It is in this context that we must consider the building of virtual
communities. The internet is a relatively new communications medium, yet
already there are numerous ways in which people have set out to build community
in cyberspace. The internet has been considered an ideal medium for the
building and maintaining of community and as uniquely able to separate
community and place entirely. Despite its very recent incursion into the fabric
of daily life for many in the west, social netwocrks of people who might
otherwise have never conversed and shared ideas and opinions have already been
formed over the internet. How important these networks are to their members, or
will become to them, is yet to be fully and adequately researched as the
emergence of these 'virtual communities' is so novel that their potential
cannot yet have been realised. Nevertheless, since the possibilities afforded
by the internet first began to enter into public consciousness great claims
have been made in popular writing, academic and policy discourses as to just
this potential. As early as 1995 Nicholas Negroponte predicted that in the near
future 'We will socialise in digital neighbourhoods.
Powerful though the technology is, It is not only the technical
innovations which the internet has provided which seem to hold out the
possibility of building an expanded and improved community life in cyberspace.
The internet has also been described as an inherently open, accessible and
democratic medium within which community-building is not only possible but can
flourish and take hitherto unknown forms. The development of different
internet-based communication tools:
Some have speculated that building community in cyberspace will
result in novel forms of interaction which are totally 'virtual' in that they
will have no geographical referent and will be truly global in scope and
others have suggested that community building on the internet will be utilised
to extend and enhance existing relationships which are based in physical spaces.
Most writing on virtual communities, however, implies that what will be built
in cyberspace will improve on traditional forms of community. Traditional
communities, it is suggested, are either disappearing as people become
generally less socially motivated and follow more individualistic and
self-interested courses of action or are becoming subject to intolerable
strains as problems such as poverty and crime tear them apart. It has also been
noted that place-based communities are liable to fracture along religious,
racial or ideological lines and have been sites of exclusion as well as
inclusion . It has been suggested too that those who have been marginalized and
excluded for whatever reason within their face-to-face, physically bounded
environments may find their spaces to communicate and interrelate in a
different realm which is unrelated to
the physical - within the virtual community. Therefore due to the above
explanations shows how to build community in cyberspace.
By Alphonce Bhoke BAPRM 42527
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