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Snurb — Friday 20 March 2009 01:52

The Net Neutrality Debate and Its Unintended Consequences

Politics | Internet Technologies | WebSci '09 |

Athens.


The next speaker at WebSci '09 is Alison Powell, and she focusses on the debate around net neutrality and the behaviour of net neutrality lobbies in this context. The debate stems from a US court ruling classifying Internet services as information rather than communication services, which eliminated the requirement of common carriage - ISPs would now be able to privilege certain types of traffic or slow down others. This became a major public debate during 2006 and 2007, driven in part by the 'Save the Internet' coalition backed by Google.

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Snurb — Thursday 12 March 2009 22:56

Chinese Mobile News, Australian Bloggers, and Youdecide2007: Publications Roundup

Politics | Journalism | Blogs and Blogging | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Participatory Journalism and Citizen Engagement (ARC Linkage) | Mobile Media 2007 | Youdecide2007 | Social Media Network Mapping | Mobile Telephony | Publications |

Time to catch up with a few publications - my recent work is featured in a number of new collections:

Mobile Technologies: From Telecommunications to Media, edited by Gerard Goggin and Larissa Hjorth, collects some of the best papers from the Mobile Media 2007 conference (which I blogged about at the time) in Sydney. Looks like a fabulous collection, and I'm delighted that an article by former QUT Visiting Scholar Liu Cheng and me about SMS news in China has been included. We're looking especially at the experience at Yunnan Daily Press, where Cheng led the roll-out of SMS news functionality, and we're including some staggering statistics about the growth of Internet and mobile use in China as well (I wonder how they'll be affected by the global financial crisis...).

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Snurb — Thursday 26 February 2009 10:06

1989, Then and Now

Politics | Journalism | Streaming Media |

For the world, 1989 was a momentous year. East Germans take to the streets in weekly protests. Poland's Solidarnosc is legalised, and later wins the Polish elections. Hungary defortifies its border with Austria, sparking a wave of defections from Eastern bloc nations to the West. Czechoslovakia's velvet revolution ends decades of communist rule, and Václav Havel is elected president. Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu is forced from power. And the Berlin Wall comes down, quite literally, in small pieces and large chunks. Also that year, Chinese troops crush the Tiananmen Square protests. George Bush the elder becomes US president, Ayatollah Khomeini dies, and Kurt Waldheim becomes president of Austria, while the last Soviet tanks leave Afghanistan and the rise of Slobodan Milosevic's nationalists begins in Yugoslavia. And in Australia, Andrew Peacock succeeds John Howard as opposition leader. That, at least, is what the history books and annual digests will tell you.

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Snurb — Tuesday 6 January 2009 15:48

Digital Tealeaves: Predictions for 2009 (Interactive Minds 2008)

Politics | Produsers and Produsage | Journalism | Internet Technologies | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Streaming Media | Television |

Digital Tealeaves: Predictions for 2009

Axel Bruns

  • 27 Nov. 2008 - Interactive Minds, Brisbane
Digital Tealeaves: Predictions for 2009

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: media produsage)

Technorati : Google, Interactive Minds, citizen journalism, filesharing, journalism, mapping, politics, produsage, streaming, television

Del.icio.us : Google, Interactive Minds, citizen journalism, filesharing, journalism, mapping, politics, produsage, streaming, television

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Snurb — Tuesday 9 December 2008 22:38

After a Lengthy Silence...

This Site | Politics | Produsage Communities | Produsers and Produsage | Journalism | Internet Technologies | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Streaming Media | Industrial Journalism | Television |

Never go on holidays... Looks like a few days into my holiday on the Sunshine Coast, one of the electrical storms sweeping through Brisbane these days knocked out the server, even in spite of various forms of surge protection. Ah well - a motherboard replacement and some serious fiddling with Linux later (massive thanks to Nic Suzor for pointing me to the tip that enabled my successful necromancy), here we are again.

And while we're here, I might as well note that the audio and Powerpoint from my Interactive Minds presentation on 27 November are now online. I'm afraid the audio quality is, shall we say, 'for collectors only', but here it is, for what it's worth. This end-of-year IM event aimed to highlight trends in 2008 and predictions for 2009, and regular readers of this blog will recognise a few of my recurring obsessions. Many thanks to Jen Storey for the invite.

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Snurb — Sunday 26 October 2008 03:32

'Anyone Can Edit': Vom Nutzer zum Produtzer (German Version, 2008)

Politics | Produsage Communities | Produsers and Produsage | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Produsage in Business |

'Anyone Can Edit': Vom Nutzer zum Produtzer

Axel Bruns

  • 20 Oct. 2008 - Hans-Bredow-Institut, Universität Hamburg
'Anyone Can Edit': Vom Nutzer zum Produtzer (2008, Hamburg Version)

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: produtzung 2.0)

