Editing Netizenship/Origins

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The first widespread "telecommunications" were the telegraph, the telephone, and the radiotelegraph. Earlier systems of signalling using colored flags and such traveled, of course, at the speed of light, but were constrained by physical limitations at the sender, at the receiver, and between the two. These systems put the "tele" in "telecommunications" and allowed communication over long distances. It is not correct to say the companies won the fight to control them. This implies there even was one. There was none, not even the opportunity for one<ref>Tom Standage, in his 1998 book ''The Victorian Internet'', which I haven't had the chance of reading, characterizes the telegraph as the Victorian internet, complete with text messaging abbreviations.</ref>.
The first widespread "telecommunications" were the telegraph, the telephone, and the radiotelegraph. Earlier systems of signalling using colored flags and such traveled, of course, at the speed of light, but were constrained by physical limitations at the sender, at the receiver, and between the two. These systems put the "tele" in "telecommunications" and allowed communication over long distances. It is not correct to say the companies won the fight to control them. This implies there even was one. There was none, not even the opportunity for one<ref>Tom Standage, in his 1998 book ''The Victorian Internet'', which I haven't had the chance of reading, characterizes the telegraph as the Victorian internet, complete with text messaging abbreviations.</ref>.


The same story unfolded largely in relation to radio and television. Except in the United States, where corporations dominated, governments operated broadcasting systems. The large capital investments needed made it impractical, if not impossible, for private individuals to run a radio or TV station in any way.
The same story unfolded largely in relation to radio and television. Except in the United States, where corporations dominated, governments operated broadcasting systems<ref>For an exception to this exception, which the US government tried and succeeded to destroy, see [https://www.amren.com/features/2020/07/silencing-dissent-by-law/ Silencing Dissent - By Law].</ref>. The large capital investments needed made it impractical, if not impossible, for private individuals to run a radio or TV station in any way.


After World War II came telex, a service which connected teleprinters around the world. Teleprinters had existed long before the war, of course, and their purpose was to allow text to be sent faster over telegraph lines by automatically sending encoded text instead of relying on a human telegraph operator to manually tap out dots and dashes. A "teletype" device would type out the encoded text it received onto a mounted piece of paper - like a typewriter being controlled by the sender of the message. In turn, the receiver would type on their own typewriter, but the letters would be sent through the telegraph lines and appear on that of the sender. Hook this up to telephone instead of telegraph lines, and you've got yourself a modem.  
After World War II came telex, a service which connected teleprinters around the world. Teleprinters had existed long before the war, of course, and their purpose was to allow text to be sent faster over telegraph lines by automatically sending encoded text instead of relying on a human telegraph operator to manually tap out dots and dashes. A "teletype" device would type out the encoded text it received onto a mounted piece of paper - like a typewriter being controlled by the sender of the message. In turn, the receiver would type on their own typewriter, but the letters would be sent through the telegraph lines and appear on that of the sender. Hook this up to telephone instead of telegraph lines, and you've got yourself a modem.  
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