Of course, a number of other trends also influence aesthetic diversity in contemporary culture besides computational technologies. The rise of the world wide web and social networks, growth of international travel, globalization of consumer economies and advertising, zero cost telecommunication, growth of foreign student enrollment, growth of remote work, and the rise of Japan, followed by Korea and then China, as exporters of cultural products and images are just some examples among many other developments all playing a role. On the one hand, they are making the world into a single global village — or if you like, a single cultural marketplace, where certain im-ages, ideas, values, narratives, products, and styles are marketed to everybody and available everywhere, and this may decrease diversity. On the other hand, the same trends may also be increasing diversity because local cultural DNAs become available globally.