Netiquette, by Virginia Shea, page 21
who otherwise never would have known each other. Usually, when you
make a phone call, you know whom you're talking to. (Although I do
know a couple who met on the phone. She was working as a telemarketer, selling what later turned out to be vaporware. (Endnote #4) He returned a couple of calls and finally confessed that he had no interest in her product
but would really like to take her out for lunch. They're married now and
have an adorable daughter.)
Telephone chat lines serve much the same purpose as network discussion groups. But for some reason -- maybe because they're quite expensive, or maybe because the conversation isn't written down and
therefore is lost as soon as it's over -- they haven't affected our society
on the same scale as computer networks.
The culture of amateur radio operation -- colloquially known as
ham
radio -- presents a better parallel to cyberspace. For many years, the
barriers to becoming a ham and getting on the net were about equivalent. You needed a lot of expensive equipment and specialized knowledge. And, like net mavens of ten or fifteen years ago, hams have their
own semi-priestly society based on their shared knowledge and interests. A ham can turn on his radio in the middle of the night and talk to
someone on the other side of the country -- or the world -- and be fairly
sure they'll have something in common.
Because the barriers to entering ham culture are still high, the number
of hams in the world is still fairly low. But over the last few years, the
barriers to entry into cyberspace have dropped dramatically, and the
number of people communicating via computers has exploded in a corresponding manner. In fact, today, ham radio operators have their own
online discussion groups!
Q. What would I want to do in cyberspace, anyway?
People enter cyberspace -- that is, they use computer networks -- for
two purposes: to communicate with other people and to retrieve information.
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