measure that, by the way?) or more liberal political thinking. In fact, the first wave of Internet adopters tended to be Republican (given that they were more affluent than the general population), and there doesn't appear to exist any research indicating that group has become more liberal.
i have to wonder just which "first wave" we're talking about, and just which clues are under discussion. are we talking about the 'first wave' from the universities of the 1970s, the 'first wave' of leisure users of the late 1980s (IRC and MUD users), or the 'first wave' of users post-1993, when commercial traffic was first allowed? [wave 1: probably pretty much steeped in university culture, based on what's out there [MSGGROUP]; wave 2: pretty counterculture in flavor, from my observations; wave 3: *possibly* with republican tendencies, though i think 'massively libertarian' might be more accurate as a descriptor of the pre-1996 traffic.] and just how are you defining 'Internet'? we could have all sorts of fun deconstructing this... with the fact that all of the politically interesting resources were defined to be web URLs as just one point. elijah