AT THE SAME time the Internet’s nurturing of niche cultures is contributing to what Cass Sunstein calls “cyberbalkanization.” Individuals can design feeds and alerts from their favorite Web sites so that they get only the news they want, and with more and more opinion sites and specialized sites, it becomes easier and easier, as Mr. Sunstein observes in his 2009 book “Going to Extremes,” for people “to avoid general-interest newspapers and magazines and to make choices that reflect their own predispositions.”
Reading and the Web - Texts Without Context - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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I really reject what Cass Sunstein is saying here. He is lamenting that people are finding outlets of news and opinion that they like or agree with. Just because these outlets are not to his liking or approval, he labels them as extreme and suggests that we use sources that he approves of. This is the mentality of censureship and is contrary to free speech. It treats people like we are too ingnorant to make decisions about ascertaining news and opinion.
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All too often, however, the recycling and cut-and-paste esthetic has resulted in tired imitations; cheap, lazy re-dos; or works of “appropriation” designed to generate controversy
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Digital media has definitely created more opportunity for plagiarism, and re-use of work without permission. This loss of control over creative work has irked many creators because they find that there work is presented in wasy that they never intended. I remember reading an article a month or so ago saying that Pink Floyd had sued their record label for allowing their Dark Side of the Moon album to be sold on iTunes as individual songs. Floyd did not like that because all of the songs on that album seamlessly flow from one to a next, so selling individual songs would completely lose that.
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“Reading in the traditional open-ended sense is not what most of us, whatever our age and level of computer literacy, do on the Internet,” the scholar Susan Jacoby writes in “The Age of American Unreason.” “What we are engaged in — like birds of prey looking for their next meal — is a process of swooping around with an eye out for certain kinds of information.”
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That is very true, I notice that when I surf the web for news or research I rarely read the entire article. Only after I narrow down the results to what I think is most relevant will I really read the whole piece.
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I feel this is true as well. When I read over an article, I either skim through or look for the most important parts.
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Scan This Book! - New York Times - 0 views
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At the same time, once digitized, books can be unraveled into single pages or be reduced further, into snippets of a page. These snippets will be remixed into reordered books and virtual bookshelves. Just as the music audience now juggles and reorders songs into new albums (or "playlists," as they are called in iTunes), the universal library will encourage the creation of virtual "bookshelves" — a collection of texts, some as short as a paragraph, others as long as entire books, that form a library shelf's worth of specialized information. And as with music playlists, once created, these "bookshelves" will be published and swapped in the public commons.
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This passage raises the concerns about retaining the integrity of books and other intellectual works. The reduction of an author's works into "snippets" that can be arranged at will by web users opens doors to taking the work out of context. Also, the author may find that most of their work is not presented in the fashion that they intended and that many people who would have otherwise read the entire work have simply relied on selected remixes of the texts.
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We can provide all the works of humankind to all the people of the world.
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When books are deeply linked, you'll be able to click on the title in any bibliography or any footnote and find the actual book referred to in the footnote.
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Sennheiser RS 180 Wireless Headphones | Wired.com Product Reviews - 0 views
Journalists' E-Mails Hacked in China - 0 views
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BEIJING - In what appeared to be a coordinated assault, the e-mail accounts of more than a dozen rights advocates, academics and journalists who cover China have been compromised by unknown intruders. A Chinese human rights organization also said that hackers had disabled its Web site for five days in a row.
iPhone OS 4.0 to Bring Expose-like Multitasking? - Mac Rumors - 0 views
Apple and AT&T Have Reportedly Worked Closely on 3G Network Performance Issues - Mac Ru... - 0 views
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