The Culture of Connectivity: A Critical History of Social MediaOxford University Press, 2 ene 2013 - 240 páginas Social media penetrate our lives: Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and many other platforms define daily habits of communication and creative production. This book studies the rise of social media, providing both a historical and a critical analysis of the emergence of major platforms in the context of a rapidly changing ecosystem of connective media. Author Jos? van Dijck offers an analytical prism that can be used to view techno-cultural as well as socio-economic aspects of this transformation as well as to examine shared ideological principles between major social media platforms. This fascinating study will appeal to all readers interested in social media. |
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... exploiting a generic resource (data): they built on the “ideological and technological” foundations of Web 2.0, as Kaplan and Haenlein suggest in the definition quoted above. Indeed, most Web 2.0 platforms started out as indeterminate ...
... exploiting a generic resource (data): they built on the “ideological and technological” foundations of Web 2.0, as Kaplan and Haenlein suggest in the definition quoted above. Indeed, most Web 2.0 platforms started out as indeterminate ...
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... exploiting a communal space. The year 2006 turned out to be the apex of user euphoria when Time magazine selected “You” as the Person of the Year, trumpeting the worldchanging potential of connected users: “It's a story about community ...
... exploiting a communal space. The year 2006 turned out to be the apex of user euphoria when Time magazine selected “You” as the Person of the Year, trumpeting the worldchanging potential of connected users: “It's a story about community ...
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... exploited, both as workers—deliverers of data to UGC and SNS platforms—and as consumers forced to buy back their own processed data by relinquishing privacy (Terranova 2004; Petersen 2008). More profoundly, some observe that the selling ...
... exploited, both as workers—deliverers of data to UGC and SNS platforms—and as consumers forced to buy back their own processed data by relinquishing privacy (Terranova 2004; Petersen 2008). More profoundly, some observe that the selling ...
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... exploiting the fissures of virtual space (Solove 2008; Nissenbaum 2010; Grimmelmann 2009). Privacy experts ... exploit online social activities for monetary gains. Going back to the Alvin family, introduced at the beginning of ...
... exploiting the fissures of virtual space (Solove 2008; Nissenbaum 2010; Grimmelmann 2009). Privacy experts ... exploit online social activities for monetary gains. Going back to the Alvin family, introduced at the beginning of ...
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... exploit them. Apart from their ability to collect (meta)data, the computational power of social media platforms lies in their capability to include algorithms for processing data. An algorithm, in computer science, is a finite list of ...
... exploit them. Apart from their ability to collect (meta)data, the computational power of social media platforms lies in their capability to include algorithms for processing data. An algorithm, in computer science, is a finite list of ...
Índice
Twitter and the Paradox of Following and Trending | |
Flickr between Communities and Commerce | |
The Intimate Connection between Television and Video | |
Wikipedia and the Neutrality Principle | |
Lock In Fence Off | |
Notes | 55 |
Index | 65 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
The Culture of Connectivity: A Critical History of Social Media José van Dijck Vista previa restringida - 2013 |
The Culture of Connectivity: A Critical History of Social Media Jose van Dijck Vista previa restringida - 2013 |
The Culture of Connectivity: A Critical History of Social Media José van Dijck No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2013 |
Términos y frases comunes
active advertising algorithms apps Available become behavior blog bots broadcast business models button changes chapter checked June 12 checked May 28 coding collaboration commercial company’s connectedness connective media corporate creative critical culture of connectivity default economic ecosystem of connective encyclopedia exploit Facebook Flickr friends function global Google Google platforms Google’s governance groups ideological instance integration interaction interface Internet Last checked June LinkedIn Mark Zuckerberg metadata microblogging microsystems monetizing Myspace neutrality nonmarket nonprofit norms online sociality ownership people’s percent Picasa platform owners policies popular potential predictive analytics principles production professional profitable promote researchers search engines sharing site’s Skype social media platforms social network services social networking space specific strategies television terms of service third parties tool trends tweets Twitter uploaders user base videos Wikimedia Foundation Wikipedia Yahoo YouTube YouTube’s