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Benjamin Jörissen

FriendFeed: One Feature to The Tipping Point - 0 views

  • FriendFeed is not a lifestream aggregator anymore (at least to me and hundreds of others), it is the perfect platform for sharing and discussing content with groups focused on a specific topic. It is Forums 2.0, if you will and it is precisely what the social web, even with gods like Facebook, Digg, YouTube, and Flickr, are severely lacking
Benjamin Jörissen

Science 2.0 -- Is Open Access Science the Future? - Scientific American - 0 views

  • Ironically, though, the Web provides better protection than the traditional journal system, Bradley maintains. Every change on a wiki gets a time stamp, “so if someone actually did try to scoop you, it would be very easy to prove your priority—and to embarrass them. I think that’s really what is going to drive open science: the fear factor. If you wait for the journals, your work won’t appear for another six to nine months. But with open science, your claim to priority is out there right away.”
  • Science could be next. A small but growing number of researchers (and not just the younger ones) have begun to carry out their work via the wide-open tools of Web 2.0. And although their efforts are still too scattered to be called a movement—yet—their experiences to date suggest that this kind of Web-based “Science 2.0” is not only more collegial than traditional science but considerably more productive.
  • Of course, many scientists remain wary of such openness—especially in the hypercompetitive biomedical fields, where patents, promotion and tenure can hinge on being the first to publish a new discovery. For these practitioners, Science 2.0 seems dangerous: putting your serious work out on blogs and social networks feels like an open invitation to have your lab notebooks vandalized—or, worse, your best ideas stolen and published by a rival. To advocates, however, an atmosphere of openness makes science more productive. “When you do your work online, out in the open,” Hooker says, “you quickly find that you’re not competing with other scientists anymore but cooperating with them.”
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  • In principle, Surridge says, scientists should find a transition to Web 2.0 perfectly natural. After all, since the time of Galileo and Newton, scientists have built up their knowledge about the world by “crowdsourcing” the contributions of many researchers and then refining that knowledge through open debate. “Web 2.0 fits so perfectly with the way science works. It’s not whether the transition will happen but how fast,” Surridge says.
  • Although wikis are gaining, scientists have been strikingly slow to embrace one of the most popular Web 2.0 applications: Web logging, or blogging. “It’s so antithetical to the way scientists are trained,” Duke University geneticist Huntington F. Willard said at the January 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference, one of the first big gatherings devoted to this topic. The whole point of blogging is getting ideas out there quickly, even at the risk of being wrong or incomplete. “But to a scientist, that’s a tough jump to make,” Willard says. “When we publish things, by and large, we’ve gone through a very long process of drafting a paper and getting it peer-reviewed. Every word is carefully chosen, because it’s going to stay there for all time. No one wants to read, ‘Contrary to the result of Willard and his colleagues....’” Nevertheless, Willard favors blogging. As a frequent author of newspaper op-ed pieces, he feels that scientists should make their voices heard in every responsible way. Because most blogs allow outsiders to comment on the individual posts, they have proved to be a good medium for brainstorming and discussions.
  • “The peer-reviewed paper is the cornerstone of jobs and promotion,” PLoS ONE’s Surridge says. “Scientists don’t blog because they get no credit” for that.
  • Some universities may be coming around, too. In a landmark vote in February, the faculty at Harvard’s College of Arts and Sciences approved a system in which the college would post finished papers in an online repository, available free to all. Authors would still hold copyright and could still publish the papers in traditional journals.
Benjamin Jörissen

Smartmobs.com » Twitter explained - 0 views

  • In a nutshell, Twitter is sort of like the Facebook status update and IRC chat rolled into a single social application where people write, read and respond in real time. The result is a kind of live collective unconscious of all those you follow.
Benjamin Jörissen

Peter Bihr on Social Media, Web 2.0 & Digital Life » Weblogs und Politikjourn... - 0 views

  • Die Abschlussarbeit meines Magisterstudiums trägt den Titel “Die Bedeutung von Weblogs für die Arbeit von Politikjournalisten”.
Benjamin Jörissen

Berkman Center-Studie "Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies": Fachl... - 0 views

