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Back in the day | City Literal - 1 views

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    Long ago :D
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W&V: "Bitcoin ist dem derzeitigen Finanzsystem überlegen" - 0 views

  • Diese Technologie ist meiner Meinung nach dem derzeitigen Finanzsystem überlegen. Bitcoin – oder jedenfalls etwas auf Grundlage derselben technologischen Struktur – wird langfristig Zahlungsmittel wie etwa Kreditkarten ersetzen.
  • Nach Berechnungen von Goldman Sachs würde der Gebrauch von Bitcoin allein in den  USA zu Einsparungen in Höhe von etwa 165 Milliarden Dollar pro Jahr führen.
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World of Warcraft gender switching: Why men choose female avatars. - 1 views

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    Interesting insights into gender switching on WoW.
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The limits of the digital humanities, by Adam Kirsch | New Republic - 1 views

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    An interesting critique of some of the hype and ideology surrounding the "digital humanities".
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Interviewing For The 'World's Toughest Job' - Digg - 2 views

  • Wait until the end. This takes a turn and you're going to want to call home afterward.
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    In one way this is just another viral video. In another, I would say it is a nice example of how emotions can be transferred via the web. It is an fake-interview via some skype-like software in which people are being pranked. At the end though, it shows very well how emotions might be carried not only within the video but also to the viewer.
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    Yes, and it's also a piece of viral marketing, showing how companies are getting better and better at using this format to elicit and manipulate emotions. Which is not to take anything away from the power of webcams to transfer emotions.
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CNN iReport Invites Google Glass Owners to Become Citizen Journalists - 2 views

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    Crowd-sourcing citizen journalism, or ever more surveillance in everyday life. Actually, this is not an either/or situation.
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World101x - 0 views

shared by Jovan Maud on 12 May 14 - No Cached
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    Talking about MOOCs, here's a new one from the University of Queensland.
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James Patten: The best computer interface? Maybe ... your hands | Talk Video | TED.com - 3 views

  • "The computer is an incredibly powerful means of creative expression," says designer and TED Fellow James Patten. But right now, we interact with computers, mainly, by typing and tapping. In this nifty talk and demo, Patten imagines a more visceral, physical way to bring your thoughts and ideas to life in the digital world, taking the computer interface off the screen and putting it into your hands.
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    Interesting idea of combining both the physical and digital spheres.
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    Very interesting. Relates to the whole question of the distinction between digital and actual and the way that this is getting harder and harder to distinguish. Also connects with the "internet of things" topic.
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The Whatever Button Likes It All - 3 views

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    An interesting solution for the problem of liking everything. Also note the cultural specifics of "liking" in Japan.
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Robot 'pals' are invading social media - and it's time to unfriend them - The Week - 2 views

  • As I argue in my book, behind socialbots stands a massive, powerful network, one we've been hearing a lot about lately: the network of surveillance, comprised both of global corporations who buy and sell our attention and governments who demand our obedience.
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    This article argues that the massive amounts of data that we make available about ourselves online allow bots to become ever more "human" in their self-presenation and interactions. Again referring to Latour: the traceability of so much behavioural data makes the distinction between "social" and "psychological" harder to maintain. At the same time, the availability of data allows machines to parse (and pass) all the more effectively.
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Shoshanna Zuboff: Dark Google - 0 views

  • Google’s absolutist pursuit of its interests is now regarded by many as responsible for the Web’s fading prospects as an open information platform in which participants can agree on rules, rights, and choice.
  • In fact, the firms were developing a wholly new business logic that incorporated elements of the conventional logic  of corporate capitalism –especially its adversarialism toward end consumers – along with  elements from the new Internet world – especially its intimacy. The outcome was the elaboration of  a new commercial logic based on hidden surveillance.
  • We often hear that our privacy rights have been eroded and secrecy has grown. But that way of framing things obscures what’s really at stake. Privacy hasn’t been eroded. It’s been expropriated.  The difference in framing provides new ways to define the problem and consider solutions.
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  • A pre-modern absolutismFinally - and this is key - the new concentration of privacy rights is institutionalized in the automatic undetectable functions of a global infrastructure that most of the world’s people also happen to think is essential for basic social participation. This turns ordinary life into the daily renewal of a 21st century Faustian pact.
  • What is Google up to next?  We know it’s secret, but here is how it looks to me. Google is no longer content with the data business.  It’s next step is to build an even more radical „reality business.”  Google sees „reality” as the next big thing that it can carve up and sell. In the data business, the payoff is in data patterns that help target ads. In the reality business, the payoff is in shaping and communicating real life behaviors of people and things in millions of ways that drive revenue to Google. The business model is expanding to encompass the digital you as well as the actual you. The scene is changing from virtual reality to, well, reality. Unsurprisingly, the two entities at the vanguard of this new wave are Google and the NSA.
    • Jovan Maud
       
      Remember in the Matrix:Reloaded (I think it was?) that Neo realised he could also use his powers in the "real world", not just inside the Matrix...
  • In a 2011 paper,  MIT Professor Alex Pentland explains the value of reality mining. „We must reinvent societies’ systems within a control framework.” He notes that this will require „exponential growth in data about human behavior.”
    • Jovan Maud
       
