Slides from my TEDGlobal 2010 talk - talk notes available at http://www.ethanzuckerman.com/blog/2010/07/14/a-wider-world-a-wider-web-my-tedglobal-2010-talk/
Presented to the Ford Foundation's "Wired for Change" conference, October 23, 2012. Includes analysis from MIT's Center for Civic Media of the Trayvon Martin case and news coverage.
The document provides nutritional information for the New York Times, breaking down its coverage by topic area. It contains 42% international news (including coverage of Iraq, Afghanistan, China and Africa). It contains 28% Washington coverage (including coverage of Obama and Congress). It contains 14% New York State/Albany coverage and 10% New York City coverage. It contains less sports coverage than the New York Post and less business coverage than the Wall Street Journal.
This document discusses how new media and technology are changing civic participation. It finds that while online civic engagement is growing, socioeconomic factors still best predict participation. It explores how crowdfunding and social networks allow new forms of "thin" and "instrumental" civic voice. However, building "thick" civic participation remains a challenge. The document calls for helping young people use digital tools to become engaged civic actors and build an interlocking public sphere.
or "Why Fat Guys from Around the World Want to Wrestle in Diapers and Why That's a Good Thing".
Presented by Ethan Zuckerman at the Microsoft Research Social Computing Symposium, January 2013.
Social media technology could be a powerful tool to bring people together... or a powerful tool to isolate us and bring us into conflict. Using case studies, including the problem of hate speech in Myanmar, this talk examines the potentials and pitfalls of new media and peacebuilding.
This document discusses mapping attention and information flows. It begins by providing examples of historical maps used for navigation and showing infrastructure like telegraph connections. It then asks questions about what forces are most critical to map, how maps of flow differ from maps of infrastructure, whether flow maps are a form of surveillance, and who and what we pay attention to. The document suggests that if flows of attention are seen as unjust or broken, what actions could be taken to address issues with attention flows.
The Internet is NOT flat. The infrastructure that connects the world together isn't used ery well to share ideas. How homophily, xenophilia, bridgeblogging can help us understand and solve these problems. Delivered for the New England Library Association on October 21, 2008.
Presented to the Ford Foundation's "Wired for Change" conference, October 23, 2012. Includes analysis from MIT's Center for Civic Media of the Trayvon Martin case and news coverage.
The document provides nutritional information for the New York Times, breaking down its coverage by topic area. It contains 42% international news (including coverage of Iraq, Afghanistan, China and Africa). It contains 28% Washington coverage (including coverage of Obama and Congress). It contains 14% New York State/Albany coverage and 10% New York City coverage. It contains less sports coverage than the New York Post and less business coverage than the Wall Street Journal.
This document discusses how new media and technology are changing civic participation. It finds that while online civic engagement is growing, socioeconomic factors still best predict participation. It explores how crowdfunding and social networks allow new forms of "thin" and "instrumental" civic voice. However, building "thick" civic participation remains a challenge. The document calls for helping young people use digital tools to become engaged civic actors and build an interlocking public sphere.
or "Why Fat Guys from Around the World Want to Wrestle in Diapers and Why That's a Good Thing".
Presented by Ethan Zuckerman at the Microsoft Research Social Computing Symposium, January 2013.
Social media technology could be a powerful tool to bring people together... or a powerful tool to isolate us and bring us into conflict. Using case studies, including the problem of hate speech in Myanmar, this talk examines the potentials and pitfalls of new media and peacebuilding.
This document discusses mapping attention and information flows. It begins by providing examples of historical maps used for navigation and showing infrastructure like telegraph connections. It then asks questions about what forces are most critical to map, how maps of flow differ from maps of infrastructure, whether flow maps are a form of surveillance, and who and what we pay attention to. The document suggests that if flows of attention are seen as unjust or broken, what actions could be taken to address issues with attention flows.
The Internet is NOT flat. The infrastructure that connects the world together isn't used ery well to share ideas. How homophily, xenophilia, bridgeblogging can help us understand and solve these problems. Delivered for the New England Library Association on October 21, 2008.
