juanmonroy + newtechnologies 21
Archive | Animating Archives | Brown University
yesterday by juanmonroy
We have divided the entire conference into eight videos: the keynote address and the seven individual sessions. You may access them at iTunes University, just click here. You will need to have iTunes loaded onto your computer in order to see these videos.
archive
YouTube
newtechnologies
yesterday by juanmonroy
The Politics of Intellectual Properties
27 days ago by juanmonroy
Cultural Studies 20(2/3) "The Politics of Intellectual Properties"edited by Ted Striphas & Kembrew McLeod
copyright
newtechnologies
intellectual_property
27 days ago by juanmonroy
What Are You Missing? March 18-31
7 weeks ago by juanmonroy
A few interesting points about the decline of DVDs, theatrical attendance, music sales, and magazines
mediaindustries
newtechnologies
filmindustry
7 weeks ago by juanmonroy
One on One: Tim Wu, Author of The Master Switch - NYTimes.com
8 weeks ago by juanmonroy
nytimestech: Bits: One on One: Tim Wu, Author of 'The Master Switch' http://nyti.ms/cfsCXz
newtechnologies
mediaindustries
TimWu
from instapaper
8 weeks ago by juanmonroy
Into the Blogosphere
8 weeks ago by juanmonroy
A collection of essays about blogging that were written when blogging was relatively new, around 2005.
research
newtechnologies
blog
8 weeks ago by juanmonroy
Information Ethics Roundtable 2012 « IER 2012
12 weeks ago by juanmonroy
Privacy and the Challenge of Technology
We live in an information society. Information and information technology are increasingly essential to our social, economic, and political interactions. Given this, serious reflection on information ethics is imperative. Information ethics studies the value questions that arise from the creation, control, and access to information. The Information Ethics Roundtable is a yearly conference that brings together information scientists, librarians, philosophers, and social scientists to discuss ethical issues such as intellectual property, intellectual freedom, and censorship. The focus of this year’s roundtable is privacy and technology. In one sense technology has been a boon for privacy. For instance, ATMs and online banking mean that we seldom have to present ourselves to a teller. Online shopping offers similar benefits. However, technology can also pose a serious threat to privacy, since so much of what we now do leaves an enduring digital record. This new information can be recombined to create detailed profiles that couldn’t have emerged in pre-digital days. Moreover, we often have no idea what happens to this information after it has been created.
newtechnologies
mediaindustries
privacy
conference
NewYork
We live in an information society. Information and information technology are increasingly essential to our social, economic, and political interactions. Given this, serious reflection on information ethics is imperative. Information ethics studies the value questions that arise from the creation, control, and access to information. The Information Ethics Roundtable is a yearly conference that brings together information scientists, librarians, philosophers, and social scientists to discuss ethical issues such as intellectual property, intellectual freedom, and censorship. The focus of this year’s roundtable is privacy and technology. In one sense technology has been a boon for privacy. For instance, ATMs and online banking mean that we seldom have to present ourselves to a teller. Online shopping offers similar benefits. However, technology can also pose a serious threat to privacy, since so much of what we now do leaves an enduring digital record. This new information can be recombined to create detailed profiles that couldn’t have emerged in pre-digital days. Moreover, we often have no idea what happens to this information after it has been created.
12 weeks ago by juanmonroy
Decline of the MediaIndustry
12 weeks ago by juanmonroy
via Brian Rose
mediaindustries
newtechnologies
12 weeks ago by juanmonroy
TrackMeNot
february 2012 by juanmonroy
Remember how we discussed how Google tracks you to provide you with a "better" and "more personalized" search results? If you use Firefox or Google's own Chrome browser, here's a plug-in that obfuscates the aggregate of your search queries.
Internet
Google
TrackMeNot
plug-in
privacy
mediaindustries
newtechnologies
february 2012 by juanmonroy
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