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Cyberspace fertile ground for knowledge, lust, commerce and crime, UB faculty say. The Internet, mobile technologies and new-media technologies may be the most influential drivers of cultural change in American society today, according to UB faculty members offering courses this semester exploring the social and cultural consequences of information and communication technologies. According to W. David Penniman, dean of the School of Informatics, the linkage between technology and cultural evolution has been a serious area of scholarly concern through the ages.
He points out that the influence of technology on society was popularized by the PBS series "Connections," which explored the dramatic changes technologies wrought upon society, including the areas of warfare, food production and transportation. The School of Informatics, in particular, is committed to the study of how information, technology and people interact within a variety of cultures, according to Penniman.
The school is one of only two in the U. Pauline Hope Cheong, assistant professor of communication and instructor for "The Age of Information," says the course will help students "thoughtfully address the implications of living and interacting with information and communication technologies.
While a course on cyberporn may on the surface seem sensationalistic, the topic, according to Penniman, has serious academic value and continues a long academic tradition of examining emerging societal trends, including trends involving controversial subjects like sex, prostitution and pornography in banned literature and in other media, such as videotapes, televised movies on demand and online "escort" services.
The emergence of cybercrime and the creation of laws and policies to regulate cyberspace are of special interest to law professor Robert Reis, who will teach "Technology Law and Cyberspace" in the UB Law School this semester. According to Reis, the anonymity and vast reach of cyberspace, combined with the enabling power of new technologies, has given people new opportunity to behave outside the moral, or legal, constraints of society.