Although I have yet to fathom precisely which gaps/repressions/oversights in Internet research Lachlan seeks to rectify, and while I find the offensive part of his contribution to be not particularly academic in nature, and the academic part to be not particularly offensive, the question of research emphasis remains an intriguing one (and one that I know is of great concern to AoIR folks, independent of any provocation/intervention). In the spirit of getting the discussion going, I'm tempted to take the question seriously, and throw out a couple of observations. First, while I don't think the list or the organization necessarily purports to represent the state of academic inquiry into the Internet in any comprehensive fashion, I was very interested to see the breakdown of submissions to the Maastricht conference, which might serve as a rough starting point for considering areas of research emphasis. Far and away the two most popular topic areas were (the meta-topic of) "theoretical/methodological approaches", and "individuals, groups, and communities" online. I'm not exactly sure how the numbering here works, but it looks like these two groups together accounted for well over a quarter of the total submissions. I suspect there are institutional/historical reasons for this kind of emphasis that are related to the formation of comm research and the sub-disciplines that have emerged (as well as to the institutional history/structure of AoIR itself). I'd be very curious to hear people's reactions to the kind of emphasis that emerges from this snapshot (if anything meaningful can be drawn from such a general set of topic areas). What types of justifications/concerns emerge in response to this breakdown. (stats are at http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/confman/chair/stats.php3) On a more specific note, there were some (seeming) omissions that jumped out at me (and I'm sure different ones jump out at different people). To name a few: In an era when the industry emphasis seems to be on jockeying for vertical integration in the coming broadband era (so as to lock up a content/pipeline combo -- with a subscriber base built in), I'd be very interested in hearing more about the political economy of the Internet -- a topic that seems to beg for the depth of scrutiny/analysis possible in academic research. Intellectual property is certainly an important part of this research -- and one that has received plenty of attention from researchers both in AoIR and out. However, the way in which the broadband network will be structured and developed (and the role played by regulation and by the recent spate of merger activity) that remains a central concern, and I'd be grateful for suggestions regarding scholarship in this area. On a related note, the future of the network is a hot topic in business/legal circles. While I'm tormenting my students with conceptions of the online public sphere, AOL/TimeWarner is trying to figure out how to control broadband's killer app (video on demand, allegedly). I would be very interested in research that explores the emerging economic/regulatory regime that will shape the future of the network. This is crucial research for all who are concerned with the fate of things like online community/creativity/democracy. One of the things that Internet research can/ought to do is not just tell us where we have been, but provide some suggestions about where we're presumably going, and how we might exercise some control over that path. At stake is not just the "code", but the infrastructure: a broadband network that's fat downstream (to facilitate pay-per-view) but thin upstream (to prevent file-sharing between "end-users") could alter what we have come to think of as the non-hierarchical, de-centered character of the net and exert important determinations on online activity. Any pointers toward research that addresses these issues? My apologies for the length of this post... Mark