06-23-2010, 07:33 AM | #1 |
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Should ''internet'' be capitalized or lowercase?
Two longtime students of the issue say, lowercase it in all USA newspaper and websites. The UK already does this, but most US newspapers follow the AP style and the NYTimes style and that is to CAP the word Internet. But these two professors, Steve Jones and David Park, say lowercase it. What say YOU? And backup your POV with examples and reasons.
Here's the professors' take. I agree, lowercase the word now. It's 2010 already! TEXT BEGINS There is no ‘I’ in ‘internet’ by Steve Jones and David Park It’s a small thing, really. Whether or not to capitalize the word ‘Internet’ is not the kind of issue that boils the blood or starts a war. And yet, it is important, and the time has come to take that capital I out of this utterly ubiquitous word. When we capitalize a word, we signify it as something special or unique. But there is nothing very special about the internet now. As this year’s group of college graduates will attest, the internet is as big a deal as television. Ho-hum. (To many of them the internet is television, but that is a subject for another time.) Proper names are capitalized, including brand names of products. But as Joseph Turow, author of Niche Envy, points out, we should not think of the internet as the kind of brand-name item that its capitalization suggests. Capitalizing ‘internet’ makes it seem like the internet is a private zone that we must buy into or rent, as if we are visiting Disney World. Of course, the internet itself (which was largely created by public funding) is owned by no one in particular, which has been—and will hopefully continue to be—one of the intriguing things about it. We have already realized that many features of the internet are not words to capitalize; we already use lower-case letters for words like web, e-mail, online, blog and cyberspace. And yet, ‘Internet’ remains with us. The situation can be compared with America in the late 19th century, when it was not difficult to find the word ‘phonograph’ capitalized; the capital p then seemed to indicate that there was something new about the word, something very different about the experiences we would associate with this device. The internet has been shrouded in the same sense of novelty, to which the capital ‘I’ testifies. Perhaps this lingering sense of novelty owes to the internet’s seemingly strange lack of an obvious physical presence. Unlike television, radio, or the phonograph, the internet is not a box you can place in your living room. We connect to the internet through the use of computers and some connecting line or wireless device, but these boxes and wires don’t contain the internet, they only act as connections to, or displays for, the internet. At the same time, the internet does not come from a specified place, as do television and radio broadcasts; to connect to the internet is very different from switching on the local news. However, this novelty of the internet has quickly faded. Younger Americans do not approach the internet as something new or special; it has become no more or less than another part of their day-to-day experience. In this sense, the internet has become part of the background. Like tap water, it can be simply turned on or off. Even without the long-promised convergence of internet with other media, the internet has managed to converge with the everyday lives of an entire generation. The time of novelty—the time when it might be understandable to capitalize ‘internet’—has passed. The persistence of the upper-case I is largely a product of newspaper publishers (many of whom didn’t capitalize ‘television’ or ‘radio’ when those media were new) and dictionary editors, who are perhaps waiting for there to be some change in usage before they change their prescribed sense of how ‘internet’ is to be spelled. But for internet users (many of whom do not capitalize any words as they type away in chat rooms and blogs) the internet is no longer novel, no mere trend or gadget, and while it is especially useful it is certainly not in need of special treatment. In this sense, then, it is up to us. A switch to ‘internet’ will not solve all of our problems, but it may reflect that we are now ready to absorb this medium, and truly make it our own. ------------------------------------- AUTHOR ID: Dr Steve Jones is UIC Distinguished Professor and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Dr David Park is Gustav E. Beerly Jr. Associate Professor of Communication at Lake Forest College. |
06-23-2010, 07:40 AM | #2 |
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NOTES:
1. Michael Quinion, website editor in the UK, notes in his current newsletter World Wide Words: As a final change, I have decided to go with the majority view and will spell the words as "website" and "internet" from now on." 2. Phillip B. Corbett, the word style editor at the new york times (sic), tells reporters that he is considering ordering the newspaper editors to start lowercasing the word "internet" ...but not so quickly, noting: "Our current style is to keep the uppercase "I." I agree that the trend is toward lowercase, and I suspect that at some point we will review our style. But our preference is to follow established usage, not to lead the way. So I can't predict when the change might be made." 3. Ted Anthony, managing editor at the Associated Press news agency, which also has a powerful style book that all newspapers must follow, or else, says he is mulling the issue over and sussing it out with his fellow editors at AP, but for now, he is sticking with caps for "Internet" and any newspaper or website that goes lowercase will be shot! 4. What is the preferred style at mobileread.com? |
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06-23-2010, 07:55 AM | #3 |
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I not not think that matters a whole lot whether it is capitalized or not, but I usually do use the capital form. My logic is that "an internet" is simply a network that interconnects two or more networks, while "the Internet" is a single worldwide interconnection of networks. There is only one Internet, unlike the comparisons in the article to the examples of radio or television. There is only one Internet, while there are many internets and intranets.
