Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ SI Summer 2012
Kerianne Cassidy

Caterpillar Brings Social Media to Blue-Collar Business - US News and World Report - 0 views

  •  
    A news story of a construction company using social media to improve their customer relations. They're keeping up with the times and connecting with their technologically savvy client-base, a smart business move.
Kerianne Cassidy

Investing in the "Next Wave" of Technology Inovation - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting look at the different speed which technology is adapted by different people/groups and how it effects sharing information.
Amanda Bailey

Internet Privacy and Security - YouTube Video - 0 views

  •  
    From Brookings, this 2011 YouTube video on internet privacy and security takes a different view point, that if people are unwilling to share their information online, parts of our information economy could collapse. (Video is approx. 5 mins)
  •  
    I particularly like how he points out the different definitions of data ownership and how data is shared
Carrie Pyne

The social impact of technology « Digital Social Innovation - 1 views

  • Pew Internet’s recent Social Impact of Technology series has uncovered a number of really interesting findings into the impact social networking sites have on people’s political activity and their interaction with voluntary groups or organisations in the US.
  •  
    relationship between using social networking sites and being engaged in political and other social groups/activities
Carrie Pyne

Our Story : FrontlineSMS - 1 views

  • Mobile technology is helping the world tackle key health, social, environmental and development challenges because of its accessibility, reach and ability to transform the communities it touches. One of the leaders in this field is FrontlineSMS founder Ken Banks — innovator, technologist and anthropologist — who has played a formative role in the application of mobile to social change.
  •  
    mobile technology transforms communities leading to social change
  •  
    [Finally, I get something to Share properly...]
Meaghan Corbett

danah boyd | apophenia - 4 views

  •  
    danah boyd (all lowercase) is one of the leading researchers and thinkers within this developing field of social informatics. Her blog analyzes and provides commentary on social networking and how it's changing the way we communicate with each other.
  • ...6 more comments...
  •  
    A passionate advocate for LGBTQ youth and outspoken opponent of bullying, cyber or otherwise, she's written extensively about Tyler Clementi and Dharun Ravi, and the role played by serious misuse of digital technology to malign an individual. She also goes into how "media-driven narrative" has shaped public perception of this case: http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2012/02/24/stop-the-cycle-of-bullying.html
  •  
    Thanks for sharing this...I saw danah boyd give a keynote at a conference here in Maryland called Theorizing the Web and she was definitely a big deal. Actually, come to think of it, the notes from that conference might have some information to share here as well.
  •  
    An excerpt from boyd's notes on her speech about "the power of fear in networked cultures" "The tools that we build are getting repurposed around the globe by people with all sorts of different agendas. They're being used by activists to challenge the status quo, but they're also being used by the status quo to assert new kinds of authority. People are building the new networks of power on the technological networks that we've generated and they're reinforcing existing power structures. "Through social media, we're ramping up the attention economy. We are setting in motion new networks. We like to think of ourselves as disrupting power systems and, indeed, that's what we were doing for a long time. But now, those in power are leveraging our tools to exert new forms of power. Fear is one of the tools that's being used. People are finding ways to put fear into our systems. "Social media is no longer the great disrupter. It is now part of the status quo. Are we prepared for what that means? Are we prepared for the ecosystem that we've created? Do we even understand how our systems are being employed by those hellbent on maintaining power in a networked age? "I don't have good answers to these socio-technical conundrums. But I think that these are important issues and I need your help in figuring out where to go from here."
  •  
    good find! you will encounter more of her work later on
  •  
    I second on the good find comment! Her post about Ravi's conviction was interesting, not only because it hits home because it happened at RU, but it brings up some extremely important topics when it comes to online bullying, the use of technology/media in the private/personal sphere, privacy etc. And she closes with saying she would hope this case would change others' actions and outlook on the harmful uses of technology and invasion of privacy, but unfortunately it most likely won't and we will continue to see these types of things happening.
  •  
    Thank for that! I'm really enjoying this, and it is helping me think about the culture of unease we seem to be living in. http://talks.webstock.org.nz/speakers/danah-boyd/culture-fear-attention-economy/ where
  •  
    I really like her talk on the culture of fear, and how it relates to the rapidly expanding array of mediums in which to spread this culture. This is a nice counterpoint to Howard Rheingold's view of some of the positive uses of social media to promote engagement and change rather than this focus on isolation and fear.
  •  
    One thing to remember is that Rheingold was very Utopic in his early writings. That becomes more critical later on.
Anton Angelo

Unfriending Over Politics: Facebook, Twitter Users Flee Contrary Opinions - The Daily B... - 2 views