Um die kreative und kollaborative Beteiligung zu beschreiben, die heutzutage nutzergesteuerte Projekte wie etwa die Wikipedia auszeichnet, ist ein Begriff wie 'Produktion' nur noch bedingt nützlich - selbst in Konstruktionen wie 'nutzergesteuerte Produktion' oder 'P2P-Produktion'. In den Nutzergemeinschaften, die an solchen Formen der Inhaltserschaffung teilnehmen, haben sich Rollen als Konsumenten und Benutzer längst unwiederbringlich mit solchen als Produzent vermischt - Nutzer sind immer auch unausweichlich Produzenten der gemeinsamen Informationssammlung, ganz egal, ob sie sich dessens auch bewußt sind: sie haben eine neue, hybride Rolle angenommen, die sich vielleicht am besten als 'Produtzer' umschreiben lassen kann. Projekte, die auf solche Produtzung (Englisch: produsage) aufbauen, finden sich in Bereichen von Open-Source-Software über Bürgerjournalismus bis hin zur Wikipedia, und darüberhinaus auch zunehmend in Computerspielen, Filesharing, und selbst im Design materieller Güter. Obwohl unterschiedlich in ihrer Ausrichtung, bauen sie doch auf eine kleine Zahl universeller Grundprinzipien auf.

Technorati : Produtzung, collaboration, content creation, gatewatching, produsage, user-led
Del.icio.us : Produtzung, collaboration, content creation, gatewatching, produsage, user-led

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Snurb — Sunday 26 October 2008 03:30

Blogs und Bürgerjournalismus - öffentliches Nachrichtenforum oder Startpunkt für neue politische Bewegungen? (ZMI 2008)

Politics | Produsage Communities | Produsers and Produsage | Journalism | Blogs and Blogging | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | ZMI 2008 |

Blogs und Bürgerjournalismus: öffentliches Nachrichtenforum oder Startpunkt für neue politische Bewegungen?

Axel Bruns

  • 24 Oct. 2008 - "Das Internet zwischen egalitärer Teilhabe und ökonomischer Vermachtung", Zentrum für Medien und Interaktivität, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Blogs - öffentliches Nachrichtenforum oder Startpunkt für neue politische Bewegungen? (Gießen 2008)

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: produsage blogs)

Blogs, die sich mit politischen Ereignissen befassen, werden zumeist als neue, von Bürgern in Selbstverantwortung betriebene Alternativen zum traditionellen Journalismus dargestellt. Internetnutzer aktieren hier nicht mehr allein in einer Rolle als Informationsabrufer, sondern beteiligen sich in mehr oder weniger großem Umfang als Produzenten von Inhalten - insgesamt also in einer Mischrolle, die als 'Produtzer' (engl. produser) umschrieben werden kann.

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Snurb — Saturday 25 October 2008 21:36

Blogs, Citizen Journalism, and Their (Future) Role in Politics

Politics | Produsage Communities | Produsers and Produsage | Journalism | Blogs and Blogging | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | ZMI 2008 |

Gießen.
My own keynote at this Web 2.0 and politics conference here in Gießen is next, in a session which discusses the possible impact of blogs, citizen journalism, and other forms of online political participation on wider political processes. My own thoughts as presented here build to some extent on the article I published in Information Polity earlier this year, and also draw on recent Australian examples (the role of Possums Pollytics in the Australian election campaign of 2007, and the new GetUp! project Project Democracy). I've posted the slides below, and will add the audio when I can the audio is now online, too.

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Snurb — Sunday 19 October 2008 00:54

Citizen and Hyperlocal Journalism as the Fifth Estate

Politics | Journalism | Blogs and Blogging | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Participatory Journalism and Citizen Engagement (ARC Linkage) | Youdecide2007 | AoIR 2008 | ir9 |

Copenhagen.
As it turns out, I have two papers in this post-lunch session on the last day of AoIR 2008 - in competing sessions. Luckily, Lars Kirchhoff and Thomas Nicolai are on hand to present one of them (I'll post the slides for this as soon as I get them from the two) - and I'm here to present my paper with Jason Wilson and Barry Saunders on hyperlocal citizen journalism (understood here in a relatively broad sense).

The first speaker here is William Dutton from the Oxford Internet Institute, whose aim is to move beyond terms such as Netizen and citizen journalism and towards an understanding of various political uses of the Net as forming a fifth estate, in addition to the press as a fourth estate in society. Such uses promote social accountability in business, industry, government, politics, and other sectors.

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Snurb — Saturday 18 October 2008 20:04

Competing Logics of Emerging Sentient Urban Spaces

Politics | Mobile and Wireless Technologies | AoIR 2008 | ir9 | Wearable Technology |

Copenhagen.
The final keynote at AoIR 2008 is by Steve Graham. His interest is in the politics of urban space in the context of ubiquitous computing. He begins by noting utopian projections of the future, where everything is mediated profoundly through digital technologies - what Dana Cuff has called 'enacted environments'.

This includes visions of augmented reality (involving the delivery of location-specific information), and builds on ideas such as the 'Internet of Things', the use of RFIDs, biometrics, tracking systems, computerised surveillance, security discourses about e-borders, geolocation, GPS tracking, etc. This relies also on machine-readable entities, with sensors linked to databases that recognise and track individual objects of interest.

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