throughout Asia. What kind of restrictions should such a business be subject to? Who gets toenforce taxes? What kind of tax can be enforced? In my research and reasoning, the main business that is flourishing from online businesses are network television stations. Online sites use offline media, especially network televisionadvertisement slots to propagate their various sites. Marvin Goldsmith of ABC reported that they collected about $200 Million in Net related ads, this year (Eisenberg). Thousands of sites out there aredesperately trying to attract attention to their sites in hopes of increasing their profits. NetworkTelevision stations such as ABC, who are constantly losing audiences can still gather an audience ofaround 18 million people; no web site can dare compare to such a response. These outrageous dotcom commercials are diminishing in impact, day by day. As portrayed in the previous pages, the World Wide Web of today, faces several serious issues. The amounts of content, type of content, business downfalls, are just a few prominent ones. The globalnature of the Web has brought forth serious problems in regulation. Since no particular area has thekey focus, there is no order or control in the flow of information. We ought to harness this productivetechnology before it falls apart into total chaos and ruin. In my opinion, the global nature has to be more restrained, in order to tackle the issue of control. First of all, there should be a written constitution and bylaws for the World Wide Web. Every countrythat is a member of the coalition should enforce these written laws within their countries. For this ideato be practical, the user should only be allowed to publish a web site in a native server; for example, anAmerican user should only be entitled to publish a site in a server located within the US. A British useris allowed and only allowed publishing in British servers. Then, those serv...