

Further reading edit

  • Alan Mckenna (2011) A Human Right to Participate in the Information Society. New York: Hampton Press. ISBN 978-1-61289-046-3.
  • Lev Manovich (2009) How to Represent Information Society?, Miltos Manetas, Paintings from Contemporary Life, Johan & Levi Editore, Milan . Online: [1]
  • Manuel Castells (2000) The Rise of the Network Society. The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture. Volume 1. Malden: Blackwell. Second Edition.
  • Michael Dawson/John Bellamy Foster (1998) Virtual Capitalism. In: Robert W. McChesney/Ellen Meiksins Wood/John Bellamy Foster (Eds.) (1998) Capitalism and the Information Age. New York: Monthly Review Press. pp. 51–67.
  • Aleksander Aristovnik (2014) Development of the information society and its impact on the education sector in the EU : efficiency at the regional (NUTS 2) level. In: Turkish online journal of educational technology. Vol. 13. No. 2. pp. 54–60.
  • Alistair Duff (2000) Information Society Studies. London: Routledge.
  • Esther Dyson/George Gilder/George Keyworth/Alvin Toffler (1994) Cyberspace and the American Dream: A Magna Carta for the Knowledge Age. In: Future Insight 1.2. The Progress & Freedom Foundation.
  • Tony Fitzpatrick (2002) Critical Theory, Information Society and Surveillance Technologies. In: Information, Communication and Society. Vol. 5. No. 3. pp. 357–378.
  • Vilém Flusser (2013) Post-History, Univocal Publishing, Minneapolis ISBN 9781937561093
  • Christian Fuchs (2008) Internet and Society: Social Theory in the Information Age. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-96132-7.
  • Christian Fuchs (2007) Transnational Space and the ’Network Society’. In: 21st Century Society. Vol. 2. No. 1. pp. 49–78.
  • Christian Fuchs (2005) Emanzipation! Technik und Politik bei Herbert Marcuse. Aachen: Shaker.
  • Christian Fuchs (2004) The Antagonistic Self-Organization of Modern Society. In: Studies in Political Economy, No. 73 (2004), pp. 183– 209.
  • Michael Hardt/Antonio Negri (2005) Multitude. War and Democracy in the Age of the Empire. New York: Hamish Hamilton.
  • Michael Hardt/Antonio Negri Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • David Harvey (1989) The Condition of Postmodernity. London: Blackwell.
  • Fritz Machlup (1962) The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • OECD (1986) Trends in The Information Economy. Paris: OECD.
  • OECD (1981) Information Activities, Electronics and Telecommunications Technologies: Impact on Employment, Growth and Trade. Paris: OECD.
  • Pasquinelli, M. (2014) Italian Operaismo and the Information Machine, Theory, Culture & Society, first published on February 2, 2014.
  • Pastore G. (2009) Verso la società della conoscenza, Le Lettere, Firenze.
  • Peter Otto/Philipp Sonntag (1985) Wege in die Informationsgesellschaft. München. dtv.
  • Pinterič, Uroš (2015): Spregledane pasti informacijske družbe. Fakulteta za organizacijske študije v Novem mestu ISBN 978-961-6974-07-3
  • Radovan Richta (1977) The Scientific and Technological Revolution and the Prospects of Social Development. In: Ralf Dahrendorf (Ed.) (1977) Scientific-Technological Revolution. Social Aspects. London: Sage. pp. 25–72.
  • Dan Schiller (2000) Digital Capitalism. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Rudi Schmiede (2006a) Knowledge, Work and Subject in Informational Capitalism. In: Berleur, Jacques/Nurminen, Markku I./Impagliazzo, John (Eds.) (2006) Social Informatics: An Information Society for All? New York: Springer. pp. 333–354.
  • Rudi Schmiede (2006b) Wissen und Arbeit im “Informational Capitalism”. In: Baukrowitz, Andrea et al. (Eds.) (2006) Informatisierung der Arbeit – Gesellschaft im Umbruch. Berlin: Edition Sigma. pp. 455–488.
  • Seely Brown, John; Duguid, Paul (2000). The Social Life of Information. Harvard Business School Press.
  • Nico Stehr (1994) Arbeit, Eigentum und Wissen. Frankfurt/Main: Suhrkamp.
  • Nico Stehr (2002a) A World Made of Knowledge. Lecture at the Conference “New Knowledge and New Consciousness in the Era of the Knowledge Society", Budapest, January 31, 2002. Online: [3] 2011-03-02 at the Wayback Machine
  • Nico Stehr (2002b) Knowledge & Economic Conduct. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Alain Touraine (1988) Return of the Actor. Minneapolis. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Jan Van Dijk (2006) The Network Society. London: Sage. Second Edition.