The document discusses technology and infrastructure development in Africa, beginning with an overview of mobile phone and internet usage statistics as well as remittance markets. It then examines the One Laptop Per Child initiative and provides a critique of some of its challenges. Finally, it considers alternative approaches to technology and infrastructure projects in Africa being taken by companies like Google and the potential for incremental investments to have larger impacts.
The document lists citizen media projects from 10 countries that trained over 300 new bloggers across 21 communities. The projects include videoblogging workshops through public libraries in Medellín, Colombia, creative writing for marginalized children in Bangladesh, documenting post-election violence in Kenya, and challenging stereotypes through prison blogs in Jamaica. It concludes by noting there are many lessons learned from these initial projects and the next focus will be on blogging for public health.
The document discusses civic media and the MIT Media Lab's work in this area. It notes that protests have increasingly been organized online through social media and viral videos. However, it also expresses both enthusiasm and skepticism about exaggerations around how technology drives social change. The Media Lab is working on tools to help communities express themselves and study how media shapes attention and frames issues. Examples include tools for incarcerated populations to blog and platforms mapping media ecosystems and gender in UK news. It raises questions around what is truly new in civic media and how researchers can be accountable to the communities whose stories they tell.
The document discusses civic media and how it can be used to help communities express themselves and study media attention and frames. It provides examples of tools developed at MIT Media Lab for civic media purposes, including tools for expression, mapping media ecosystems, and analyzing controversies. It also discusses related topics like participatory media, viral video campaigns, "Facebook revolutions", exaggeration and distortion in media, and how media can help or hinder social change.
The document discusses civic media and digital civics projects at the MIT Media Lab. It provides examples of tools and platforms created at the lab to help communities engage civically through media, such as Vojo which allows people to create and share multimedia stories from their phones. The Media Lab also works on projects mapping media ecosystems, analyzing news coverage and framing of issues, and designing civic interventions. Questions explored include the effectiveness of media-centric activism and how civic crowdsourcing impacts public goods.
Roger Dingledine on Tor and blocking resistanceEthan Zuckerman
This document provides an overview of Tor's blocking-resistance design. It begins with background on Tor, including that it is open source software with over 1500 active relays and 200,000 daily users. It then outlines that it will discuss the expected adversaries against Tor (the threat model), properties of Tor that make it useful for blocking resistance, and modifications made to Tor to improve blocking resistance.
Dokumen tersebut membahas tentang teori-teori atom, mulai dari teori atom Dalton, Thompson, Rutherford, hingga Bohr. Teori-teori tersebut menjelaskan perkembangan konsep atom dari zaman ke zaman.
The document discusses civic media and tools being developed at the MIT Media Lab to help communities express themselves and study how media shapes attention and frames issues. It mentions tools for expression, mapping media ecosystems, and making civic media, including projects like a mail-based blogging platform for incarcerated people, tracking political promises, and using data murals. The overall focus is on participatory and civic media and involvement.
This document discusses civic participation and activism. It suggests that if we want civic participation that is meaningful, impactful and scalable, we should:
1) Move beyond viewing politics and activism as separate, and instead focus on empowering individual agency.
2) Understand the different levers for change, like legislation, authority and public opinion, as well as developing new tactics.
3) Deepen people's foundations of understanding on issues while also increasing their engagement through actions like petitions, protests, and social media.
4) Recognize that thick, impactful civic participation at a large scale requires distributing control and leadership broadly throughout communities.
A short presentation I offered at the Quantified Self 2011 conference in Mountain View, CA, suggesting that part of self tracking could include tracking what media you encounter and how you process it.
The document discusses how new media enabled the Arab Spring protests and discusses challenges in understanding global events. It argues that the internet empowered activists and enabled group formation. While offline activism relies on strong ties, online activism can leverage weak ties. However, it is difficult to understand other parts of the world. The document provides suggestions for how to gain a more globally aware perspective, including translating content, bridging cultures, curating diverse information, and becoming a xenophile.