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06-23-2010, 08:52 AM | #4 |
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The newspaper I write for still capitalizes it, but in my personal writings and blogs, I use lowercase. I just don't see it as a proper noun, even if there is only one internet. Lowercase will eventually become the norm.
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06-23-2010, 09:20 AM | #5 |
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Internet or internet. We can sure waste time and effort with nonsense.
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06-23-2010, 09:39 AM | #6 | |
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Personally, I think a move to use the lowercase merely indicates ignorance of what the Internet actually is. |
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07-03-2010, 07:41 AM | #7 |
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Lowercase, just like it's inventor, algore.
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07-03-2010, 09:40 AM | #8 |
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I started writing "internet" in lowercase a couple of years ago. I have been teaching Computer Networks at a university for a long time, so I use the word quite a bit. It would be interesting to check my lecture slides to see if it is consistent there as these were developed during the time I changed from capitalized to lowercase. I don't have a change history, however. Never bothered to use version control for them.
Occasionally I still type "Internet". The last time I did, about half an hour ago, I quickly changed it lo the lowercase form. |
07-03-2010, 12:44 PM | #9 |
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What are the grammatical rules for capitalizing words?
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_t...talizing_words * The word "I" as in "I am" must always be capitalised. * Names of businesses, people, brands, websites, and anything aside from the common noun should be capitalised. * The first letter of every sentence must be placed one space away from the full-stop, and, yes, must be capitalised. * Letters succeeding punctuation marks are only capitalised after full-stops, not commas, colons, semi-colons, apostrophes, speech marks, or brackets. |
07-03-2010, 01:10 PM | #10 |
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Internet should only be capitalized when it is an award E.G.; taglines gets 2 Internets for starting this thread on the internet.
Website should only be capitalized when referring to a specific website E.G.; The Mobileread Website is among many websites focusing on electronic book reading devices (EBoReDs). |
07-03-2010, 02:07 PM | #11 |
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07-05-2010, 01:55 PM | #12 |
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I feel it should be lowercase for internets in general (any network of networks) but the global Internet should be capitalised since it's a singular thing.
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07-05-2010, 03:19 PM | #13 | |||||
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But I fear those of us who prefer 'I' are in a minority because most people simply don't know (or care) whether there are one or more internets and don't understand the reasoning behind. So we'd better just get used to it and spend our energy on more productive things. Not that it doesn't irk me |
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07-05-2010, 03:59 PM | #14 | |
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The Internet is a specific, unique, named example of a computer network. There is only one Internet; it's not an internet. "The Internet" is its name, just like "Worldwalker" is my (pen) name, not a descriptive term. The Internet is a network; Worldwalker is a forum member; the Empire State Building is a building. "Specialness" has nothing to do with it; the US Army's capitalization of "soldier" is an abomination. So is the idea that any adjective which applies to a human being (black, deaf, whatever) should be capitalized. Capitalization is for proper nouns, and words derived from proper nouns (Asian, for instance, since it's derived from the proper noun Asia). Not just because you think something is Special or Important. |
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07-05-2010, 04:03 PM | #15 |
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Worldwalker, that was very well said
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grammar, internet, lowercase |
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