Heath Bunting

[11] Created in 1998, _readme.html[12] is a work of net.art: a simple web page with a white background and light grey text taken from an article about Heath Bunting.

As coded for by simple HTML attributes, hyperlinked words turn from grey to black once visited.

[13] The work utilises an article about Heath Bunting written by James Flint of The Daily Telegraph.

[15] Bunting's work also shows the range of banal or absurd domain names that companies have purchased.

[16] On Friday, 5 August 1994, Bunting orchestrated a scheme that involved many people calling public phones in and in the surrounding area of London King's Cross railway station.

Many people called in and he witnessed as casual passers-by engaged in conversations with strangers who were perhaps halfway across the world.

In Digital Humanities, a class by Professor Michael Shanks at Stanford University, the project is described: "the train station was transformed into an art platform and the unsuspecting commuters and workers in the area became the audience.

[21][22] Commissioned by the Tate Gallery and the Luxembourg-based Fondation Musée d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean (Mudam) in 2002, BorderXing details ways to cross international borders throughout Europe without legal documentation.