Despite the fight against piracy, many people still indulge in the very disheartening acts. This has been seen as a benefit for many users but a disadvantage for creators. It has been determined by the government that downloading content that should be paid for, although, it's not illegal but those who upload the content are to be blamed because they are indulging it piracy, putting up what other people have worked for.
However, Matt Mason, author of "The pirate of Dilemma" refers a pirate as a person who copies other people's contents and puts it up on the web for the public consumption, they are the smartest thinker. pirates are not only submitting contents online for the benefit of those who can not afford to purchase a Cd, they are also pirating medications, electronics e.t.c. That's why people no longer worry if they can't get the original version of the product, simply because they know they can always go for the pirated copy.
Matt mason believes piracy is not a bad idea because, it's an advantage on the part of those who can not afford a Cd. It is clear that piracy has made thorns of unlimited content a possibility which has helped the society.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Competing Myths of the Web 2.0 Brand
The marketing ideology and myths of web by Trebor Scholz are divided into eight parts. The first part which is the shifting of web 2.0. H e talked about how web 2.0 came into existence. Tim Reilly distinguished between the web 1.0 and 2.0 by associating it with the "new participatory architectures of the web.
The second part which is the new newness of technologies, he also talks about how the web has been in existence but knowing that newness sells the technological world hence the introduction of the web 2.0. The third part which is the wikis and user-submitted content, talks about how Ward Cunningham developed wiki-wiki web. This has in turn increased the social life online and the user interface is more user friendly. The rest of the article talks more about the social networking sites, RSS, CSS and blogging. RSS helps you to subscribe to web pages and receive updates, CSS which is the cascading style sheets were developed as a means for creating a consistent approach to providing information for web documents.
However, the article goes on to talk about pod-casting and folksonomies. Folksonomies is a method of collaboratively creating and managing keywords to anotate and categorize content. The penultimate and final part of the article is the web 2.0 ideology, the power of naming, and the imagination of the future of the web. These goes to talk about and the future of the technological market.
The second part which is the new newness of technologies, he also talks about how the web has been in existence but knowing that newness sells the technological world hence the introduction of the web 2.0. The third part which is the wikis and user-submitted content, talks about how Ward Cunningham developed wiki-wiki web. This has in turn increased the social life online and the user interface is more user friendly. The rest of the article talks more about the social networking sites, RSS, CSS and blogging. RSS helps you to subscribe to web pages and receive updates, CSS which is the cascading style sheets were developed as a means for creating a consistent approach to providing information for web documents.
However, the article goes on to talk about pod-casting and folksonomies. Folksonomies is a method of collaboratively creating and managing keywords to anotate and categorize content. The penultimate and final part of the article is the web 2.0 ideology, the power of naming, and the imagination of the future of the web. These goes to talk about and the future of the technological market.
The Death of the Web or Open Source Future?
The web is dead. The websites are alive. Torrents, Podcasts, Facebook, etcetera are alive. Will you search THE website or A website? The subtle difference is the intention; Getting means having an objective. Exploring (Searching) means freedom. Getting can be controlled, can be induced, can be conditioned to yourself. The extasis of finding without really looking for it; Searching what you don’t know yet, the fulfilling pleasure of sailing the Web is long lost. StumbleUpon.com is profiting from this death.
The transferred bits, has nothing to do with the Web, except for the technological sense; The web is the free space, existing inside the internet protocols. Everyone can be part of the Web. Everyone can open notepad, code as he will, and open up the services in his own computer, but there’s no Web (There IS the Web, but it’s dead. ¿You got the point?).
That web site exist, and its part of the web, but the web is dead in the sense that nobody is IN the web anymore. There’s no sailer in the ocean of the Web, but surfers in the seas of blogs, social networks; the sea of the gadget. Your notepad site exists in a death ocean. The new boats, the new spaces are those hard-coded, hard-limited not in a technological sense; Facebook, Twitter, Ipad, RSS’s, Etcetera. “You’ve spent the day on the Internet — but not on the Web”. New spaces are grown; Social media networks, Music networks, Facebook, Blogs, Apps, Gadgets, but the web as some knew it, is dead. It doesn’t implies the new spaces are worse.
“It makes no sense to put the Web in the fight against particular apps.” ¿Who’s putting the Web in the fight against particular apps? Let that fight for the capitalists; Without them and their struggles, there would be no change nor progress in a technological sense “And contrary to the post in which it says that Apple and Google are killing it. In reality, they are building it.”
Apple and Google are building OVER it, thus killing it. The Web will always exist, buried under Apple’s and Google’s backyard. I understand your point, but the whole point of the article isn’t contradicted by your argument. It’s not about the internet, it’s not about the control of the technology, but with the Web itself.
The transferred bits, has nothing to do with the Web, except for the technological sense; The web is the free space, existing inside the internet protocols. Everyone can be part of the Web. Everyone can open notepad, code as he will, and open up the services in his own computer, but there’s no Web (There IS the Web, but it’s dead. ¿You got the point?).
That web site exist, and its part of the web, but the web is dead in the sense that nobody is IN the web anymore. There’s no sailer in the ocean of the Web, but surfers in the seas of blogs, social networks; the sea of the gadget. Your notepad site exists in a death ocean. The new boats, the new spaces are those hard-coded, hard-limited not in a technological sense; Facebook, Twitter, Ipad, RSS’s, Etcetera. “You’ve spent the day on the Internet — but not on the Web”. New spaces are grown; Social media networks, Music networks, Facebook, Blogs, Apps, Gadgets, but the web as some knew it, is dead. It doesn’t implies the new spaces are worse.