  • Veröffentlichung einer aktuellen, von hochkarätigen Experten unter Führung des Berkman Centers der Harvard Universität verfassten Studie
  • Die Antworten der Studie schmecken weder manchen der Auftraggeber, noch dem nach Sensationen lüsternden Teil der Presse: In Wahrheit, konstatiert das 278-Seiten-Papier, sei das Problem gar nicht so groß wie immer wieder behauptet wird. Es werde auch in den Medien aufgeblasen.
  • Beteiligt an der Erarbeitung durch die nur zu diesem Zweck gegründete "Internet Safety Technical Task Force" waren neben Thinktanks, Akademischen Instituten und Industrievertretern auch Jugendschutzorganisationen wie das National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
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  • Einige der Auftraggeber sind nun unzufrieden und erklärten bereits, sie seien mit den Ergebnissen der Studie nicht einverstanden.
  • Erheblich häufiger als sexuelle Belästigung durch Erwachsene sei die durch Altersgenossen. Die täten sich auch im Bereich des "Bullying" hervor, das die Autoren der Studie als wichtigstes Problem für Jugendliche im Web benennen: Beschimpfungen und Diffamierungen, Psychokrieg und psychische wie körperliche Misshandlungen seien "die häufigste Bedrohung" für Heranwachsende, "sowohl offline wie online".
  • Social Networks seien gerade nicht der virtuelle Ort, an dem es zu sexuellen Belästigungen oder Pornografie-Kontakten komme, sondern vielmehr zu teils fiesen Hackereien innerhalb der Peer-Group - eine virtuelle Erweiterung des Schulhofes.
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    "Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies"
Benjamin Jörissen

New Study Shows Time Spent Online Important for Teen Development - MacArthur Foundation - 0 views

  • Results from the most extensive U.S. study on teens and their use of digital media show that America’s youth are developing important social and technical skills online – often in ways adults do not understand or value.
Benjamin Jörissen

Web 3.0: Object Orienting The Web - 0 views

  • the most powerful “pregnant” web concept is the simple idea that the web should be a web of objects, and should become less a web of text or pages
  • RDF, OWL, and SPARQL
  • Facebook and its social graph is really the first major Web 3.0 application, so make no mistake, these ideas are powerful.
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    Web 3.0 as "object oriented" Web
Benjamin Jörissen

Ten leading platforms for creating online communities - 0 views

  • It’s beginning to be understood that communities aren’t just for socializing but for getting things done.
  • too many online communities today exhibit worst practices such as lack of sustained community management, a tendency to use communities for “push marketing”, cross wiring business and consumer motivations, and lastly, starting with the technology first.
  • This is because community forms the foundation and virtual tent within which network-based collaboration occurs.
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  • Learning how to design an effective community, whether it’s on-the-fly for a small, ad hoc team effort on an upcoming project or a large-scale, long-term customer community of millions of users, is something we’re all going have to get better at in coming years.
Benjamin Jörissen

Nutzung sozialer Netzwerke in Europa: Deutschland auf Platz 7, deutlich unter EU-Durchs... - 0 views

  • Country Total Unique Visitors (000) to Social Networking Category % Reach of Country’s Total Internet Audience Europe 210,950 74.6 United Kingdom 29,263 79.8 Spain 13,185 73.7 Portugal 2,705 72.9 Denmark 2,390 69.7 Italy 14,408 69.3 Belgium 3,668 68.2 border-style: none soli
Benjamin Jörissen

Facebook überholt MySpace - 0 views

  • Facebook-User verbringen offenbar am meisten Zeit mit dem Social-Networking. Im August kamen diese auf insgesamt 991 Mio. Minuten online, Bebo-Nutzer verbrachten 600 Mio. Minuten auf der Webseite und MySpace-Nutzer 540 Mio. Minuten.
Benjamin Jörissen

Stanford Univ.-Studie: Social Web löst eine Revolution des Schreibens aus - 0 views

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    Eine Studie belegt unsere heimliche Literarisierung durch das Internet
Benjamin Jörissen

The American Diet: 34 Gigabytes a Day - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • A report published Wednesday by the University of California, San Diego, calculates that American households collectively consumed 3.6 zettabytes of information in 2008.
  • So where does all this information we consume come from? Everywhere, it turns out. The report suggests the average American consumes 34 gigabytes of content and 100,000 words of information in a single day.
  • it means that 100,000 words cross our eyes and ears in a single 24-hour period
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  • our voracious appetite for information and entertainment
  • The study suggests that, on average, most Americans consume 11.8 hours of information a day.
  • Most of this time is spent in front of some sort of screen watching TV-related content
  • computer, which we interact with for about two hours a day
  • Most of these experiences happen simultaneously
  • a huge increase in the number of bytes we consume related to video games
  • Gaming saw the biggest leap in the number of bytes we consume and the amount of time devoted to this platform.” This isn’t just first-person shooting games but also includes lots of analytical games like Bookworm, Tetris as well as social networking games.
  • if you add up the amount of time people spend surfing the Web, they are actually reading more than ever
  • from 1980 to 2008, the number of bytes we consume has increased 6 percent each year, the researchers said, adding up to a 350 percent increase over 28 years
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