Skip to main content
Article
Does Power Grow Out of the Barrel of a Modem? Some Thoughts on Jack Goldsmith and Tim Wu's "Who Controls the Internet?"
Stanford Law and Policy Review (2006)
  • Glenn Reynolds
Abstract
This review of Jack Goldsmith and Tim Wu's Who Controls the Internet? Illusions of a Borderless World, notes that Goldsmith and Wu are correct in concluding that events in recent years undercut cyber-utopian theories of an Internet that is beyond the reach of national sovereignty. It argues, however, that the failure to achieve such goals does not mean that the Internet is unimportant as a source of expanded freedom and power on the part of ordinary people, and suggests that this trend of individual empowerment is likely to continue.
Keywords
  • Internet,
  • Goldsmith,
  • Wu,
  • Reynolds,
  • cyberspace,
  • independence
Disciplines
Publication Date
2006
Citation Information
Glenn Reynolds. "Does Power Grow Out of the Barrel of a Modem? Some Thoughts on Jack Goldsmith and Tim Wu's "Who Controls the Internet?"" Stanford Law and Policy Review Vol. 20 (2006) p. 101 - 107
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/glenn-reynolds/14/