By Jonathan Zittrain
This extraordinary book from Oxford Professor Jonathan Zittrain explains the engine that has catapulted the Internet from backwater to ubiquity - and reveals that it is sputtering precisely because of its runaway success.
Jonathan Zittrain is the George Bemis Professor of International Law at Harvard Law School and the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Professor of Computer Science at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Director of the Harvard Law School Library, and Co-Founder of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society. His research interests include battles for control of digital property and content, cryptography, electronic privacy, the roles of intermediaries within Internet architecture, human computing, and the useful and unobtrusive deployment of technology in education.
He performed the first large-scale tests of Internet filtering in China and Saudi Arabia, and as part of the OpenNet Initiative co-edited a series of studies of Internet filtering by national governments: Access Denied: The Practice and Policy of Global Internet Filtering; Access Controlled: The Shaping of Power, Rights, and Rule in Cyberspace; and Access Contested: Security, Identity, and Resistance in Asian Cyberspace.
He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Board of Advisors for Scientific American. He has served as a Trustee of the Internet Society, and as a Forum Fellow of the World Economic Forum, which named him a Young Global Leader, and as Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence at the Federal Communications Commission, where he previously chaired the Open Internet Advisory Committee. A complete list of his works may be found at www.jz.org.
By Jonathan Zittrain
This extraordinary book from Oxford Professor Jonathan Zittrain explains the engine that has catapulted the Internet from backwater to ubiquity - and reveals that it is sputtering precisely because of its runaway success.
A programme of seminars, forums and conferences informing our research on Internet governance.
A leading independent authority on trends in badware and its distribution, and a focal point for the development of collaborative, community-minded approaches to stopping badware. The main focus is on research and public education.
Establishing networks of researchers from different technical and social science research disciplines to begin to develop a Web Science research agenda through the exchange of PhD students and collaborative workshops.
2 December 2009
We are delighted to announce that The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University will join as a partner for the eighth Oxford Internet Institute Summer Doctoral Programme (SDP), to be held in Oxford from 5-16 July 2010.
5 March 2006
The OII has joined the OpenNet Initiative (ONI), a worldwide initiative established in 2003 to study state-sponsored filtering of the Internet. The OII will expand its capacity for analysis of the social, political and cultural contexts of filtering.
15 April 2005
Internationally known cyberlaw scholar Jonathan Zittrain becomes the first holder of the Chair in Internet Governance and Regulation at the Oxford Internet Institute.