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  1. Collaborative Art Experiments on Facebook

    Collaborative Art Experiments on Facebook

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 16:25

  2. Web 2.0 Storytelling: Emergence of a New Genre

    Overview of dozens of examples of what the authors call "Web 2.0 Storytelling" - narratives told on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 01.11.2011 - 13:48

  3. The Compelling Charm of Numbers: Writing for and thru the Network of Data

    In postmodern times writing is different. With Facebook the personal diary has returned, reformulated for the 21st century. But this is not the diary as we use to know it. Here time gains a persistence and epistemological import and the person or persons recorded shift from being narrator to the quantified subject. This is not only a philosophical or psychological issue but also an economic and political one.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 27.08.2012 - 13:27

  4. Intervista con Riccardo Giovanni Milanesi

    Riccardo Giovanni Milanesi is creator and author of the two Web Series L’Altra (The Other Girl, 2011) and FableGirls (2012). In thi interview he explains how the work for the realization of L’Altra were carried out, an online project which was co-created with users/readers on FaceBook e published in real time. Moreover he announces the new Web Serie Vera Bes (2013).

    Daniele Giampà - 12.11.2014 - 20:28

  5. Naked in the 'Nonopticon'

    Siva Vaidhyanathan has an exceptionally good article about privacy in the current The Chronicle of Higher Education.

    Naked in the ‘Nonopticon’, Surveillance and marketing combine to strip away our privacy By Siva Vaidhyanathan, The Chronicle of Higher Education, "The Chronicle Review" Volume 54, Issue 23, Page B7, (February 15, 2008). [no subscription requred]
    "The Nonopticon" is a state of being watched without knowing that you are being watched or at least not knowing the extent to which you are being watched. Reviewing the book Privacy in Peril by sociologist James B. Rule, he says:

    Every incentive in a market economy pushes companies to collect more and better data on us. Every incentive in a state bureaucracy encourages extensive surveillance. Only widespread political action can put a stop to it. Small changes, like better privacy policies by companies like Google and Amazon.com, are not going to make much difference in the long run, Rule argues. The challenge is too large and the risks too great.

    (http://freegovinfo.info/node/1625)

    Sumeya Hassan - 19.05.2015 - 12:48

  6. Digital Narrative and Temporality

    We sometimes hear it said that our relationship with time has been altered. In companies and administrations, the adoption of New Management strategies means that employees feel themselves subjected to ever increasing urgency and stress. The “FOMO Syndrome,” the anxiety generated by our fear of missing out on something in a world in which we are exposed to a constant flow of information and access to other people’s narratives (or at least to their stories), is a phenomenon inherently linked to the digital environment. The Covid-19 crisis has no doubt accentuated this tendency, with its injunction to stay increasingly connected (particularly to social media and video conferencing platforms), and to immediately respond to digital notifications and sollicitations on a 24/7 basis.

    Milosz Waskiewicz - 25.05.2021 - 15:32