  • Yannis Veneris (1984) The Informational Revolution, Cybernetics and Urban Modelling, PhD Thesis, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
  • Yannis Veneris (1990) Modeling the transition from the Industrial to the Informational Revolution, Environment and Planning A 22(3):399-416. [4]
  • Frank Webster (2002a) The Information Society Revisited. In: Lievrouw, Leah A./Livingstone, Sonia (Eds.) (2002) Handbook of New Media. London: Sage. pp. 255–266.
  • Frank Webster (2002b) Theories of the Information Society. London: Routledge.
  • Frank Webster (2006) Theories of the Information Society. 3rd edition. London: Routledge
  • Gelbstein, E. (2006) Crossing the Executive Digital Divide. ISBN 99932-53-17-0

External links edit

  • - interactive country-level data for the information society and knowledge economy
  • The origin and development of a concept: the information society.
  • Global Information Society Project at the World Policy Institute
  • I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society - Ohio State law journal which addresses legal aspects related to the information society.
  • [5] - Participation in the Broadband Society. European network on social and technical research on the emerging information society.

information, society, other, uses, disambiguation, information, society, society, subculture, where, usage, creation, distribution, manipulation, integration, information, significant, activity, main, drivers, information, communication, technologies, which, h. For other uses see Information society disambiguation An information society is a society or subculture where the usage creation distribution manipulation and integration of information is a significant activity 1 Its main drivers are information and communication technologies which have resulted in rapid growth of a variety of forms of information Proponents of this theory posit that these technologies are impacting most important forms of social organization including education economy 2 health government 3 warfare and levels of democracy 4 The people who are able to partake in this form of society are sometimes called either computer users or even digital citizens defined by K Mossberger as Those who use the Internet regularly and effectively This is one of many dozen internet terms that have been identified to suggest that humans are entering a new and different phase of society 5 Some of the markers of this steady change may be technological economic occupational spatial cultural or a combination of all of these 6 Information society is seen as a successor to industrial society Closely related concepts are the post industrial society post fordism post modern society computer society and knowledge society telematic society society of the spectacle postmodernism Information Revolution and Information Age network society Manuel Castells or even liquid modernity Contents 1 Definition 2 The growth of computer information in society 3 Development of the information society model 3 1 Economic transition 3 2 Critiques 4 Second and third nature 5 Sociological uses 6 Related terms 7 Intellectual property considerations 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 Further reading 11 External linksDefinition editThere is currently no universally accepted concept of what exactly can be defined as an information society and what shall not be included in the term Most theoreticians agree that a transformation can be seen as started somewhere between the 1970s the early 1990s transformations of the Socialist East clarification needed and the 2000s period that formed most of today s net principles and currently as is changing the way societies work fundamentally Information technology goes beyond the internet as the principles of internet design and usage influence other areas and there are discussions about how big the influence of specific media or specific modes of production really is Frank Webster notes five major types of information that can be used to define information society technological economic occupational spatial and cultural 6 According to Webster the character of information has transformed the way that we live today How we conduct ourselves centers around theoretical knowledge and information 7 Kasiwulaya and Gomo Makerere University allude where dubious discuss that information societies are those that have intensified their use of IT for economic social cultural and political transformation In 2005 governments reaffirmed their dedication to the foundations of the Information Society in the Tunis Commitment and outlined the basis for implementation and follow up in the Tunis Agenda for the Information Society In particular the Tunis Agenda addresses the issues of financing of ICTs for development and Internet governance that could not be resolved in the first phase Some people such as Antonio Negri characterize the information society as one in which people do immaterial labour 8 By this they appear to refer to the production of knowledge or cultural artifacts One problem with this model is that it ignores the material and essentially industrial basis of the society However it does point to a problem for workers namely how many creative people does this society need to function For example it may be that you only need a few star performers rather than a plethora of non celebrities as the work of those performers can be easily distributed forcing all secondary players to the bottom of the market It is now common for publishers to promote only their best selling authors and to try to avoid the rest even if they still sell steadily Films are becoming more and more judged in terms of distribution by their first weekend s performance in many cases cutting out opportunity for word of mouth development Michael Buckland characterizes information in society in his book Information and Society Buckland expresses the idea that information can be interpreted differently from person to person based on that individual s experiences 9 Considering that metaphors and technologies of information move forward in a reciprocal relationship we can describe some societies especially the Japanese society as an information society because we think of it as such 10 11 The word information may be interpreted