History of the CYBERCAFE
By Magda Romanska




Beginning in the 1990s, many traditional cafés began transforming into so-called cybercafés or internet
cafés. The transformation once again reestablished the historical role of cafés as places of public
discourse, information exchange and communication. Internet cafés provide internet access to their patrons,
usually for an hourly fee. Currently there are two types of internet cafés: those that provide computer
terminals with internet access, and those that provide Wi-Fi internet access only, to which users connect
via their own computers. The first to install internet access in a café was Wayne Gregori, in 1991 in San
Francisco. The concept (and the name Cybercafé), however, was developed three years later, in 1994, by Ivan
Pope. Commissioned to design the ‘Towards the Aesthetics of the Future’ art event for the Institute of
Contemporary Art (ICA) in London, Pope proposed a café with internet access.
Following the event, Cyberia, London’s first internet café, opened the same year. Shortly thereafter, The
Binary Café, Canada’s first internet café, opened in Toronto. Likewise, the same year, the first American
internet café, The High Tech Café, was opened by Jeff Anderson in Dallas, Texas. A year later, in 1995, the
CB1 Café in Cambridge was established. To this day, it remains the oldest internet café in the U.K. Shortly
after its opening, internet cafés began popping up in major urban centers throughout the U.S. and Western
Europe. Although their decor and clientele varied, reflecting local culture, cybercafés began developing
their own unique variation of café culture while changing the way people began to communicate worldwide. The
growth of internet cafés is credited with fueling the internet boom and communication revolution of the late
1990s as more and more people were suddenly able to communicate around the globe in an instant.
In 2008, the world’s first virtual internet café was released in Sweden. The virtual internet café functions
similarly to the traditional cybercafé but is fully based on the internet. Instead of using their own
computers on the internet, users can remotely control café computers. The virtual cybercafé permits users to
have complete anonymity. Today, everyone can set up his or her own virtual cybercafé on the internet for
private or community use.
Most recently, as internet use at home has become widespread throughout the West and North America, the use
of internet cafés has drastically declined. Since more people now own personal computers, they no longer
have a need for communal internet cafés. Many traditional cafés and fast food venues also now offer free
Wi-Fi access, so internet cafés are no longer unique phenomena. Interestingly enough, however, whereas in
the West internet cafés are becoming extinct, they are experiencing a second renaissance in many developing
countries, particularly in Southeast Asia, Africa, and South America, where internet access is sparse.
Often, internet cafés are a primary source of internet access for a local community, providing a
shared-accessed model, which is more affordable than personal ownership. The function of internet cafés
across the globe varies, reflecting the global diversity of internet café culture, from the
entertaining-gaming model to the business model to the social and political model, when internet cafés are a
vital source of connection in times of political upheaval.
In China, internet cafés are called “wangba,” which means “net bar.” Although few Chinese own personal
computers, the internet is booming mainly because of the widespread use of wangbas. In 2005, China had
110,000 registered internet cafés, which employed more than 1,000,000 people. Chinese internet cafés are
primarily used for business purposes, gaming and networking. In fact, the use of internet cafés for gaming
is popular across Asia, particularly in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, South Korea and the Philippines. In South
Korea, for example, internet cafés are called “PC bangs,” and are frequented mostly by youngsters looking to
play online games. The LAN multiplayer gaming centers allow many users to connect to the same portal to play
virtual games such as World of Warcraft.
In many places around the globe, like Nairobi, Kenya, for example, people use internet cafés to find love
via internet dating sites. But the internet cafés also have their darker side. First, there is a widespread
concern about copyright violations by internet café users, which is prompting many café owners to
discontinue their CD-burning services. Around the globe, internet cafés are also being used for more
sinister purposes, such as connecting global terrorist networks, aiding in the global sex-slave trade and
child pornography. In Italy, for example, to prevent the use of internet cafés for terrorist purposes, users
are asked for their government issued IDs before logging in. In Singapore, internet cafés are also closely
controlled to prevent distribution of pornography. In Los Angeles, internet cafés have been known to attract
street gangs; thus their use there has been restricted. Just as traditional coffeehouses played an important
role in spearheading the American Revolution, internet cafés have played an important political role during
the recent upheavals, particularly during the Arab Spring, when street demonstrations and information
exchanges were organized mainly through the use of internet cafés. In many places, internet cafés provide
the kind of cultural exchange that would not be possible otherwise. In Kabul, for example, internet cafés
allow for intercity communication which would otherwise take days, as often there are no phone lines
available. There is also hope that common access to the internet will empower central governments and unite
various ethnic factions, thus bringing people together.