This document discusses three different visualizations: a sign in Tahrir Square thanking Facebook and Al Jazeera, a 2008 visualization of global air routes using Flightstats.com data by Zurich University of Applied Sciences, and a 2009 visualization of global air routes attributed to "a trotskyite" under a CC license.
The document discusses different aspects of memes and internet culture from around the world. It includes a question from a child about where memes come from, lists of popular meme creators from different countries, definitions of unusual words, and interviews from anthropologists discussing how humor and memes can bring people together across borders despite censorship. It promotes understanding different cultures and finding common ground through shared jokes and laughter online.
This document discusses transparency and Wikileaks. It argues that increased transparency does not always lead to better government and outlines Wikileaks' success in producing scoops compared to mainstream media. The document presents a theory of change involving rigorous research, media coverage, public pressure, and eventual policy changes. It stresses the need for freeing data, finding missing data, providing filters and context, and translating data into civic action and movement.
The document discusses technology and infrastructure development in Africa, beginning with an overview of mobile phone and internet usage statistics as well as remittance markets. It then examines the One Laptop Per Child initiative and provides a critique of some of its challenges. Finally, it considers alternative approaches to technology and infrastructure projects in Africa being taken by companies like Google and the potential for incremental investments to have larger impacts.
The document lists citizen media projects from 10 countries that trained over 300 new bloggers across 21 communities. The projects include videoblogging workshops through public libraries in Medellín, Colombia, creative writing for marginalized children in Bangladesh, documenting post-election violence in Kenya, and challenging stereotypes through prison blogs in Jamaica. It concludes by noting there are many lessons learned from these initial projects and the next focus will be on blogging for public health.
The document discusses civic media and the MIT Media Lab's work in this area. It notes that protests have increasingly been organized online through social media and viral videos. However, it also expresses both enthusiasm and skepticism about exaggerations around how technology drives social change. The Media Lab is working on tools to help communities express themselves and study how media shapes attention and frames issues. Examples include tools for incarcerated populations to blog and platforms mapping media ecosystems and gender in UK news. It raises questions around what is truly new in civic media and how researchers can be accountable to the communities whose stories they tell.
The document discusses civic media and how it can be used to help communities express themselves and study media attention and frames. It provides examples of tools developed at MIT Media Lab for civic media purposes, including tools for expression, mapping media ecosystems, and analyzing controversies. It also discusses related topics like participatory media, viral video campaigns, "Facebook revolutions", exaggeration and distortion in media, and how media can help or hinder social change.
The document discusses civic media and digital civics projects at the MIT Media Lab. It provides examples of tools and platforms created at the lab to help communities engage civically through media, such as Vojo which allows people to create and share multimedia stories from their phones. The Media Lab also works on projects mapping media ecosystems, analyzing news coverage and framing of issues, and designing civic interventions. Questions explored include the effectiveness of media-centric activism and how civic crowdsourcing impacts public goods.
Roger Dingledine on Tor and blocking resistanceEthan Zuckerman
This document provides an overview of Tor's blocking-resistance design. It begins with background on Tor, including that it is open source software with over 1500 active relays and 200,000 daily users. It then outlines that it will discuss the expected adversaries against Tor (the threat model), properties of Tor that make it useful for blocking resistance, and modifications made to Tor to improve blocking resistance.
Dokumen tersebut membahas tentang teori-teori atom, mulai dari teori atom Dalton, Thompson, Rutherford, hingga Bohr. Teori-teori tersebut menjelaskan perkembangan konsep atom dari zaman ke zaman.
The document discusses civic media and tools being developed at the MIT Media Lab to help communities express themselves and study how media shapes attention and frames issues. It mentions tools for expression, mapping media ecosystems, and making civic media, including projects like a mail-based blogging platform for incarcerated people, tracking political promises, and using data murals. The overall focus is on participatory and civic media and involvement.
This document discusses civic participation and activism. It suggests that if we want civic participation that is meaningful, impactful and scalable, we should:
1) Move beyond viewing politics and activism as separate, and instead focus on empowering individual agency.
