@Info.Policy: Future history reports on Internet's demise
Connecting state and local government leaders
This obituary is 'preprinted' from a future edition of Government Computer News. Today the Internet was pronounced dead. The immediate cause of death was universal disinterest.
Robert Gellman
- Phishing. Phishers, or cyberthieves, pretended to be trusted service providers in order to induce people to disclose personal information for use in identity theft scams. Phishers duped hundreds of millions of people. Legitimate companies suffered because many consumers, unable to distinguish the real from the fraudulent, ignored all commercial e-mail and Internet activities.
- Spam. Despite worldwide efforts, governments could not stop unsolicited e-mail, which became the overwhelming majority of all e-mail messages. Several members of Congress who touted legislative solutions were defeated for re-election when disgruntled Net users held them accountable for the failure of their legislation. Another spam victim was the Federal Trade Commission, which Congress abolished years ago in frustration over the commission's inability to protect consumers against spam and Internet fraud. One beneficiary was the Postal Service, which boomed when regular mail came back into vogue.
- Spyware. Keystroke loggers, browser hijackers and other forms of spyware did considerable damage. Browser hijackers changed settings, sent users to porn sites and prevented normal browser use. Some people lost jobs or went to jail because of child porn or classified materials placed on their computers by hackers. Some employees refused to use computers connected to the Internet for fear of losing their jobs.
- Advertising. An escalating war between pop-up ads and ad blockers raged for years, with the ads always one step ahead. Aggressive adware also contributed to declining Internet usage as people often could see nothing but ads.
- URL redirection. Hackers became adept at pointing browsers to their own sites, and users couldn't tell whether they had reached the correct uniform resource locator or a copycat site. Search engines suffered from redirection and became significantly less helpful.
Robert Gellman is a Washington privacy and information policy consultant. E-mail him at rgellman@netacc.net.
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