  • But here’s the kicker: some 38 percent say they were surprised to learn that the political leanings of others were different than they imagined.
    • Anton Angelo
       
      Any ideas about the details and veracity of the study?
    • Anton Angelo
  •  
    I thought this was a humorous article on how online social circles are really not all that different from dinner party social circles.  Although I bet that people are quicker to jettison someone via an online tool than in person.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    Pamela - I think it's the same superficiality that would allow people to "friend" others they hardly know just based on shared political beliefs, that would allow for them to "unfriend" others who are close to them in real life just based on differing political beliefs. I also wonder how many of those who un-friended people did so because they were genuinely offended or because they feared it might affect their social status.
  •  
    Although I haven't unfriended anyone over a political spat, I'll admit to having blocked the FB status updates of one of my acquaintances who was continually posting things that I wasn't really interested in seeing. It's very easy to use the block function in FB to make sure a particular person's updates don't appear in your feed; you don't have to de-friend, which is more drastic (and then you might have to awkwardly explain WHY you defriended that person), but you can avoid content that gets under your skin and not take the bait, so to speak.
  •  
    Much harder to ignore your best mate's obnoxious partner at a dinner party (and all the other occasions you'll see them) than on facebook. I suppose this is another example of the Filter Bubble. ("what does she see in him? I suppose we can't not invite him....")
jcinthelibrary

Data Mining Your Desktop - Technology Review - 1 views

  •  
    I thought this article would go well with the Kling reading from the last unit. Here's a company, Hewlett Packard, that is losing workers (about ten percent of them) yet is introducing a new social networking program for those who remain. Of course, this social network has more to do with managing work projects and tasks than just chatting with friends or posting status updates/
  •  
    I think data-mining is an important statistical analysis tool for organizations, although I think this leads us to another issue of information overload. Companies are compiling all this information through data-mining and then have to create databases to store it all, AND then they have to create software to search through the databases. What a cycle! Seems like the more technology we create the more data we are churning out, leading to information overload.
  •  
    I think the ability to see who is working on what would be highly valuable for future networking, both to an individual looking for team members or advice with a similar project, or someone who is perhaps looking to spread their name around in hopes of garnering better chances for an internal promotion.
Jorge Arganza

Presentation: Teens, Kindness and Cruelty on Social Network Sites | Pew Research Center... - 0 views

  •  
    A slew of statistics, in slideshow format, concerning teen use of Social Network Sites. From Pew Research.
Natalie DeAngelo

MMOs and a second (or third...) identity on the web - 2 views

shared by Natalie DeAngelo on 04 Jun 12 - No Cached
  •  
    I have never played WoW, but I do enjoy the idea of playing a game while simultaneously adopting or constructing a new persona or identity as part of the game. WoW and other online MMOs have vast communities with diverse members interacting in various online social setting both within and outside the game realm. I have a particular interest in the way that social media and technology shapes and affects the construction or reconstruction of "our" identities, and how intertwined much of our lives are with the technology we use.
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    When thinking about how technology molds our own identities, it is intriguing then to consider how it helps us create these secondary or multiple identities for MMO's and RPG's. I feel we could even take this one step farther to the relationship between technology, the internet and fandom, where online communities created and populated by fans of a certain artifact create, in a sense, a whole new world to inhabit.
  •  
    @Natalie: Have you tried playing The Sims (http://thesims.com/en_us/what-is-the-sims)? This game is a perfect example of what you're trying to achieve, "playing a game while simultaneously adopting or constructing a new persona or identity as part of the game".
  •  
    I've never played WOW either but I do buy into the whole idea of an online identity. Non-gamers create one, too, by way of social networking sites--LinkedIn, facebook, Myspace--and some via usernames on online messageboards. It's possible to have several different online identities; the clean and presentable one you use to promote yourself to employers and work colleagues on LinkedIn, the slightly more laid-back Facebook profile, and with the promise of anonymity on message boards and forums, you can really let loose!
  •  
    My husband and I have spent hours upon hours playing Everquest, so I know first-hand the draw of creating an online persona/identity. It's a way to step out of your everyday life and become someone or something you aren't. For instance, in one game I'm a Dark Fairy with magical powers. Who wouldn't want to be one? It's also a way to have relationships with people all over the planet without giving too much away about your true identity, so the draw for those that are less than comfortable in real-life situations is huge. Not to mention you learn all kinds of things about different areas of the world, so it's a learning experience too!
Samantha Gilham

EMPOWERING LEARNERS WITH DIGITAL AND MEDIA LITERACY. - 0 views

  •  
    A pretty lengthy scholarly article that hits on some key points such as privacy, cyber bullying, authorship, and how these topics can be taught to students in the classroom to make them better informed users of the internet.  
Samantha Gilham

