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MEMBERS: Anabel Urrutia Carmen Borja Liliana Calapiña

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MEMBERS:

Anabel UrrutiaCarmen BorjaLiliana Calapiña

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Internet is a network of distributed computer networks around the world that connect businesses, offices, universities, and others.

It comprises several million computers linked together.

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Through the Internet you can access the information stored on powerful

computers called Web Hosting.

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The information get from the Internet may or may not be reliable, you can also access pornography or illegal business, so you must be very careful in how it is used.

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Internet is a medium of communication and access to information, which has the followingFeatures:• There are no borders and is universal• You have no owner and its correct use is left to the conscience of each member• There are no ethnic discrimination, religious, political, etc..• There is no regulatory body

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1958 The company creates the first modem BELL.

1961 Leonard Kleinrock published the first theory about the use of packages for data transfer.

1962 Home of investigations by ARPA.

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1969 Connecting the first computers from 4 universities. 1971 23 Sending the first email by Ray Tomlinson.

1972 Birth of InterNetworking Working Group.

1973 England and Norway Internet stick, each with a computer.

Creating NewsGroups 1979 by American students.

1982 Definition of TCP / IP and the word "Internet"

1983 First Name Server sites.

1984 1000 computers connected.

1987 10000 connected computers.

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1989 100000 connected computers.

1990 Disappearance of ARPANET

1991 is announced publicly the World Wide Web

1992 1 million connected computers.

1993 Appearance of NCSA Mosaic web browser

1996 10 billion connected computers.

2000 Explosion of the dotcom bubble

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Turn on and configure your new computer: the operating system

Connect to the Internet: the operators

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Start browsing safely: entry platforms

Education and prevention

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Other Connections: phones and consoles

If you detect any danger ...Acts!

Share leisure

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Train your eye and your fingers to employ a series of techniques that help you quickly find what you need to know about web pages.

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Train your mind to think critically, even suspiciously, by asking a series of questions that will help you decide how much a web page is to be trusted.

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1. Before you leave the list of search results -- before you click and get interested in anything written on the page.

2. Then choose pages most likely to be reliable and authentic.

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1. Look for a link called "links," "additional sites," "related links,".

2. In the text, if you see little footnote numbers or links that might refer to documentation, take the time to explore them.

3. Look at the publisher of the page

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Inform, give facts, give data

Explain, persuade Sell, entice

Share Disclose

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HOW DO I CORRECTLY CITE

INTERNET SOURCES?

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Citing a source means to acknowledge, or give credit to, the person who actually created the content you’re using. The opposite of this is plagiarism, which means to take someone else’s work and claim it as your own.

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When and how to cite?

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Whenever you use a direct quote, acknowledge the quote by placing it inside quotation marks and then naming the author.

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Whenever you use photos, images, or other art, naming the artist or creator underneath the image.

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You can also use footnotes, endnotes or parenthetical remarks to cite content in research papers.

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There is no single standard for citing or referencing online sources correctly; instead there are several guidelines based on style preferences. It is important for teachers to identify the style they require

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Core elements in citing material include the author’s last name, first name (when known); the title of the specific document, article, or work in quotes, (when known); the title of the larger work if there is one, the date when the article was published (when available); the date of the last revision if any; the date you accessed the material, and for internet resources, the URL where the content is hosted.

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Citing your sources is important for two key reasons. The first is to give credit where credit is due to the people whose work you quote, or used as a basis for your ideas. The second reason is to allow others who read or see your work to check the resources you’ve used to check for accuracy by following your citation to the exact article, or website you reference, or to learn more from that resource if they are looking to expand their own understanding.

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