1000 resultados para Digital noticeboard
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This piece is a short rejoinder to César Bolaño’s paper The Political Economy of the Internet and related articles (e.g., Comor, Foley, Huws, Reveley, Rigi and Prey, Robinson) that center around the relevance of Marx’s labor theory of value for understanding social media. I argue that Dallas Smythe’s assessment of advertising was made to distinguish his approach from the one by Baran and Sweezy. Smythe developed the idea of capital’s exploitation of the audience at a time when both feminist and anti-imperialist Marxists challenged the orthodox idea that only white factory workers are exploited. The crucial question is how to conceptualize productive labor. This is a theoretical, normative, and political question. A mathematical example shows the importance of the “crowdsourcing” of value-production on Facebook. I also point out parallels of the contemporary debate to the Soviet question of who is a productive or unproductive worker in the Material Product System.
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The task of this work is to apply thoughts from Georg Lukács’ final book, the Ontology of Social Being, for the theoretical analysis of cultural and digital labour. It discusses Lukács’ concepts of work and communication and relates them to the analysis of cultural and digital work. It also analyses his conception of the relation of labour and ideology and points out how we can make use of it for critically understanding social media ideologies. Lukács opposes the dualist separation of the realms of work and ideas. He introduces in this context the notion of teleological positing that allows us to better understand cultural and digital labour as well as associated ideologies, such as the engaging/connecting/sharing-ideology, today. The analysis shows that Lukács’ Ontology is in the age of Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter still a very relevant book, although it has thus far not received the attention that it deserves. This article also introduces the Ontology’s main ideas on work and culture, which is important because large parts of the book have not been translated from the German original into English. Lukács’ notion of teleological positing is crucial for understanding the common features of the economy and culture.
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At the core of this paper is a psychosocial inquiry into the Marxist concept of alienation and its applications to the field of digital labour. Following a brief review of different theoretical works on alienation, it looks into its recent conceptualisations and applications to the study of online social networking sites. Finally, the authors offer suggestions on how to extend and render more complex these recent approaches through in-depth analyses of Facebook posts that exemplify how alienation is experienced, articulated, and expressed online. For this perspective, the article draws on Rahel Jaeggi’s (2005) reassessment of alienation, as well as the depth-hermeneutic method of “scenic understanding” developed by Alfred Lorenzer (e.g. 1970; 1986).
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This book is an interrogation of humanity's new potentials and threats brought by technology when the question of social change is becoming more crucial than ever. Collected in the course of 2010-2012, the selected essays in this anthology confront questions from a wide-ranging perspective that evoke the postmodern idea of the cyborg to illuminate recent phenomena from global warming, Wikileaks, to the Occupy movements. Multiple disciplines from music to psychoanalysis to journalism to anthropology collaborate to examine the way we shape the world from behind our ubiquitous screens to taking to the streets in mass protests. What does the increasing omnipotence of networked machines ultimately mean? What do social networks do to our sense of self, others and society? Does P2P technology foster new ethics and spiritualities? What potentials does posthumanity have to bring about social change? Featuring essays from Robert Barry, Siri Driessen & Roos van Haaften, Bonni Rambatan, Dustin Cohen, Jacob Johanssen, Michel Bauwens, Aliki Tzatha, Zakary Paget, Stefen Baack, Alessandro Zagato, Peter Nikolaus Funke, Glenn Muschert, and Jung-Hua Liu.
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This article discusses the use of digital evidence as a means of proof before the International Court of Justice (ICJ). The absence of specific Court rules and procedures for digital evidence (with the exception of Practice Direction IX bis) is not necessarily an obstacle to its production and evaluation before the ICJ, as the general evidentiary rules can also be applied to digital evidence. The article first looks at the rules on the production of documentary evidence and then examines the specific issues related to audiovisual evidence. Finally, it examines the admissibility of digital evidence unlawfully obtained by a litigant through unilateral transborder access to data. The article concludes that, even if specific regulation may be needed as to the specific way in which authenticity and accuracy of digital evidence are to be established, the particular facts of the case and the grounds of challenge can vary widely, and it is doubtful that any regulation could be sufficiently flexible to deal with this in advance.
