ecopolis

life in transformation

Archive for the ‘Internet’ tag

U.S. teens lose interest in blogging: study

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LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Blogging by teenagers and young adults has dropped by half over the past three years as they turn instead to texting and social networking sites such as Facebook, a new study shows.

The study released this week by the Pew Internet and American Life project also found that fewer than one in 10 teens were using Twitter, a surprising finding given overall popularity of the micro-blogging site.

According to the report, only 14 percent of teenagers who use the Internet say they kept an online journal or blog, compared with a peak of 28 percent in 2006 — and only 8 percent were using Twitter.

“It was a little bit surprising, although there are definitely explanations given the state of the technological landscape,” Pew researcher Aaron Smith told Reuters.

Smith said the report’s authors attributed the decline in blogging to the explosion of social networking sites such as Facebook, which emphasize short status updates over personal journals.

According to the study, 73 percent of teens who were online used social networking sites.

He also cited the ubiquity of cell phones. Much of the communication between young people now takes place on mobile devices, which don’t lend themselves to long-form writing.

via Reuters

Written by Luca

February 23rd, 2010 at 10:02 am

Posted in Culture, FLOWS

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The Future of Email

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Created by Adam Somlai-Fischer with Prezi.

Written by Luca

February 22nd, 2010 at 9:02 pm

Posted in FLOWS, INTERFACE

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Google, NSA to team up in cyberattack probe

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Internet search firm Google is finalizing a deal that would let the National Security Agency help it investigate a corporate espionage attack that may have originated in China, the Washington Post reported on Thursday.

The aim of the investigation is to better defend Google, the world’s largest Internet search company, and its users from future attacks, the Post said, citing anonymous sources with knowledge of the arrangement.

The sources said Google’s alliance with the NSA — the intelligence agency is the world’s most powerful electronic surveillance organization — would be aimed at letting them share critical information without violating Google’s policies or laws that protect the privacy of online communications.

via Reuters

Written by Luca

February 22nd, 2010 at 7:02 pm

Posted in FLOWS, RELATIONS

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Why to Opt-Out matter to you

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Written by Luca

February 17th, 2010 at 10:17 am

Posted in ECONOMY

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‘I hate the net’ – porn star Ron Jeremy

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Porn Star Ron Jeremy explains why he dislikes the Net:

My dad predicted years ago that the internet was going to be both good and bad – kind of like nuclear energy. It’s got great uses when it is good, and frighteningly awful when it is bad.

“The internet has allowed a lot of crooks, thieves and squatters to become millionaires. Normally, they wouldn’t get a job washing dishes. I have a lot of problems with the internet and with identity theft. It has happened to me twice with my bank account, so I am not a big fan.”

“People can download stuff for free these days, so why the heck are they going to buy it? The only ones making money out of porn are the novelty companies. I just hate the internet in general.”

“I am a former school teacher, I have a masters degree and two BAs, and I think the internet is making people stupid.

“It’s good because you can research any topic. In my day, we went to the encyclopedia for that. Nowadays, though, kids can’t memorise anything. No dates, no times tables, no history. If there is anything you need to know, you just press a few buttons. We could be giving rise to a generation of idiots.”

“What the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation. My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it: in a swiftly moving stream of particles. Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.”

Wasn’t the porn the force behind the net??

Written by Luca

January 12th, 2010 at 5:02 pm

Posted in Culture

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Politics of online video

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Saturday, November 21, 2009
By Geert Lovink

In his presentation the Glasgow-based Simon Yuill took us back to the 1980s and the media activism back then: films and videos produced during the miners strike and other riots and actions. This activity in the late 1990s transforms in ?citizen journalism?. Yuill here used the example of the Cluetrain Manifesto (1999). The emphasis here is on distributed conversations. It is the RSS feed that becomes the organizing principle of distributed realtime news production. This tool can be used by anyone and is not own or controlled by states and corporations. With Toni Negri one could say that APIs are becoming ?constitutional machines?. Yuill calls for ?critical constitutions? in order to prevent the use of closed and proprietary platforms by activists. The was no ?twitter revolutions? that came out of street in Iran. It was mainly users overseas, in other countries, that caused this hype.

Elizabeth Losh started with a montage of Barack Obama?s YouTube performances. In the talk called ?Official Channels? she discussed the different trends that emerge. YouTube is more state-like, and national then we often might think. How is online video used to maintain the status quo? Online video is fully integrated in the White House media strategy. The media apparatus is often shown explicitly, which Losh is calling ?mediated transparency?. Obama is put in the role of the leader that explains. Obviously Obama is not the first US president to use media techniques. Liz mentioned elements from Bush, Reagan, Roosevelt, Kennedy, and so on.

How much ?change? do we really have? In the White House Obama has been removed from the computer. Liz was able to find only one picture in which Obama holds his encrypted top-secret Blackberry. Most often we see him on the phone. The realm of the computer is left to the female secretaries outside of the Oval Office. An irony of Obama?s online video policy is that most schools in the USA block YouTube, in order to Then Liz Losh addressed the issues of the White House? dependency on Google/YouTube. Most of you will know about the important role of Google?s CEO Eric Schmidt?s role as a senior political advisor of this administration (more related interview video footage on vectorsdev.usc.edu/nehvectors/losh.

Stephen Crocker from Newfoundland, Canada, started with 1960s film footage of Fogo Island. The question then was not so much to represent people?s lives but how to ?create people?. How to overcome the problem of ?remoteness?? One of the solutions at the time was the resettlements of thousands of people to larger growth centres. The problem was defined as one of communication, ?information poverty? as it was called. Information was supposed to tell us something about human nature, and was associated by Marshall McLuhan and others as ?metaphysics?. For remote communities the origin of a film remained mysterious. The National Film Board had the task to change this. ?The
Things I Cannot Change? from 1967 for the first time explained the situation of poverty to a wider audience. From now on films did not have to be about the poor, but had to involve them, and had to be produced by them. Films about social change were screened to the people themselves. These days there is no collective public space anymore. What online video tools do is enable self-reflection. It is confessional and self-referential amateur material. Video sharing is addressed to anyone but no one in particular. With Lacan we could say that these images are both inadequate and compelling. Intimacy is
created, and not destroyed, by bureaucratic machines. How can we be with others in this new world of remoteness and loneliness? The ways of being together are different these days. The way we relate to
others is through the image.

via videovortex Digest, Vol 35, Issue 9.

Written by Luca

November 26th, 2009 at 3:59 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

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Twitter Cops

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Written by Luca

July 9th, 2009 at 12:08 pm

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IRAN: a nation of bloggers

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Written by Luca

June 15th, 2009 at 5:54 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

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