facebook and PrivacyFacebook 2.0
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One Step Closer to Open Social Networks?: Google and Facebook Join the DataPortability WorkgroupCreated by Catherine Howell (University of Cambridge) on January 09, 2008
After the recent scuffles between tech blogger Robert Scoble and Facebook over data portability and privacy, comes the announcement that Facebook - along with Google - has now joined the DataPortability Workgroup - (announced yesterday by Ben Metcalfe, the DataPortability founder, on his blog). The optimistic vision for open social networks, where users will be able to share content freely across social networking sites, seems to be getting closer. Google and Facebook are, obviously, two of the biggest holders of social and personal information on the internet - on the one hand, they have enormous user populations clamouring for this facility, on the other, they presumably have a whole bunch of powerful advertisers and companies dying to "work with" all those rich user profiles. Poke 1.0 afterthoughtsCreated by Catherine Howell (University of Cambridge) on December 04, 2007
On 15 November 2007, Matt Riddle and I attended the “Poke 1.0” symposium at London Knowledge Lab organised by Neil Selwyn. Some brief thoughts and notes on the day here: overall, it was a really exciting and energising event, and I felt there was a strong sense of a nascent research community starting to coalesce. Here are parallel reviews by Lewis Goodings and Juliet Eve. Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship
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Sharing, Privacy and Trust in Our Networked World: A Report to the OCLC Membership
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Well, if They’re Already Using It ...
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A few new podcasts of interest ...Created by Matt Pasiewicz (EDUCAUSE) on October 05, 2007
NPR's Andy Carvin recently joined Talk of the Nation to cover social networking and sites like Facebook and MySpace. During the recording, they covered a number of issues related to their use in education. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=14993512 First Monday is starting up a new series of podcasts. The current recording features an interview with Ian Bogost about his new book, Persuasive Games. Next up is Siva Vaidhyanathan ... I was forwarded a preview of the very interesting recording, but they haven't linked it up yet. ELI2007 Podcast: Youth, Technology & PrivacyCreated by Carie Lee Page (EDUCAUSE) on January 31, 2007
In this 53-minute recording from the 2007 EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative Annual Meeting, we'll hear from Tracy Mitrano in a session entitled Youth, Technology and Privacy. Mitrano will share anecdotes and interviews from traditional-age college students to delve deeper into the issue of privacy in a digital age. She'll ask, "Are expectations of privacy different between students and administrators?" And, if so, what implications do these new definitions of privacy have for university regulations and public policy? A Wider World: Youth, Privacy, and Social Networking Technologies
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An Interview with Charles DziubanCreated by Matt Pasiewicz (EDUCAUSE) on October 26, 2006
In this 21 min minute recording, we'll hear from Chuck Dziuban, Director of the Research Initiative for Teaching Effectiveness at the University of Central Florida. Listen in as he shares some thoughts on information fluency, the importance of libraries and more. See also: |