Think Global, Act Local: Expanding the Agenda for Media Literacy Education in the Unite... - 0 views

  •  
    More on media literacy and how to bring media literacy education into the classroom, not only at the collegiate level.
Samantha Gilham

Twitter Literacy (I refuse to make up a Twittery name for it) | City Brights: Howard Rh... - 0 views

  • To me, this represents a perfect example of a media literacy issue: Twitter is one of a growing breed of part-technological, part-social communication media that require some skills to use productively. Sure, Twitter is banal and trivial, full of self-promotion and outright spam. So is the Internet. The difference between seeing Twitter as a waste of time or as a powerful new community amplifier depends entirely on how you look at it – on knowing how to look at it.
  •  
    I love his quote about Twitter being banal and trivial, all of the superficial characteristics that many social media sites are comprised of, but also can also be a "powerful new community amplifier."  Looking at technology vs. knowing how to look at or use technology are two different things.  
Samantha Gilham

Net Smart - 0 views

  •  
    This is the link to the free downloadable first chapter of Rheingold's book, Net Smart. I feel the more I've been researching today the more I lean toward articles geared toward social media literacy, being "net smart," and how users can use technology in a "smart" and aware fashion. I like his focus on the future of digital culture and how it will be shaped by how we use it today. The past, present, and future tenses of media, technology, and how culture is affected by these states of technology are topics that social informatics scholars seem to really be diving into most recently.
Samantha Gilham

Culture Digitally // Examining Contemporary Cultural ProductionCulture Digitally // Exa... - 0 views

    • Samantha Gilham
       
      I'm extremely interested in this new book, Media, Society, World: Social Theory.  It looks like it draws upon several topics that we have been discussing and deal with on a daily basis!
  • Media are fundamental to our sense of living in a social world. Since the beginning of modernity, media have transformed the scale on which we act as social beings. And now in the era of digital media, media themselves are being transformed as platforms, content, and producers multiply. Yet the implications of social theory for understanding media and of media for rethinking social theory have been neglected; never before has it been more important to understand those implications. This book takes on this challenge.
Samantha Gilham

Call for Papers - SocInfo 2012 - 0 views

  • Computational models of social phenomena, social simulation Social choice mechanisms in the e-society Social networks: discovery, evolution, analysis, applications Social Behavior Modeling Web mining and its social interpretations Social Influence and Diffusion Models of Social Influence Security, privacy, trust, reputation and incentive issues Social Communities and Social Network Analysis Design and analysis of social/collaborative Web applications Social Interactions and Collaboration Algorithms and protocols inspired by human societies Socio-economic Systems and Applications Mechanisms for providing fairness in information systems Virtual communities (e.g., open-source, multiplayer gaming) Impact of technology on socio-economic Recommendation systems Visualization of dynamic social networks Social applications of the Semantic Web Social Informatics Theory Social system design and architectures Trust, Privacy, Risk and Security in Social Contexts Social Intelligence and Social Cognition Social media analytics and social media intelligence Emotional Intelligence and Data Mining
  •  
    Page shared by another classmate, topics page may be a good brainstorming page to think of project topics/focus
Meaghan Corbett

About // // Culture DigitallyCulture Digitally - 1 views

  •  
    Culture Digitally is a gathering space for social informatics scholars around the world, who come from a variety of disciplines (communication, sociology, media studies, computer science, anthropology). to share and comment on the latest research in the field. The idea behind the blog is that social informatics transcends several different areas of study and so cross-disciplinary collaboration is incredibly important.
  •  
    What an interesting blog! The dialogue they had titled "(How) Have Technological Shifts Changed Being A Sports Fan?" was so interesting! My focus as I searched through SI literature tended to focus on issues of censorship and privacy, but the idea that technology would impact sports fandom had never occured to me. The stances made by both participants were very well thought out and presented some really good arguments. The role of technology in fandom studies is an area that could be really interesting to dive deeper into.
Jorge Arganza

Wiki:interactive media resources | Social Media CoLab - 0 views

  •  
    A list of useful presentation tools and interactive resources to enhance group learning.
Jorge Arganza

Google - 0 views

shared by Jorge Arganza on 05 Jun 12 - Cached
Karen Carter

The Rise of the Data Self - 0 views

  •  
    A couple of interesting bits from this article: "Data is the authorized way to pursue self-knowledge in the networked society; the other means are suspicious, deluded or outmoded." And on the matter of FB and specifically, the way in which the timeline feature shapes us while serving them: "The more work we put into making a coherent story out of the data Facebook collects, the more useful, marketable information we give them."
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 77 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page