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Bradford Saron

Web 2.0 Expo SF 2008: Clay Shirky - 2 views

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    For all you Clay Shirky fans out there (from whom the name of this social bookmark group originates), another video--this time from blip.tv--on his observations about technology and society. 
Bradford Saron

Clay Shirky - 2 views

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    This is Clay Shirky's first blog post since April of last year. As the author of Here Comes Everyone and Cognitive Surplus (and a number of TED talks), he's one of the leading experts on the digital age and how its affecting society. Here, he looks at the death of the print industry. 
Bradford Saron

The Political Power of Social Media | Foreign Affairs - 0 views

  • The event marked the first time that social media had helped force out a national leader.
  • How does the ubiquity of social media affect U.S. interests, and how should U.S. policy respond to it?
  • social media have become coordinating tools for nearly all of the world's political movements, just as most of the world's authoritarian governments (and, alarmingly, an increasing number of democratic ones) are trying to limit access to it.
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  • New media conducive to fostering participation can indeed increase the freedoms Clinton outlined, just as the printing press, the postal service, the telegraph, and the telephone did before.
  • Despite this basic truth -- that communicative freedom is good for political freedom -- the instrumental mode of Internet statecraft is still problematic.
  • THE THEATER OF COLLAPSE
  • Opinions are first transmitted by the media, and then they get echoed by friends, family members, and colleagues. It is in this second, social step that political opinions are formed. This is the step in which the Internet in general, and social media in particular, can make a difference. As with the printing press, the Internet spreads not just media consumption but media production as well -- it allows people to privately and publicly articulate and debate a welter of conflicting views.
  • This condition of shared awareness -- which is increasingly evident in all modern states -- creates what is commonly called "the dictator's dilemma" but that might more accurately be described by the phrase coined by the media theorist Briggs: "the conservative dilemma," so named because it applies not only to autocrats but also to democratic governments and to religious and business leaders. The dilemma is created by new media that increase public access to speech or assembly; with the spread of such media, whether photocopiers or Web browsers, a state accustomed to having a monopoly on public speech finds itself called to account for anomalies between its view of events and the public's. The two responses to the conservative dilemma are censorship and propaganda. But neither of these is as effective a source of control as the enforced silence of the citizens. The state will censor critics or produce propaganda as it needs to, but both of those actions have higher costs than simply not having any critics to silence or reply to in the first place. But if a government were to shut down Internet access or ban cell phones, it would risk radicalizing otherwise pro-regime citizens or harming the economy.
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    The power of being digitally social, this is an example in the political arena. This is also what Clay Shirky is talking about in a Cognitive Surplus. This is the power of people collaborating and sharing without consideration of cost, distance, time, copyright, law, etc. Do we want to teach children how to ethically participate in this type of environment? Or, just let them go without any skills or discipline?
Bradford Saron

Clay Shirky: How cognitive surplus will change the world | Video on TED.com - 1 views

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    This is Clay Shirky's video explaining cognitive surplus, which is where we get our name, Cognitive Interfund Transfer. 
Bradford Saron

19 College Professors Worth Following on Twitter - 2 views

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    They've hit two of my favorites, including Michael Wesch and Scott McLeod. I'll have to research the others! They have, however, missed Clay Shirky. 
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    No one from the UW system. :-(
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    Twitter is so Iowa and Kansas. (McLeod is from Iowa State and Wescsh is from Kansas.)
Bradford Saron

From Innovation to Revolution | Foreign Affairs - 0 views

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    Must read: Shirky vs Gladwell
Bradford Saron

"Crowd Accelerated Innovation" and its implications for education | Connected Principals - 0 views

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    I've said before that the aggregate effect of social media is very powerful. Here, the author even refers to Clay Shirky, the author of Cognitive Surplus. 
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