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Ethan Zuckerman

    Ethan Zuckerman is een vooraanstaand mediawetenschapper, internetactivist en blogger, gericht op de kruising van technologie en maatschappelijk leven. Zijn werk onderzoekt hoe digitale media het publieke discours en maatschappelijke verandering kunnen vormgeven. Zuckerman verkent de ethische en praktische implicaties van online platforms voor democratie en burgerparticipatie. Zijn inzichten helpen de uitdagingen en kansen van ons digitale tijdperk te belichten.

    Writing the Revolution
    Mistrust
    Digital Cosmopolitans
    • Digital Cosmopolitans

      • 320bladzijden
      • 12 uur lezen
      3,9(36)Tarief

      A rousing call to action for those who would be citizens of the world-online and off.

      Digital Cosmopolitans
    • Mistrust

      • 304bladzijden
      • 11 uur lezen
      3,8(62)Tarief

      The rise of mistrust is provoking a crisis for representative democracy- solutions lie in the endless creativity of social movements.

      Mistrust
    • Writing the Revolution

      • 184bladzijden
      • 7 uur lezen

      A close reading of Wikipedia’s article on the Egyptian Revolution reveals the complexity inherent in establishing the facts of events as they occur and are relayed to audiences near and far. Wikipedia bills itself as an encyclopedia built on neutrality, authority, and crowd-sourced consensus. Platforms like Google and digital assistants like Siri distribute Wikipedia’s facts widely, further burnishing its veneer of impartiality. But as Heather Ford demonstrates in Writing the Revolution, the facts that appear on Wikipedia are often the result of protracted power struggles over how data are created and used, how history is written and by whom, and the very definition of facts in a digital age. In Writing the Revolution, Ford looks critically at how the Wikipedia article about the 2011 Egyptian Revolution evolved over the course of a decade, both shaping and being shaped by the Revolution as it happened. When data are published in real time, they are subject to an intense battle over their meaning across multiple fronts. Ford answers key questions about how Wikipedia’s so-called consensus is arrived at; who has the power to write dominant histories and which knowledges are actively rejected; how these battles play out across the chains of circulation in which data travel; and whether history is now written by algorithms.

      Writing the Revolution