What is a digital native? How does the generational divide impact the legal, societal, and educational realms?
Great questions being answered – or at least explored in depth – through the research lead up to publication of a new book. There is some tremendously helpful feedback on the draft v.0.9 of the forthcoming book Born Digital (Basic Books, German translation with Hanser) from tertiary students at Harvard and St. Gallen Law School, which is very worth while reading.
Discussing Born Digital with European Students, gives insights into Digital Natives ideas about the opportunities, challenges, and most promising approaches in digital technologies when asked three discussion questions:
First, what do you think is the greatest opportunity for Digital Natives when it comes to digital technologies? Second, what are you most concerned about when thinking about the future of the Internet? Third, what approach – generically speaking – seems best suited to address the challenges you’ve identified?
Join them in the discussion if you like, or check out their project wiki , their new DN blog, follow them on Twitter, or join their Facebook group.
Here are the student’s thoughts in brief:
Greatest opportunities:
- Democratizing effect of the net: DN can build their own businesses without huge upfront investments (Rene, Switzerland)
- ICT enables networking among people across boundaries (Catrine, Switzerland)
- Encourages communication among DNs (Pierre-Antoine, France)
- Increased availability of all kind of information, allows fast development and sharing ideas among DNs (Jonas, Germany)
- Availability of information, DN can go online and find everything they’re looking for; this shapes, e.g., the way DNs do research; as a result, world becomes a smaller place, more common denominators in terms of shared knowledge and culture (Melinda, Switzerland)
- Efficiency gains in all areas, including speed of access, spread of ideas, … (Eugene, Singapore)
Greatest challenges, long-term:
- Problem of losing one’s identity – losing cultural identity in the sea of diversity (Eugene, Singapore)
- Dependency on technology and helplessness when not having the technology available; DNs are becoming dependent on technology and lose ability to differentiate b/w reality and virtuality; other key challenge: bullying (Melinda, Switzerland)
- Who will get access to the digital world – only the wealthy kids in the West or others, too? Digital divide as a key problem (Jonas, Germany)
- Addiction: DNs are always online and depend so much on Internet that it maz lead to addictive behavior (Pierre-Antoine, France)
- DNs can’t distinguish between offline and online world, they can’t keep, e.g. online and offline identities separate (Catrine, Switzerland)
- Notion of friendship changes; DNs might forget about their friends in the immediate neighborhood and focus solely on the virtual (Rene, Switzerland)
Most promising approaches:
- Teach digital natives how to use social networks and communicate with each other; law, in general, is not a good mode of regulation in cyberspace (Rene, Switzerland)
- Technology may often provide a solution in response to a technologically-created problem like, e.g., privacy intrusion (Catrine, Switzerland)
- Don’t regulate too much, otherwise people won’t feel responsible anymore; education is key, help people to understand that it’s their own responsibility (Pierre-Antoine, France)
- The laws that are currently in place suffice (except in special circumstances); learning is key, but who shall be the teacher (since today’s teachers are not DNs)? (Jonas, Germany)
- Generic legal rules are often not the right tool, problems change too fast; instead, kids need general understanding of how to handle technology; goal could be to strengthen their personality in the offline world so that they can transfer their confidence, but also skills to the online world (Melinda, Switzerland)
- Technology will most likely help DNs to solve many of the problems we face today; education is the basis, but focus needs to be on the question how to put education from theory into practice (Eugene, Singapore)
From the blog Law and Information: obtaining a better understanding of the information society and law’s role in it.