“It makes no sense to put the Web in the fight against particular apps.” ¿Who’s putting the Web in the fight against particular apps? Let that fight for the capitalists; Without them and their struggles, there would be no change nor progress in a technological sense “And contrary to the post in which it says that Apple and Google are killing it. In reality, they are building it.”
Apple and Google are building OVER it, thus killing it. The Web will always exist, buried under Apple’s and Google’s backyard. I understand your point, but the whole point of the article isn’t contradicted by your argument. It’s not about the internet, it’s not about the control of the technology, but with the Web itself.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Changing Notions of Labour: From Participation to Exploitation
LOSER GENERATED CONTENT: From Participation to Exploitation
Given that everything that has an advantage almost always has a corresponding disadvantage, this article written by Søren Mørk Petersen focused on examining the pros and cons of the internet. A random photo which was taken by a camera phone was used as an example to illustrate this and it indeed was amazing, just how much significance a single photo could have. People’s creative potential is triggered by technological platforms, and this enables them to take part in the designing of software and share their own content.
- Web 2.0 is a software with web applications that allows participatory information sharing, user design and collaboration using the world-wide web. This site allows interaction between users in a social media dialogue unlike other websites where users are limited to passive viewing of contents that was created for them. Examples of the Web 2.0 sites are social networking sites, blogs, Usenet (user-generated content).
- These sites have great advantages in the sense that lots of informations can be gained and shared between parties. This advantage could also be a disadvantage because it could lead to the use of other people's ideas without giving them credit; since there is the absence of infringement and copyright rules on most of these open websites.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Search 2.0: Privacy Undone, Surveillance Reconsidered
The peep culture depicts what's going on in our society now most especially Facebook and twitter. Many people want to be noticed, people crave for attention. Surveillance is associated with spying and privacy innovations.
However, by providing information, photos, videos, etc., many users (on social networking sites especially) reveal an exhibitionist attitude. Many users take pleasure in having their profiles looked at. Why else would so many people continue to update their profiles, if not for the purpose of keeping others interested? Take, for example, the update of one's profile picture on Facebook. For some users, this update is a constant ordeal. I find that the main reason people change their profile picture so often is to get attention. Once other people have stopped commenting or "liking" the picture, it must be time for a change, so as to get attention on their wall for the new photo (really weired).Social networking is a great way of getting connected with family and friends but still face the privacy issue.
EXHIBITIONISM
This refers to the love of people being looked at by others on the web. On social networking sites (most especially facebook), people post photos together with so much informations with the purpose of being seen by others. I believe this sets of individuals loves being looked at by others, sometimes i say to myself that "There is more to life than facebook". Many people want to be part of social community.
In other words, if people do not post too much of their informations online for the whole world to see, there would be nothing to spy on.
However, by providing information, photos, videos, etc., many users (on social networking sites especially) reveal an exhibitionist attitude. Many users take pleasure in having their profiles looked at. Why else would so many people continue to update their profiles, if not for the purpose of keeping others interested? Take, for example, the update of one's profile picture on Facebook. For some users, this update is a constant ordeal. I find that the main reason people change their profile picture so often is to get attention. Once other people have stopped commenting or "liking" the picture, it must be time for a change, so as to get attention on their wall for the new photo (really weired).Social networking is a great way of getting connected with family and friends but still face the privacy issue.
EXHIBITIONISM
This refers to the love of people being looked at by others on the web. On social networking sites (most especially facebook), people post photos together with so much informations with the purpose of being seen by others. I believe this sets of individuals loves being looked at by others, sometimes i say to myself that "There is more to life than facebook". Many people want to be part of social community.
In other words, if people do not post too much of their informations online for the whole world to see, there would be nothing to spy on.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
WEB 2.O
The online Webopedia describes Web 2.0 has the term used to describe the current generation of the World Wide Web. Web 2.0 primarily focuses on the ability for users from all over the world to collaboratively and interactively share information online. Web 2.0 moves the online community away from the utilization of static, basic HTML pages and encourages the use of modern community driven web applications such as blogs, forums and wikis to provide users with the information they wish to consume or create. Simply put, Web 2.0 is the introduction of an interactive and dynamic element into the once stagnant HTML only web pages with a strong reliance on human collaboration for the creation of Social Media to be consumed by other humans.
Web 2.0 allows the user to provide user created or enhanced content for others people to use. Popular encyclopedia website Wikipedia is a prime example of this; once an article is created, anyone from around the world with knowledge of the topics discussed within the article is free to edit the article. Popular Social Networking website Twitter is another example of Web 2.0’s community driven information process. Various users can share or “tweet” all forms of information with each other that can potentially be helpful to other users online. Web 2.0 has created a new form of communication, making those who utilize information not only consumers, but potential creators as well.
Although Web 2.0 is often seen as a buzzword, there is clear indication that the way we use the internet has evolved over time. Users now have more freedom to create and collaborate on websites to bring about more diverse and useful content.
Web 2.0 allows the user to provide user created or enhanced content for others people to use. Popular encyclopedia website Wikipedia is a prime example of this; once an article is created, anyone from around the world with knowledge of the topics discussed within the article is free to edit the article. Popular Social Networking website Twitter is another example of Web 2.0’s community driven information process. Various users can share or “tweet” all forms of information with each other that can potentially be helpful to other users online. Web 2.0 has created a new form of communication, making those who utilize information not only consumers, but potential creators as well.
Although Web 2.0 is often seen as a buzzword, there is clear indication that the way we use the internet has evolved over time. Users now have more freedom to create and collaborate on websites to bring about more diverse and useful content.
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