in many different ways According to Buckland in Information and Society most of the meanings fall into three categories of human knowledge information as knowledge information as a process and information as a thing 12 Thus the Information Society refers to the social importance given to communication and information in today s society where social economic and cultural relations are involved 13 In the Information Society the process of capturing processing and communicating information is the main element that characterizes it Thus in this type of society the vast majority of it will be dedicated to the provision of services and said services will consist of the processing distribution or use of information 13 The growth of computer information in society edit nbsp Internet users per 100 inhabitantsSource International Telecommunication Union 14 15 nbsp The amount of data stored globally has increased greatly since the 1980s and by 2007 94 of it was stored digitally SourceThe growth of the amount of technologically mediated information has been quantified in different ways including society s technological capacity to store information to communicate information and to compute information 16 It is estimated that the world s technological capacity to store information grew from 2 6 optimally compressed exabytes in 1986 which is the informational equivalent to less than one 730 MB CD ROM per person in 1986 539 MB per person to 295 optimally compressed exabytes in 2007 17 This is the informational equivalent of 60 CD ROM per person in 2007 18 and represents a sustained annual growth rate of some 25 The world s combined technological capacity to receive information through one way broadcast networks was the informational equivalent of 174 newspapers per person per day in 2007 17 The world s combined effective capacity to exchange information through two way telecommunication networks was 281 petabytes of optimally compressed information in 1986 471 petabytes in 1993 2 2 optimally compressed exabytes in 2000 and 65 optimally compressed exabytes in 2007 which is the informational equivalent of 6 newspapers per person per day in 2007 18 The world s technological capacity to compute information with humanly guided general purpose computers grew from 3 0 10 8 MIPS in 1986 to 6 4 x 10 12 MIPS in 2007 experiencing the fastest growth rate of over 60 per year during the last two decades 17 James R Beniger describes the necessity of information in modern society in the following way The need for sharply increased control that resulted from the industrialization of material processes through application of inanimate sources of energy probably accounts for the rapid development of automatic feedback technology in the early industrial period 1740 1830 p 174 Even with enhanced feedback control industry could not have developed without the enhanced means to process matter and energy not only as inputs of the raw materials of production but also as outputs distributed to final consumption p 175 5 Development of the information society model edit nbsp Colin Clark s sector model of an economy undergoing technological change In later stages the Quaternary sector of the economy grows One of the first people to develop the concept of the information society was the economist Fritz Machlup In 1933 Fritz Machlup began studying the effect of patents on research His work culminated in the study The production and distribution of knowledge in the United States in 1962 This book was widely regarded 19 and was eventually translated into Russian and Japanese The Japanese have also studied the information society or jōhōka shakai 情報化社会 The issue of technologies and their role in contemporary society have been discussed in the scientific literature using a range of labels and concepts This section introduces some of them Ideas of a knowledge or information economy post industrial society postmodern society network society the information revolution informational capitalism network capitalism and the like have been debated over the last several decades Fritz Machlup 1962 introduced the concept of the knowledge industry He began studying the effects of patents on research before distinguishing five sectors of the knowledge sector education research and development mass media information technologies information services Based on this categorization he calculated that in 1959 29 per cent of the GNP in the USA had been produced in knowledge industries 20 21 citation needed Economic transition edit Peter Drucker has argued that there is a transition from an economy based on material goods to one based on knowledge 22 Marc Porat distinguishes a primary information goods and services that are directly used in the production distribution or processing of information and a secondary sector information services produced for internal consumption by government and non information firms of the information economy 23 Porat uses the total value added by the primary and secondary information sector to the GNP as an indicator for the information economy The OECD has employed Porat s definition for calculating the share of the information economy in the total economy e g OECD 1981 1986 Based on such indicators the information society has been defined as a society where more than half of the GNP is produced and more than half of the employees are active in the information economy 24 For Daniel Bell the number of employees producing services and information is an indicator for the informational character of a society A post industrial society is based on services What counts is not raw muscle power or energy but information A post industrial society is one in which the majority of those employed are not involved in the production of tangible goods 25 Alain Touraine already spoke in 1971 of the post industrial society The passage to postindustrial society takes place when investment results in the production of symbolic goods that modify values needs representations far more than in the production of material goods or even of services Industrial society had transformed the means of production post industrial society changes the ends of production that is culture The decisive point here is that in postindustrial society all of the economic system is