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n bauch

open-access.net's slideshows on SlideShare - 0 views

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    Slideshares zum Thema Open Access.
maike online

Open Access - 0 views

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    Folien zum Thema Open Access - interessant wegen der aktuellen Diskussion und dem Heidelberger Anti-Digitalitäts-Aufruf.
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    Folien zum Thema Open Access
maike online

heise online - 08.05.09 - Schlagabtausch zwischen Befürwortern und Gegnern vo... - 0 views

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    Roland Reuß, der Initiator des umstrittenen "Heidelberger Appells" gegen die kostenlose Publikation staatlich geförderter Forschungsergebnisse im Internet, wehrt sich weiter vehement gegen das "Open Access"-Modell. Er sehe bei der "Bewegung" im Wissenschaftsbereich zur freien Veröffentlichung urheberrechtlich geschützter Werke "die Gefahr eines großen Staatsverlags", warnte der Philologe auf der Urheberrechtskonferenz des Bundesjustizministeriums vor einem "totalitäre
anja c. wagner

Matthias Spielkamp: Open Excess: Der Heidelberger Appell - 0 views

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    Super Artikel zu Open Access
anja c. wagner

Cloud Learning as Universal Primary Education | Teemu Arina - 0 views

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    I will discuss the idea I call Cloud Learning - universal access to learning by all through the fact that our learning environments, learning content, learning services an learning devices are becoming digitally distributed, context aware (as in physical location, physical environment and learners themselves) and will resemble more of a cloud than a cathedral.

anja c. wagner

"Privacy and Publicity in the Context of Big Data" - 0 views

  • Privacy is not about control over data nor is it a property of data.  It's about a collective understanding of a social situation's boundaries and knowing how to operate within them.  In other words, it’s about having control over a situation. It's about understanding the audience and knowing how far information will flow.  It’s about trusting the people, the situating, and the context.  People seek privacy so that they can make themselves vulnerable in order to gain something: personal support, knowledge, friendship, etc.
  • 1) Security Through Obscurity Is a Reasonable Strategy 2) Not All Publicly Accessible Data is Meant to be Publicized 3) People Who Share PII Aren’t Rejecting Privacy 4) Aggregating and Distributing Data Out of Context is a Privacy Violation 5) Privacy is Not Access Control
  • Social norms can and are changing, but that doesn't mean that privacy has been thrown out the door. People care deeply about privacy, care deeply about maintaining context.  But they also care about publicity, or the right to walk out in public and be seen. 
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  • This goes back to our methodological conundrum with Big Data.  Not all data are created equal and it's really hard to make reasonable interpretations from 30,000 feet without understanding the context in which content is produced and shared.  Treating data as arbitrary bytes is bound to get everyone into trouble. So we’re stuck with an ethical conundrum: do we err on the side of making sure that we care for those who are most likely to be hurt or do we accept the costs of exposing people?  
  • During its tenure, Facebook has made a series of moves that have complicated people's understanding of context, resulting in numerous outpourings of frustration over privacy. 
  • People don't seek privacy when they have something to hide.  They hide because they want to maintain privacy.  They seek privacy because they are social creatures who want to understand the context and manage information accordingly.  They seek privacy because they want to be socially appropriate and make themselves vulnerable to those around them.  People hide in plain sight all the time, but this is getting trickier and trickier with each new technology. 
  • Big Data is made of people. People producing data in a context.  People producing data for a purpose.  Just because it's technically possible to do all sorts of things with that data doesn't mean that it won't have consequences for the people it's made of. And if you expose people in ways that cause harm, you will have to live with that on your conscience.
  • Privacy will never be encoded in zeros and ones.  It will always be a process that people are navigating.  Your challenge is to develop systems and do analyses that balance the complex ways in which people are negotiating these systems.  You are shaping the future. I challenge you to build the future you want to inhabit.
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    Toller Vortrag von danah boyd - v.a. mit Blick auf die Datenschutz-Veränderungen bei Facebook
anja c. wagner

Opencast Community | Projects | Opencast - 0 views

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    This funding, along with the contributions and commitments from UC Berkeley and our 12 partner institutions, will enable an international team to develop software that will support the scheduling, capture, encoding and delivery of educational content to video-and-audio sharing sites such as YouTube and iTunes, so that learners can access lectures when and where they need it. The Opencast Matterhorn platform is scheduled to be up and running by summer 2010.
Brigitte Pott

Adding Social Media to the Customer Service Mix: How Enterprise Search 2.0 Uncovers 360... - 0 views

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    (mit Analyst von Gartner) Social media has exploded as a popular channel containing valuable customer data and feedback. But how can you use that data to better equip CSRs, Managers, and even Customers with information to improve customer service? How can you correlate it with information stored within your company and in cloud-based systems? Event Details Tuesday, May 10, 2011 1:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 Register Now Register Now Enterprise Search 2.0-powered applications access relevant information regardless of where it's stored, including social media channels, and presents the information in 360 degree dashboards, so agents, customers and executives can have a complete view of information relevant to them. 360 views drive improvements in customer service metrics, increase customer satisfaction, and better inform executive decisions.
anja c. wagner

OneSocialWeb - Creating a free, open, and decentralized social networking platform. - 3 views

  • The purpose of onesocialweb is to enable free, open, and decentralized social applications on the web. Its protocol can be used to turn any XMPP server into a full fledged social network, participating in the onesocialweb federation. The suite of extensions covers all the usual social networking use cases such as user profiles, relationships, activity streams and third party applications. In addition, it provides support for fine grained access control, realtime notification and collaboration.
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    Wer schaut sich denn dieses Social Network an und berichtet?
anja c. wagner

Ted Curran.net » Cultivate your Personal Learning Network - 0 views

  • You can think of building your own Personal Learning Network as an attempt to create this “learning loop” for yourself using the tools at your disposal. Instead of a bunch of teachers selecting challenging information for you, the Internet gives you access to a world of bloggers, tweeters, speakers, photographers, videographers, and colleagues who will teach you anything you want for nothing more than the price of your time and attention. All they ask of you is to think about it, question it, master the skills, and respond in a thoughtful way. You can participate in this conversation by writing your own blog, tweeting, organizing sources, speaking, and teaching others in the way that works best for you.
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    A Game of Inputs and Outputs
Rob Tell

Social CRM - Getting Down to Reality Brian Solis - 1 views

  • First, and foremost, even though most of the social web action is personal, the revolution has been a communications revolution, first and foremost, not a business revolution. As a result of this irrevocable change in the what, where, when and how we communicate, businesses need to learn how to use these new communications channels – because that’s how their existing and potential customers are communicating. Its simple really.
  • 1. Find out where they are communicating such as Twitter and Facebook as well as traditional channels (phone, email) and understand how to use those channels. Outreach, in other words.
  • 2. Find out what they need from you to communicate and provide them with the channels to do that e.g. a service community. Inputs, in other words.
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  • The value to your business? Happy customers. The same as always.
  • If you’ve done that and accessed those channels available and didn’t limit yourself to those you’re comfortable with, the simplest thing in the world occurs. The customers begin to trust you a bit more
  • the value of a natural environment in getting higher quality product feedback
  • Steve Knox, the Vocalpoint CEO at the time said, “We know that the most powerful form of marketing is an advocacy message from a trusted friend.”
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