January 19, 2022

Barton on Norm Origin and Development in Cyberspace: Models of Cybernorm Evolution @DuquesneLaw

ICYMI: April M. Barton, Duquesne University School of Law, published Norm Origin and Development in Cyberspace: Models of Cybernorm Evolution at 78 Washington University Law Quarterly 59 (2000). Here is the abstract.
In the absence of legal rules or physical force, what causes someone to behave in a manner contrary to one's private desires? Why, for instance, does one tip a bellhop for carrying luggage to a hotel room? Legal rules do not mandate the tipping of bellhops, and bellhops typically do not threaten physical force. So why does one feel obligated to tip the bellhop and embarrassed when when one does not? Tipping the bellhop is a social norm. Social norm theory seeks to explain such informal constraints on human behavior. While numerous areas of academia employ social norm theory, scholars have yet to apply it directly to the study of the Internet. This Article traces norm origin and development in cyberspace and presents a corresponding theory of "cybernorms"; a theory which explains informal constraints on human behavior in cyberspace.
Download the article from SSRN at the link.

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