the object of intervention of society upon itself That is why we can call it the programmed society because this phrase captures its capacity to create models of management production organization distribution and consumption so that such a society appears at all its functional levels as the product of an action exercised by the society itself and not as the outcome of natural laws or cultural specificities Touraine 1988 104 In the programmed society also the area of cultural reproduction including aspects such as information consumption health research education would be industrialized That modern society is increasing its capacity to act upon itself means for Touraine that society is reinvesting ever larger parts of production and so produces and transforms itself This makes Touraine s concept substantially different from that of Daniel Bell who focused on the capacity to process and generate information for efficient society functioning Jean Francois Lyotard 26 has argued that knowledge has become the principle sic force of production over the last few decades Knowledge would be transformed into a commodity Lyotard says that postindustrial society makes knowledge accessible to the layman because knowledge and information technologies would diffuse into society and break up Grand Narratives of centralized structures and groups Lyotard denotes these changing circumstances as postmodern condition or postmodern society Similarly to Bell Peter Otto and Philipp Sonntag 1985 say that an information society is a society where the majority of employees work in information jobs i e they have to deal more with information signals symbols and images than with energy and matter Radovan Richta 1977 argues that society has been transformed into a scientific civilization based on services education and creative activities This transformation would be the result of a scientific technological transformation based on technological progress and the increasing importance of computer technology Science and technology would become immediate forces of production Aristovnik 2014 55 Nico Stehr 1994 2002a b says that in the knowledge society a majority of jobs involves working with knowledge Contemporary society may be described as a knowledge society based on the extensive penetration of all its spheres of life and institutions by scientific and technological knowledge Stehr 2002b 18 For Stehr knowledge is a capacity for social action Science would become an immediate productive force knowledge would no longer be primarily embodied in machines but already appropriated nature that represents knowledge would be rearranged according to certain designs and programs Ibid 41 46 For Stehr the economy of a knowledge society is largely driven not by material inputs but by symbolic or knowledge based inputs Ibid 67 there would be a large number of professions that involve working with knowledge and a declining number of jobs that demand low cognitive skills as well as in manufacturing Stehr 2002a Also Alvin Toffler argues that knowledge is the central resource in the economy of the information society In a Third Wave economy the central resource a single word broadly encompassing data information images symbols culture ideology and values is actionable knowledge Dyson Gilder Keyworth Toffler 1994 At the end of the twentieth century the concept of the network society gained importance in information society theory For Manuel Castells network logic is besides information pervasiveness flexibility and convergence a central feature of the information technology paradigm 2000a 69ff One of the key features of informational society is the networking logic of its basic structure which explains the use of the concept of network society Castells 2000 21 As an historical trend dominant functions and processes in the Information Age are increasingly organized around networks Networks constitute the new social morphology of our societies and the diffusion of networking logic substantially modifies the operation and outcomes in processes of production experience power and culture Castells 2000 500 For Castells the network society is the result of informationalism a new technological paradigm Jan Van Dijk 2006 defines the network society as a social formation with an infrastructure of social and media networks enabling its prime mode of organization at all levels individual group organizational and societal Increasingly these networks link all units or parts of this formation individuals groups and organizations Van Dijk 2006 20 For Van Dijk networks have become the nervous system of society whereas Castells links the concept of the network society to capitalist transformation Van Dijk sees it as the logical result of the increasing widening and thickening of networks in nature and society Darin Barney uses the term for characterizing societies that exhibit two fundamental characteristics The first is the presence in those societies of sophisticated almost exclusively digital technologies of networked communication and information management distribution technologies which form the basic infrastructure mediating an increasing array of social political and economic practices The second arguably more intriguing characteristic of network societies is the reproduction and institutionalization throughout and between those societies of networks as the basic form of human organization and relationship across a wide range of social political and economic configurations and associations 27 Critiques edit The major critique of concepts such as information society postmodern society knowledge society network society postindustrial society etc that has mainly been voiced by critical scholars is that they create the impression that we have entered a completely new type of society If there is just more information then it is hard to understand why anyone should suggest that we have before us something radically new Webster 2002a 259 Critics such as Frank Webster argue that these approaches stress discontinuity as if contemporary society had nothing in common with society as it was 100 or 150 years ago Such assumptions would have ideological character because they would fit with the view that we can do nothing about change and have to adapt to existing political