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Announcements

Taking a Breath(er)

It’s been a crazy week. Add to that the announcement we received just an hour or two before our first online (only) class: We all know now that we will be an “online-only” class for the remainder of the semester. As I said during our class meeting, although the news is hard to take, I […]

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Announcements

Not Cancelled

So a dangerous little bit of viral substance has spread around the world and led to wide-scaled cancellations? The Net Mirror shimmers, glitches a bit, but the screen remains is on- we just have a new class plan. Because of the way this course as designed, we have many of the pieces we need to […]

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Announcements Miscellaneous

Our New Class Plan

COVID-19 and moving online The anxiety regarding the COVID-19 spread is palpable now, but I don’t want you to be worrying too much about your schoolwork on top of the other concerns we are all facing.  Instead, we should take sensible precautions and do our best to move forward with flexibility and compassion.  I am very pleased […]

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Announcements Blog 5: Algorithms Miscellaneous

AI, algorithms, viral spread, and a bit of a break

Spring Break You are all now hopefully enjoying the first day of Spring Break, and I do hope each of you will take some time to take care of yourselves, manage any rising anxieties, and just enjoy a bit of time off.  As is plainly obvious to all of us, there is a considerable amount of […]

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Announcements

AI: Questioning the “I” and Seeking the Missing “B”

Artificial Intelligence… sounds magical. Smart technology, free of human emotion, right? It will help humanity and change life for the better? We ask you to look into that Net Mirror and inquire- are the outputs of machine thinking and algorithms really Intelligent? How is that intelligence? And is it free of the biases of it’s […]

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Announcements Blog 5: Algorithms

Living in a Bubble: The True Cost of Customization and Convenience

Another stimulating Net Mirror discussion unfolded this past week on the problem of filter bubbles and “web-based customization”. We considered the ubiquitous power of algorithms and the resulting persuasion architecture(s) that shape our perspectives of the world at large. Thanks to Nives for an excellent presentation covering Eli Pariser’s The Filter Bubble. We quickly confronted […]

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Announcements

Looking Into / Out of Filter Bubbles

For tonight’s class we are looking at how filter bubbles affect, maybe even influence us, in ways that are not directly visible. And we tie that into questions of how this drives the ad-clicking dystopia described by Zeynep Tufecki, Here is a summary of activities we will introduce and do in class. Please tweet / […]

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Announcements Blog 4: Filter Bubbles

Seeing Ourselves and Filtering

Thanks to Medea, we had a fun (funny) and engaging tour of self-representation in the digital age, stopping to consider #selfie culture, filters, and presentation of the self in everyday digitally-facilitated life. Selfie Culture We spoke together about how selfies may capture the essence of vanity and commercialism, but how selfies may also be vehicles […]

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Announcements

Selfies Were New… in 1839

Yesterday my wife and I were visiting the Grand Canyon, and the act of self photography was in full gear (sticks and all) by the visitors there, including us. Yet, the act of the self photograph is hardly new. From the Public Domain Review comes the story of Robert Cornelius doing the act in 1839. […]

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Announcements Blog 3: Self Representation in the Digital Age

Connecting while practicing restraint?

Another week of the Net Mirror, and we have covered some vast ground thanks to our shared reading of Participatory Culture in a Networked Era by Henry Jenkins, Mizuko Ito, danah boyd (Polity Press, 2016) as well as thoughtful discussion, lead by Linda. She started us off with some soothing spa-like sounds, leading us through a […]