Rheingold
speaks to how both friendships and enmities are formed online and how people
come together to support each other through misfortune. He gives the example
of how computer-moderated communication enabled members of one Well community
to send vital medical aid to a friend hospitalized halfway around the world.
Rheingold goes on to show how communities can form by various electronic
communication methods, using the conferencing system of The Well as one
example. He also examines how people interact through mailing lists, live
chat, and the fantasy cyberenvironments of online role-playing games. In
the process, he questions what kind of relationships can really be formed
in a medium where people can change their apparent identity at will.
This book questions whether a distinction between "virtual" communities and "real-life" communities is entirely valid. The Virtual Community argues that real relationships happen and real communities develop when people communicate upon virtual common ground. Rheingold also shares his far-reaching knowledge of how technology effects our social constructs. If you are involved in an online community, here is your cultural heritage.