Article 1TBK5 So who put the cyber into cybersex?

So who put the cyber into cybersex?

by
John Naughton
from Technology | The Guardian on (#1TBK5)
Today we have cybercafes and cyberwars, but cybernetics - the term that launched a dozen prefixes - has been lost. In a new book, Thomas Rid aims to reconnect 'cyber' to its original idea of man-machine symbiosis

Where did the "cyber" in "cyberspace" come from? Most people, when asked, will probably credit William Gibson, who famously introduced the term in his celebrated 1984 novel, Neuromancer. It came to him while watching some kids play early video games. Searching for a name for the virtual space in which they seemed immersed, he wrote "cyberspace" in his notepad. "As I stared at it in red Sharpie on a yellow legal pad," he later recalled, "my whole delight was that it meant absolutely nothing."

How wrong can you be? Cyberspace turned out to be the space that somehow morphed into the networked world we now inhabit, and which might ultimately prove our undoing by making us totally dependent on a system that is both unfathomably complex and fundamentally insecure. But the cyber- prefix actually goes back a long way before Gibson - to the late 1940s and Norbert Wiener's book, Cybernetics, Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine, which was published in 1948.

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