realities kasiwulaya 2002b 267 These critics argue that contemporary society first of all is still a capitalist society oriented towards accumulating economic political and cultural capital They acknowledge that information society theories stress some important new qualities of society notably globalization and informatization but charge that they fail to show that these are attributes of overall capitalist structures Critics such as Webster insist on the continuities that characterise change In this way Webster distinguishes between different epochs of capitalism laissez faire capitalism of the 19th century corporate capitalism in the 20th century and informational capitalism for the 21st century kasiwulaya 2006 For describing contemporary society based on a new dialectic of continuity and discontinuity other critical scholars have suggested several terms like transnational network capitalism transnational informational capitalism Christian Fuchs 2008 2007 Computer networks are the technological foundation that has allowed the emergence of global network capitalism that is regimes of accumulation regulation and discipline that are helping to increasingly base the accumulation of economic political and cultural capital on transnational network organizations that make use of cyberspace and other new technologies for global coordination and communication The need to find new strategies for executing corporate and political domination has resulted in a restructuration of capitalism that is characterized by the emergence of transnational networked spaces in the economic political and cultural system and has been mediated by cyberspace as a tool of global coordination and communication Economic political and cultural space have been restructured they have become more fluid and dynamic have enlarged their borders to a transnational scale and handle the inclusion and exclusion of nodes in flexible ways These networks are complex due to the high number of nodes individuals enterprises teams political actors etc that can be involved and the high speed at which a high number of resources is produced and transported within them But global network capitalism is based on structural inequalities it is made up of segmented spaces in which central hubs transnational corporations certain political actors regions countries Western lifestyles and worldviews centralize the production control and flows of economic political and cultural capital property power definition capacities This segmentation is an expression of the overall competitive character of contemporary society Fuchs 2008 110 119 digital capitalism Schiller 2000 cf also Peter Glotz 28 networks are directly generalizing the social and cultural range of the capitalist economy as never before Schiller 2000 xiv virtual capitalism the combination of marketing and the new information technology will enable certain firms to obtain higher profit margins and larger market shares and will thereby promote greater concentration and centralization of capital Dawson John Bellamy Foster 1998 63sq high tech capitalism 29 or informatic capitalism Fitzpatrick 2002 to focus on the computer as a guiding technology that has transformed the productive forces of capitalism and has enabled a globalized economy Other scholars prefer to speak of information capitalism Morris Suzuki 1997 or informational capitalism Manuel Castells 2000 Christian Fuchs 2005 Schmiede 2006a b Manuel Castells sees informationalism as a new technological paradigm he speaks of a mode of development characterized by information generation processing and transmission that have become the fundamental sources of productivity and power Castells 2000 21 The most decisive historical factor accelerating channelling and shaping the information technology paradigm and inducing its associated social forms was is the process of capitalist restructuring undertaken since the 1980s so that the new techno economic system can be adequately characterized as informational capitalism Castells 2000 18 Castells has added to theories of the information society the idea that in contemporary society dominant functions and processes are increasingly organized around networks that constitute the new social morphology of society Castells 2000 500 Nicholas Garnham 30 is critical of Castells and argues that the latter s account is technologically determinist because Castells points out that his approach is based on a dialectic of technology and society in which technology embodies society and society uses technology Castells 2000 5sqq But Castells also makes clear that the rise of a new mode of development is shaped by capitalist production i e by society which implies that technology isn t the only driving force of society Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt argue that contemporary society is an Empire that is characterized by a singular global logic of capitalist domination that is based on immaterial labour With the concept of immaterial labour Negri and Hardt introduce ideas of information society discourse into their Marxist account of contemporary capitalism Immaterial labour would be labour that creates immaterial products such as knowledge information communication a relationship or an emotional response Hardt Negri 2005 108 cf also 2000 280 303 or services cultural products knowledge Hardt Negri 2000 290 There would be two forms intellectual labour that produces ideas symbols codes texts linguistic figures images etc and affective labour that produces and manipulates affects such as a feeling of ease well being satisfaction excitement passion joy sadness etc Ibid Overall neo Marxist accounts of the information society have in common that they stress that knowledge information technologies and computer networks have played a role in the restructuration and globalization of capitalism and the emergence of a flexible regime of accumulation David Harvey 1989 They warn that new technologies are embedded into societal antagonisms that cause structural unemployment rising poverty social exclusion the deregulation of the welfare state and of labour rights the lowering of wages welfare etc Concepts such as knowledge society information society network society informational capitalism postindustrial society