2) Understand the different levers for change, like legislation, authority and public opinion, as well as developing new tactics.
3) Deepen people's foundations of understanding on issues while also increasing their engagement through actions like petitions, protests, and social media.
4) Recognize that thick, impactful civic participation at a large scale requires distributing control and leadership broadly throughout communities.
A short presentation I offered at the Quantified Self 2011 conference in Mountain View, CA, suggesting that part of self tracking could include tracking what media you encounter and how you process it.
The document discusses how new media enabled the Arab Spring protests and discusses challenges in understanding global events. It argues that the internet empowered activists and enabled group formation. While offline activism relies on strong ties, online activism can leverage weak ties. However, it is difficult to understand other parts of the world. The document provides suggestions for how to gain a more globally aware perspective, including translating content, bridging cultures, curating diverse information, and becoming a xenophile.
This document discusses three different visualizations: a sign in Tahrir Square thanking Facebook and Al Jazeera, a 2008 visualization of global air routes using Flightstats.com data by Zurich University of Applied Sciences, and a 2009 visualization of global air routes attributed to "a trotskyite" under a CC license.
The document discusses different aspects of memes and internet culture from around the world. It includes a question from a child about where memes come from, lists of popular meme creators from different countries, definitions of unusual words, and interviews from anthropologists discussing how humor and memes can bring people together across borders despite censorship. It promotes understanding different cultures and finding common ground through shared jokes and laughter online.
This document discusses transparency and Wikileaks. It argues that increased transparency does not always lead to better government and outlines Wikileaks' success in producing scoops compared to mainstream media. The document presents a theory of change involving rigorous research, media coverage, public pressure, and eventual policy changes. It stresses the need for freeing data, finding missing data, providing filters and context, and translating data into civic action and movement.
This document discusses the history and importance of mapping infrastructure and flow. It explores how 19th century maps tracked steamship routes, telegraph connections, and railroads. Modern maps show global container ship routes, airlines, oil and gas pipelines, and undersea internet cables. Effective understanding of globalization requires mapping both infrastructure and the flow through it.
The document discusses how activists have used cute cat videos and images to circumvent censorship of the internet by authoritarian governments. It explains that governments attempt to censor the internet by blocking keywords, URLs, DNS servers, and IP addresses but that activists have found this difficult to enforce. The document argues that posting cute cat media raises the social and financial costs of comprehensive censorship and that activists have strategically used accessible tools like email, Google Maps, and social media to spread information.
What Cute Cats can teach us about Internet censorshipEthan Zuckerman
The infamous cute cats talk, as delivered at the Ford Foundation in November 2008. The basic idea - banal uses of web2.0 tools help create a space for activist uses which might otherwise be censored or blocked.
A talk delivered in Barcelona at a conference on the future of the internet, and on innovation and the social web. The talk focuses on African innovation and the lessons we can learn from African innovation for innovation in social media
My talk from the Surprising Africa event at PICNIC 08. Focuses on the rise of citizen media in Africa and the importance of citizen journalism in the Kenyan election crisis.
El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
04062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
An astonishing, first-of-its-kind, report by the NYT assessing damage in Ukraine. Even if the war ends tomorrow, in many places there will be nothing to go back to.
Acolyte Episodes review (TV series) The Acolyte. Learn about the influence of the program on the Star Wars world, as well as new characters and story twists.
Essential Tools for Modern PR Business .pptxPragencyuk
Discover the essential tools and strategies for modern PR business success. Learn how to craft compelling news releases, leverage press release sites and news wires, stay updated with PR news, and integrate effective PR practices to enhance your brand's visibility and credibility. Elevate your PR efforts with our comprehensive guide.
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
10. 8.3% 21m
17.7% 16m
5m
11%
5m
8.4%
3.8m
7.5%
2.8m 4.7%
2.4m 6.8%
1.9m
4.8% monthly unique visitors
1.5m % of internet users who use twitter
0.9%
1.2m
2.7% data from Google ad planner, June 2010