      Bruno Latour would argue that the "the social" is becoming ever more "visible" and can be subjected to ever more quantatitive analysis. Or are we seeing a process of convergence, where the distinction between qualitative and quantitative is breaking down? The notion of developing a "control framework", though, illustrates though how the gathering of massive amounts of data is not merely collecting information about the world, but an active intervention in shaping the world.
  • the proliferation of sensors, mobile phones, and other data capture devices will provide the „eyes and ears” of a „world-spanning living organism.”
    • Jovan Maud
       
      "Distributed sensor networks" -- otherwise known as "the internet of things". 
  • “pattern of life analysis”
  • All this suggests that Google is building capabilities even more ambitious than reality „mining”. The aim is not merely the God’s eye view, but the God’s eye power to shape and control reality.
  • There are two useful ideas for us in the work of historian Karl Polanyi. He described the rise of a new human conception: the self-regulating market economy.  He saw that the market economies of the 19th and 20th centuries depended upon three astonishing mental inventions.  He called them „fictions“. The first was that human life can be subordinated to market dynamics and be reborn as „labor.” Second,  nature can be subordinated and reborn as „real estate.” Third, that purchasing power can be reborn as „money.”  The very possibility of industrial capitalism depended upon the creation of  these  three critical  „fictional commodities.” Life, nature, and exchange had to be turned into things that could be profitably bought and sold.
  • Google brings us to the precipice of a new development in the scope of the market economy. A fourth fictional commodity is emerging as a dominant characteristic of market dynamics in the 21st century. „Reality” is about to undergo the same kind of fictional transformation and be reborn as „behavior.” 
  • Polanyi understood that the pure unimpeded operations of  a self-regulating of the market were profoundly destructive. Society required    countermeasures to avoid such danger. He called this the „double movement”:  „a network of measures and policies...integrated into powerful institutions designed to check the action of the market relative to labor, land, and money.”
    • Jovan Maud
       
      When Horst and Miller discuss the "dialectics of culture" in their chapter, I think they are referring to something similar. How are the powers of abstraction brought about by digital technologies domesticated in "culture", or into structures of governance? 
  • We are beyond the realm of economics here. This is not merely a conversation about free  markets; it’s a conversation about free people.
  • But such specialized  professional arguments shift the Google debate from the realm of everyday life and ordinary people to the arcane interests of economists and bureaucrats. They obscure the fact that the issues have shifted from monopolies of products or services to monopolies of rights: rights to privacy and rights to reality.  These new forms of power, poorly understood except by their own practitioners, threaten the sovereignty of the democratic social contract.
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Ist „Look up" das verlogenste oder das dümmste Video des Jahres? | VICE Deuts... - 1 views

  • Die Devise heißt nicht „Look Up“—sondern „Grow Up“. Und für Gary: Shut up.
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    "Das Überraschende an diesem Video ist nicht, dass es so offensichtlich verlogen ist. (Es ist dafür gemacht worden, um auf sozialen Netzwerken viral zu gehen, und der Typ hat in der Beschreibung auf YouTube darunter gleich seine persönliche Website und seinen Twitter-Namen angegeben-er hat 2.387 Follower. 2.387 Twitter-Follower sind nicht schlecht für jemanden, der schlechte Gedichte darüber schreibt, wie böse soziale Netzwerke sind.)"
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    Good article. It not only points out the irony of a viral video that rails against the effects of the internet, it illustrates well the nostalgia for the "real", "authentic" way of being that digital technologies have supposedly destroyed. As the article points out though, it's also interesting that so many people seem to find the video interesting and worth sharing, despite the fact that its message is cliched and massively sentimental. I actually had to turn the video off before the end because it was annoying me so much.
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    Haha, yeah you're right. I've had the same experience and didn't watch it until the end.
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Look Up - YouTube - 0 views

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    I think one of our girls has mentioned this video, didn't she? Anyway, it is indeed quite interesting, though I would say the topic/ message isn't exactly new. I would rather say it is interesting that someone is doing something like this again.

Michael Anti - Talk on China's "great firewall" - 4 views

started by Etienne Mahler on 06 May 14 no follow-up yet
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Coffitivity - Increase Your Creativity! - 2 views

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    It's amazing the amount of sites and digital tools dedicated to productivity, and its interesting to note that they are often directed at trying to combat some of the perceived negative effects of digital technologies themselves. Take this site, for example, it seeks to reintroduce the hubbub of a social environment, like a cafe, into the office.
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The "Cuban Twitter" Scam Is a Drop in the Internet Propaganda Bucket - The Intercept - 0 views

  • Propagandizing foreign populations has generally been more legally acceptable. But it is difficult to see how government propaganda can be segregated from domestic consumption in the digital age. If American intelligence agencies are adopting the GCHQ’s tactics of “crafting messaging campaigns to go ‘viral’,” the legal issue is clear: A “viral” online propaganda campaign, by definition, is almost certain to influence its own citizens as well as those of other countries.
  • Those programs, carried out in secrecy and with little accountability (it seems nobody in Congress knew of the “Cuban Twitter” program in any detail) threaten the integrity of the internet itself, as state-disseminated propaganda masquerades as free online speech and organizing. There is thus little or no ability for an internet user to know when they are being covertly propagandized by their government, which is precisely what makes it so appealing to intelligence agencies, so powerful, and so dangerous.
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