transnational network capitalism postmodern society etc show that there is a vivid discussion in contemporary sociology on the character of contemporary society and the role that technologies information communication and co operation play in it citation needed Information society theory discusses the role of information and information technology in society the question which key concepts shall be used for characterizing contemporary society and how to define such concepts It has become a specific branch of contemporary sociology Second and third nature editThis section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Information society is the means of sending and receiving information from one place to another 31 As technology has advanced so too has the way people have adapted in sharing information with each other Second nature refers a group of experiences that get made over by culture 32 They then get remade into something else that can then take on a new meaning As a society we transform this process so it becomes something natural to us i e second nature So by following a particular pattern created by culture we are able to recognise how we use and move information in different ways From sharing information via different time zones such as talking online to information ending up in a different location sending a letter overseas this has all become a habitual process that we as a society take for granted 33 However through the process of sharing information vectors have enabled us to spread information even further Through the use of these vectors information is able to move and then separate from the initial things that enabled them to move 34 From here something called third nature has developed An extension of second nature third nature is in control of second nature It expands on what second nature is limited by It has the ability to mould information in new and different ways So third nature is able to speed up proliferate divide mutate and beam in on us from elsewhere 35 It aims to create a balance between the boundaries of space and time see second nature This can be seen through the telegraph it was the first successful technology that could send and receive information faster than a human being could move an object 36 As a result different vectors of people have the ability to not only shape culture but create new possibilities that will ultimately shape society Therefore through the use of second nature and third nature society is able to use and explore new vectors of possibility where information can be moulded to create new forms of interaction 37 Sociological uses edit nbsp Estonia a small Baltic country in northern Europe is one of the most advanced digital societies 38 In sociology informational society refers to a post modern type of society Theoreticians like Ulrich Beck Anthony Giddens and Manuel Castells argue that since the 1970s a transformation from industrial society to informational society has happened on a global scale 39 As steam power was the technology standing behind industrial society so information technology is seen as the catalyst for the changes in work organisation societal structure and politics occurring in the late 20th century In the book Future Shock Alvin Toffler used the phrase super industrial society to describe this type of society Other writers and thinkers have used terms like post industrial society and post modern industrial society with a similar meaning Related terms editA number of terms in current use emphasize related but different aspects of the emerging global economic order The Information Society intends to be the most encompassing in that an economy is a subset of a society The Information Age is somewhat limiting in that it refers to a 30 year period between the widespread use of computers and the knowledge economy rather than an emerging economic order The knowledge era is about the nature of the content not the socioeconomic processes by which it will be traded The computer revolution and knowledge revolution refer to specific revolutionary transitions rather than the end state towards which we are evolving The Information Revolution relates with the well known terms agricultural revolution and industrial revolution The information economy and the knowledge economy emphasize the content or intellectual property that is being traded through an information market or knowledge market respectively Electronic commerce and electronic business emphasize the nature of transactions and running a business respectively using the Internet and World Wide Web The digital economy focuses on trading bits in cyberspace rather than atoms in physical space The network economy stresses that businesses will work collectively in webs or as part of business ecosystems rather than as stand alone units Social networking refers to the process of collaboration on massive global scales The internet economy focuses on the nature of markets that are enabled by the Internet Knowledge services and knowledge value put content into an economic context Knowledge services integrates Knowledge management within a Knowledge organization that trades in a Knowledge market In order for individuals to receive more knowledge surveillance is used This relates to the use of Drones as a tool in order to gather knowledge on other individuals Although seemingly synonymous each term conveys more than nuances or slightly different views of the same thing Each term represents one attribute of the likely nature of economic activity in the emerging post industrial society Alternatively the new economic order will incorporate all of the above plus other attributes that have not yet fully emerged In connection with the development of the information society information pollution appeared which in turn evolved information ecology associated with information hygiene 40 Intellectual property considerations editOne of the central paradoxes of the information society is that it makes information easily reproducible leading to a variety of freedom control problems relating to intellectual property Essentially business and capital whose place becomes that of producing and selling information and knowledge seems to require control over this new resource so that it can effectively be managed