Remote access
The Internet allows computer users to connect to other computers
and information stores easily, wherever they may be across the
world. They may do this with or without the use of security,
authentication and encryption technologies, depending on the
requirements.
This is encouraging new ways of working from home, collaboration
and information sharing in many industries. An accountant
sitting at home can audit the books of a company based in
another country, on a server situated in a third country that is
remotely maintained by IT specialists in a fourth. These
accounts could have been created by home-working book-keepers,
in other remote locations, based on information e-mailed to them
from offices all over the world. Some of these things were
possible before the widespread use of the Internet, but the cost
of private, leased lines would have made many of them infeasible
in practice.
An office worker away from his desk, perhaps the other side of
the world on a business trip or a holiday, can open a remote
desktop session into his normal office PC using a secure Virtual
Private Network (VPN) connection via the Internet. This gives
him complete access to all his normal files and data, including
e-mail and other applications, while he is away.
This concept is also referred to by some network security people
as the Virtual Private Nightmare, because it extends the secure
perimeter of a corporate network into its employees' homes; this
has been the source of some notable security breaches.
Collaboration
This low-cost and nearly instantaneous sharing of ideas,
knowledge and skills has revolutionized some, and given rise to
whole new, areas of human activity. One example of this is the
collaborative development and distribution of Free/Libre/Open-Source
Software (FLOSS) such as Linux, Mozilla and OpenOffice.org. See
Collaborative software.
File-sharing
A computer file can be e-mailed to customers, colleagues and
friends as an attachment. It can be uploaded to a website or FTP
server for easy download by others. It can be put into a "shared
location" or onto a file server for instant use by colleagues.
The load of bulk downloads to many users can be eased by the use
of "mirror" servers or peer-to-peer networking.
In any of these cases, access to the file may be controlled by
user authentication; the transit of the file over the Internet
may be obscured by encryption and money may change hands before
or after access to the file is given. The price can be paid by
the remote charging of funds from, for example a credit card
whose details are also passed - hopefully fully encrypted -
across the Internet. The origin and authenticity of the file
received may be checked by digital signatures or by MD5 or other
message digests.
These simple features of the Internet, over a world-wide basis,
are changing the basis for the production, sale and distribution
of many types of product, wherever they can be reduced to a
computer file for transmission. This includes all manner of
office documents, publications, software products, music,
photography, video, animations, graphics and the other arts.
This in turn is causing seismic shifts in each of the existing
industry associations, such as the RIAA and MPAA in the USA,
that previously controlled the production and distribution of
these products in that country.
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