The last decade of the 20th century witnessed the birth of the internet. A network of computers, servers and telephony infrastructures covered the world and a new space was formed on it, a virtual environment without any physical existence that was called cyberspace by some people and “entered” to search for information, read news, chat, send emails and share music. In the mid-2000s, the advent of mobile phones placed in the palms of our hands access to the new world that so much of our lives are now spent in.
Thirty years after its emergence, the internet has completely transformed our daily lives. The term cyberspace appears to have become obsolete, unable to reflect the omnipresence of the virtual world in our everyday lives, and we now talk about new and more immersive forms of digital experiences that will enable us to deploy essential parts of our lives outside the physical reality. The fact is that we’re already living in an expanded world. A hybrid reality in which virtual environments extend the borders and potential of the material world, raising questions of unprecedented depth.