and sold as the basis of the information economy However such control can prove to be both technically and socially problematic Technically because copy protection is often easily circumvented and socially rejected because the users and citizens of the information society can prove to be unwilling to accept such absolute commodification of the facts and information that compose their environment Responses to this concern range from the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in the United States and similar legislation elsewhere which make copy protection see DRM circumvention illegal to the free software open source and copyleft movements which seek to encourage and disseminate the freedom of various information products traditionally both as in gratis or free of cost and liberty as in freedom to use explore and share Caveat Information society is often used by politicians meaning something like we all do internet now the sociological term information society or informational society has some deeper implications about change of societal structure Because we lack political control of intellectual property we are lacking in a concrete map of issues an analysis of costs and benefits and functioning political groups that are unified by common interests representing different opinions of this diverse situation that are prominent in the information society 41 See also editCyberspace Digitization Digital transformation Digital dark age Digital addict Digital phobic Information culture Information history Information industry Information revolution Internet culture Netizen Network society Simon Buckingham and unorganisation Surveillance capitalism The Information Society journal World Summit on the Information Society WSIS Yoneji MasudaReferences edit Soll Jacob 1968 2009 The information master Jean Baptiste Colbert s secret state intelligence system University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 02526 8 OCLC 643805520 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Hilbert M 2015 Digital Technology and Social Change Open Online Course at the University of California freely available at https youtube com watch v xR4sQ3f6tW8 amp list PLtjBSCvWCU3rNm46D3R85efM0hrzjuAIg Archived 2020 08 01 at the Wayback Machine Hilbert M 2015 Digital Technology and Social Change Open Online Course at the University of California https youtube com watch v KKGedDCKa68 amp list PLtjBSCvWCU3rNm46D3R85efM0hrzjuAIg Archived 2020 08 01 at the Wayback Machine freely available at https canvas instructure com courses 949415 Archived 2018 01 05 at the Wayback Machine Hilbert M 2015 Digital Technology and Social Change Open Online Course at the University of California freely available at https canvas instructure com courses 949415 Archived 2018 01 05 at the Wayback Machine a b Beniger James R 1986 The Control Revolution Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press a b Webster Frank 2002 Theories of the Information Society Cambridge Routledge Webster F 2006 Chapter 2 What is an information society In Theories of the Information Society 3rd ed pp 15 31 New York Routledge Magic Lantern Empire Reflections on Colonialism and Society Magic Lantern Empire Cornell University Press pp 148 160 2017 12 31 doi 10 7591 9780801468230 009 ISBN 978 0 8014 6823 0 Buckland Michael March 3 2017 Information in Society MIT Press James Boyle 1996 6 vague Kasiwulaya and Walter Makerere University Makerere University Press vague Buckland Michael 2017 Information and Society Cambridge MA MIT Press p 22 a b Polo Roca Andoni 2020 06 29 Information Society Digital Society Control Society Basque Journal of Sociology and Political Science 68 53 doi 10 18543 inguruak 68 2020 art05 ISSN 0214 7912 S2CID 225651269 Individuals using the Internet 2005 to 2014 Archived 2015 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Key ICT indicators for developed and developing countries and the world totals and penetration rates International Telecommunication Union ITU Retrieved 25 May 2015 Internet users per 100 inhabitants 1997 to 2007 Archived 2015 05 17 at the Wayback Machine ICT Data and Statistics IDS International Telecommunication Union ITU Retrieved 25 May 2015 Hilbert M Lopez P 2011 02 10 The World s Technological Capacity to Store Communicate and Compute Information Science 332 6025 60 65 Bibcode 2011Sci 332 60H doi 10 1126 science 1200970 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 21310967 S2CID 206531385 a b c The World s Technological Capacity to Store Communicate and Compute Information Archived 2013 07 27 at the Wayback Machine Martin Hilbert and Priscila Lopez 2011 Science 332 6025 60 65 free access to the article through here martinhilbert net WorldInfoCapacity html a b video animation on The World s Technological Capacity to Store Communicate and Compute Information from 1986 to 2010 YouTube Archived from the original on 2013 02 21 Retrieved 2016 11 29 Crawford S 1983 The origin and development of a concept The information society Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 71 4 380 385 PMC 227258 PMID 6652297 Rooney Jim 2014 Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Intellectual Capital Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning UK Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited p 261 ISBN 978 1 910309 71 1 Machlup Fritz 1962 The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Peter Drucker 1969 The Age of Discontinuity London Heinemann Marc Porat 1977 The Information Economy Washington DC US Department of Commerce Karl Deutsch 1983 Soziale und politische Aspekte der Informationsgesellschaft In Philipp Sonntag Ed 1983 Die Zukunft der Informationsgesellschaft Frankfurt Main Haag amp Herchen pp 68 88 Daniel Bell 1976 The Coming of Post Industrial Society New York Basic Books 127 348 Jean Francois Lyotard 1984 The Postmodern Condition Manchester Manchester University Press 5 Darin Barney 2003 The Network Society Cambridge Polity 25sq Peter Glotz 1999 Die beschleunigte Gesellschaft Kulturkampfe im digitalen Kapitalismus Munchen Kindler Wolfgang Fritz Haug 2003 High Tech Kapitalismus Hamburg Argument Nicholas Garnham 2004 Information Society Theory as Ideology In Frank Webster Ed 2004 The Information Society Reader London Routledge Wark 1997 p 22 Wark 