If you are interested in the relationship between internet technologies and issues around political and social change, censorship, copyright etc. then try Stanford University’s Liberation Technology list. I recommend joining the liberationtech mailing list for updates on international projects and debates - join here - it is a closed list so they screen all subscribers.
For instance, the Stanford liberationtech mailing list referred to another reading list, a compilation started by Adam Thierer at the Technology Liberation Front (TLF is a cyber-libertarian group dedicated to keeping the internet free of government control). Thierer drafted what he called the Digital Decade’s Definitive Reading List of Internet and Info-Tech Policy Books of the 2000s. Whether you agree with the point of view of TLF is of-course another matter.
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