Digital Destiny: New Media and the Future of Democracy

Author:   Jeff Chester
Publisher:   The New Press
ISBN:  

9781565847958


Pages:   308
Publication Date:   02 July 2007
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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Digital Destiny: New Media and the Future of Democracy


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Overview

"With the explosive growth of the Internet and broadband communications, we now have the potential for a truly democratic media system offering a wide variety of independent sources of news, information, and culture, with control over content in the hands of the many, rather than a few select media giants. But the country's powerful communications companies have other plans. Assisted by a host of hired political operatives and pro-business policy makers, the big cable, TV, and Internet providers are using their political clout to gain ever greater control over the Internet and other digital communication channels. Instead of a ""global information commons,"" we're facing an electronic media system designed principally to sell to rather than serve the public, dominated by commercial forces armed with aggressive digital marketing, interactive advertising, and personal data collection. Just as Lawrence Lessig translated the mysteries of software and intellectual property for the general reader in Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace, Jeff Chester gets beneath the surface of media and telecommunications regulation to explain clearly how our new media system functions, what's at stake, and what we can do to fight the corporate media's plans for our ""digital destiny""-before it's too late."

Full Product Details

Author:   Jeff Chester
Publisher:   The New Press
Imprint:   The New Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.50cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 21.50cm
Weight:   0.499kg
ISBN:  

9781565847958


ISBN 10:   1565847954
Pages:   308
Publication Date:   02 July 2007
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   No Longer Our Product
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Jeff Chester is the Paul Revere of the media revolution. Read this book and you will understand the stakes. -Bill Moyers No other work as concisely and powerfully frames the democratic challenge that media policy presents. It is time people understood plainly just what is at stake. This book makes that understanding possible. -Lawrence Lessig Digital Destiny is the most important book on media policy in years and will become required reading for a generation of students, scholars, activists and concerned citizens across the nation. -Robert W. McChesney A noble and eloquent guardian of the public interest, Jeff Chester shows how Big Media too often allows journalism to take a back seat to profit margins. Digital Destiny is a passionate and powerful book. -Ken Auletta, media writer for The New Yorker All Americans should read this important and timely book. It discloses the multi-billion dollar agendas of the powers-that-be and precisely how they impact our lives. -Charles Lewis, founder, The Center for Public Integrity


A sobering view of today's entrenched corporate media giants as a threat to the concept of an enlightened electorate.As executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, a public-interest group, the author has spent 30 years in the middle of Washington's often obfuscated communications policy-making apparatus. Recent trends, he argues, have so broken down former caveats against consolidation of media ownership-newspapers, radio, TV and now digital networks and services-that the future of media content, including the Internet itself, may be effectively determined without public participation. Thanks to rampant deregulation of large media corporations, particularly under the reign of former Bush administration FCC Commissioner Michael C. Powell, Chester asserts, commercial considerations-advertising revenues and fee-based media services-have become the prime force in new media development and delivery schemes. (The news here for many readers may be that it wasn't always this way.) Longstanding policy guidelines recognized that multiple media ownership in local markets could result in shaping information solely to further the agenda of corporate owners. However, Powell, son of former Bush Secretary of State Colin Powell, pushed a GOP-endorsed free-market campaign that, while rebuffed in some of its more extreme dimensions, has now empowered single entities to own multiple media outlets and services in local markets. As a way of pointing out the determination-and, in his view, insidiousness-of media giants to lobby against ownership restrictions, Chester singles out the New York Times Corp. as one of the most aggressive, noting that the maneuvers of its corporate stewards remained curiously absent from its own news pages for an extended period. A party power shift in Washington, the author sums up, won't necessarily diminish the threat. Complex, quixotic attempt to sway the American public from the temptation to amuse itself to death. (Kirkus Reviews)


Jeff Chester is the Paul Revere of the media revolution. Read this book and you will understand the stakes. Bill Moyers No other work as concisely and powerfully frames the democratic challenge that media policy presents. It is time people understood plainly just what is at stake. This book makes that understanding possible. Lawrence Lessig <i>Digital Destiny</i> is the most important book on media policy in years and will become required reading for a generation of students, scholars, activists and concerned citizens across the nation. Robert W. McChesney A noble and eloquent guardian of the public interest, Jeff Chester shows how Big Media too often allows journalism to take a back seat to profit margins. <i>Digital Destiny</i> is a passionate and powerful book. Ken Auletta, media writer for The <i>New Yorker</i> All Americans should read this important and timely book. It discloses the multi-billion dollar agendas of the powers-that-be and precisely how they impact our lives. Charles Lewis, founder, The Center for Public Integrity


Jeff Chester is the Paul Revere of the media revolution. Read this book and you will understand the stakes. --Bill Moyers No other work as concisely and powerfully frames the democratic challenge that media policy presents. It is time people understood plainly just what is at stake. This book makes that understanding possible. --Lawrence Lessig Digital Destiny is the most important book on media policy in years and will become required reading for a generation of students, scholars, activists and concerned citizens across the nation. --Robert W. McChesney A noble and eloquent guardian of the public interest, Jeff Chester shows how Big Media too often allows journalism to take a back seat to profit margins. Digital Destiny is a passionate and powerful book. --Ken Auletta, media writer for The New Yorker All Americans should read this important and timely book. It discloses the multi-billion dollar agendas of the powers-that-be and precisely how they impact our lives. --Charles Lewis, founder, The Center for Public Integrity


Author Information

Jeff Chester is the executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy. He has long been on the front lines fighting against the consolidation and commercialization of the U.S. media system. A former investigative reporter and filmmaker, he lives outside Washington, D.C.

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