1997 p 23 Wark 1997 p 21 Wark 1997 p 24 Wark 1997 p 25 Wark 1997 p 26 Wark 1997 p 28 Welcome to E stonia the world s most digitally advanced society Wired Retrieved 15 July 2020 Grinin L 2007 Periodization of History A theoretic mathematical analysis In History amp Mathematics Archived 2012 02 06 at the Wayback Machine Moscow KomKniga URSS P 10 38 ISBN 978 5 484 01001 1 Eryomin A L Information ecology a viewpoint Archived 2014 11 02 at the Wayback Machine International Journal of Environmental Studies 1998 Vol 54 pp 241 253 Boyle James A Politics of Intellectual Property Environmentalism for the Net Duke Law Journal vol 47 no 1 1997 pp 87 116 JSTOR JSTOR www jstor org stable 1372861 Works cited edit Wark McKenzie 1997 The Virtual Republic Allen amp Unwin St Leonards Further reading editAlan Mckenna 2011 A Human Right to Participate in the Information Society New York Hampton Press ISBN 978 1 61289 046 3 Lev Manovich 2009 How to Represent Information Society Miltos Manetas Paintings from Contemporary Life Johan amp Levi Editore Milan Online 1 Manuel Castells 2000 The Rise of the Network Society The Information Age Economy Society and Culture Volume 1 Malden Blackwell Second Edition Michael Dawson John Bellamy Foster 1998 Virtual Capitalism In Robert W McChesney Ellen Meiksins Wood John Bellamy Foster Eds 1998 Capitalism and the Information Age New York Monthly Review Press pp 51 67 Aleksander Aristovnik 2014 Development of the information society and its impact on the education sector in the EU efficiency at the regional NUTS 2 level In Turkish online journal of educational technology Vol 13 No 2 pp 54 60 Alistair Duff 2000 Information Society Studies London Routledge Esther Dyson George Gilder George Keyworth Alvin Toffler 1994 Cyberspace and the American Dream A Magna Carta for the Knowledge Age In Future Insight 1 2 The Progress amp Freedom Foundation Tony Fitzpatrick 2002 Critical Theory Information Society and Surveillance Technologies In Information Communication and Society Vol 5 No 3 pp 357 378 Vilem Flusser 2013 Post History Univocal Publishing Minneapolis ISBN 9781937561093 2 Christian Fuchs 2008 Internet and Society Social Theory in the Information Age New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 96132 7 Christian Fuchs 2007 Transnational Space and the Network Society In 21st Century Society Vol 2 No 1 pp 49 78 Christian Fuchs 2005 Emanzipation Technik und Politik bei Herbert Marcuse Aachen Shaker Christian Fuchs 2004 The Antagonistic Self Organization of Modern Society In Studies in Political Economy No 73 2004 pp 183 209 Michael Hardt Antonio Negri 2005 Multitude War and Democracy in the Age of the Empire New York Hamish Hamilton Michael Hardt Antonio Negri Empire Cambridge MA Harvard University Press David Harvey 1989 The Condition of Postmodernity London Blackwell Fritz Machlup 1962 The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States Princeton Princeton University Press OECD 1986 Trends in The Information Economy Paris OECD OECD 1981 Information Activities Electronics and Telecommunications Technologies Impact on Employment Growth and Trade Paris OECD Pasquinelli M 2014 Italian Operaismo and the Information Machine Theory Culture amp Society first published on February 2 2014 Pastore G 2009 Verso la societa della conoscenza Le Lettere Firenze Peter Otto Philipp Sonntag 1985 Wege in die Informationsgesellschaft Munchen dtv Pinteric Uros 2015 Spregledane pasti informacijske druzbe Fakulteta za organizacijske studije v Novem mestu ISBN 978 961 6974 07 3 Radovan Richta 1977 The Scientific and Technological Revolution and the Prospects of Social Development In Ralf Dahrendorf Ed 1977 Scientific Technological Revolution Social Aspects London Sage pp 25 72 Dan Schiller 2000 Digital Capitalism Cambridge MA MIT Press Rudi Schmiede 2006a Knowledge Work and Subject in Informational Capitalism In Berleur Jacques Nurminen Markku I Impagliazzo John Eds 2006 Social Informatics An Information Society for All New York Springer pp 333 354 Rudi Schmiede 2006b Wissen und Arbeit im Informational Capitalism In Baukrowitz Andrea et al Eds 2006 Informatisierung der Arbeit Gesellschaft im Umbruch Berlin Edition Sigma pp 455 488 Seely Brown John Duguid Paul 2000 The Social Life of Information Harvard Business School Press Nico Stehr 1994 Arbeit Eigentum und Wissen Frankfurt Main Suhrkamp Nico Stehr 2002a A World Made of Knowledge Lecture at the Conference New Knowledge and New Consciousness in the Era of the Knowledge Society Budapest January 31 2002 Online 3 Archived 2011 03 02 at the Wayback Machine Nico Stehr 2002b Knowledge amp Economic Conduct Toronto University of Toronto Press Alain Touraine 1988 Return of the Actor Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Jan Van Dijk 2006 The Network Society London Sage Second Edition Yannis Veneris 1984 The Informational Revolution Cybernetics and Urban Modelling PhD Thesis University of Newcastle upon Tyne UK Yannis Veneris 1990 Modeling the transition from the Industrial to the Informational Revolution Environment and Planning A 22 3 399 416 4 Frank Webster 2002a The Information Society Revisited In Lievrouw Leah A Livingstone Sonia Eds 2002 Handbook of New Media London Sage pp 255 266 Frank Webster 2002b Theories of the Information Society London Routledge Frank Webster 2006 Theories of the Information Society 3rd edition London Routledge Gelbstein E 2006 Crossing the Executive Digital Divide ISBN 99932 53 17 0External links editSpecial Report Information Society The Next Steps Knowledge Assessment Methodology interactive country level data for the information society and knowledge economy The origin and development of a concept the information society Global Information Society Project at the World Policy Institute UNESCO Observatory on the Information Society I S A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society Ohio State law journal which addresses legal aspects related to the information society 5 Participation in the Broadband Society European network on social and technical research on the emerging information society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Information society amp oldid 1192953438, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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