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Colombia’s Internet connectivity has increased immensely. Colombia has also ‘opened for business’, leading to an influx of extractive projects to which social movements object heavily. Studies on the role of digital media in political mobilisation in developing countries are still scarce. Using surveys, interviews, and reviews of literature, policy papers, website and social media content, this study examines the role of digital and social media in social movement organisations and asks how increased digital connectivity can help spread knowledge and mobilise mining protests. Results show that the use of new media in Colombia is hindered by socioeconomic constraints, fear of oppression, the constraints of keyboard activism and strong hierarchical power structures within social movements. Hence, effects on political mobilisation are still limited. Social media do not spontaneously produce non-hierarchical knowledge structures. Attention to both internal and external knowledge sharing is therefore conditional to optimising digital and social media use.
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Curadoria digital. Dados de pesquisa. eScience. Preservação digital.
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O presente estudo tem como objeto central o livro ilustrado e como principal objetivo compreender as diferenças entre dois modelos: o livro impresso e o livro digital. Partindo de um objeto de estudo concreto, um livro tradicional em formato impresso, é nosso objetivo perceber as principais diferenças que ocorrem na transição para um suporte digital, especificamente num formato iPad. Pretendemos também enunciar algumas das metodologias possíveis para que esta transição seja eficaz. Num momento de transição como o que vivemos atualmente, em que o ilustrador tem cada vez mais necessidade de se adaptar a novos meios, novas ferramentas de trabalho e novas formas de comunicação, importa refletir sobre a natureza do livro e sobre as características que distinguem os dois suportes: o tradicional e o digital. Assim, é nossa intenção identificar e perceber essas diferenças e enunciar alguns procedimentos a ter em conta quando o ilustrador experimenta a transição de um objeto de ilustração para um meio digital tátil, como é o iPad.
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Dissertação apresentada à Escola Superior de Comunicação Social como parte dos requisitos para obtenção de grau de mestre em Audiovisual e Multimédia.
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Dissertação apresentada à Escola Superior de Comunicação Social como parte dos requisitos para obtenção de grau de mestre em Audiovisual e Multimédia.
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Orientada por Doutora Paula Peres
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Os indivíduos com limitações acentuadas em termos motores/cognitivos/sensoriais tem muito menos oportunidades de interagir sobre o ambiente envolvente do que quem não sofre estas limitações. O mundo que nos rodeia, não está de forma alguma “pensado” para pessoas com limitações acentuadas. Na Era da Informação e da comunicação que vivemos actualmente, a utilização das TIC tornou-se uma competência fundamental para a vida de uma pessoa de forma integrada nesta sociedade. Se para quem não sofre de acentuadas limitações é absolutamente necessário possuir estas competências TIC, para o público com limitações acentuadas as TIC podem constituir uma oportunidade única para poder interagir, comunicar e conhecer melhor o mundo envolvente. Neste sentido, foi realizado um estudo com o intuito de tentar perceber quais as características que um Centro de Recursos de Inclusão Digital possuí, para responder a pessoas com necessidades educativas individuais de carácter permanente. Procurou-se ainda compreender o seu funcionamento como um todo, tentando detectar os pontos fortes e os pontos fracos do referido centro. Este estudo assenta na percepção de técnicos inquiridos (envolvidos em actividades do Centro de Recursos), relativamente aos benefícios e constrangimentos na intervenção educativa dos clientes que acompanham.
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Temos assistido, especialmente ao longo dos últimos dois anos,a um progressivo aumento da utilização das redes sociais por parte da Presidência da República Portuguesa, com destaque para o Facebook. Tal repete a tendência registada a nível mundial, com especial destaque para os EUA e para o seu actual presidente, Barack Obama. No caso português, a Presidência da República, órgão de soberania liderado pelo Prof. Cavaco Silva,é um dos mais activos nesta frente, procurando utilizar as redes sociais como um barómetro sobre a forma como os portugueses sentem a democracia e o estado da nação.