As an information economy and a cultural hallmark, cyberspace belies t
raditional boundaries yet involves a distinctive territory, citizenry,
literature, technology, capital and finance, ritual, weapons and bell
igerencies, a recognizable past, and variegated if unspecified futures
. Not easily quantified is the geography of so elusive and placeless a
n entity, and its technology has been variously portrayed as utopian,l
iberating, elitist, or enslaving; in it are brought to life strains of
technological determinism. Maps of cyberspace can be forged only with
utmost difficulty, and it is best beloved and imagined in dense cyber
punk fiction. Part sacred space, part ethereal region, part digital fa
ct, cyberspace involves a regional geography perhaps best captured in
a koan: What is the place where everyone is but nobody lives?