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Beyond the Blogosphere: Information and Its Children
Barnes and Noble
Beyond the Blogosphere: Information and Its Children
Current price: $65.00
Barnes and Noble
Beyond the Blogosphere: Information and Its Children
Current price: $65.00
Size: Hardcover
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This book looks at questions and answers pertaining to the organization, usage, and ownership of information in the Internet age—and the impact of shifting attitudes towards information ownership on creative endeavors.
In the competing traditions of Marshall McLuhan and Langdon Winner, authors Aaron Barlow and Robert Leston take readers on a revealing tour of the Internet
after
the explosion of the blogosphere and social media. In the world
Beyond the Blogosphere
, information has surpassed its limits, the distinction between public and private selves has collapsed, information is more untrustworthy than it ever was before, and technology has exhibited a growth and a
desire
that may soon exceed human control.
As Langdon Winner pointed out long ago, "tools have politics." In an eye-opening jourbaney that navigates the nuances of the cultural impact the internet is having on daily life, Barlow and Leston examine the culture of participation in order to urge others to reconsider the view that the Internet is merely a platform or a set of tools that humans use to suit their own desires. Provocative and engaging,
stands as a challenge on how to rethink the Internet so that it doesn't
out-think
us.
In the competing traditions of Marshall McLuhan and Langdon Winner, authors Aaron Barlow and Robert Leston take readers on a revealing tour of the Internet
after
the explosion of the blogosphere and social media. In the world
Beyond the Blogosphere
, information has surpassed its limits, the distinction between public and private selves has collapsed, information is more untrustworthy than it ever was before, and technology has exhibited a growth and a
desire
that may soon exceed human control.
As Langdon Winner pointed out long ago, "tools have politics." In an eye-opening jourbaney that navigates the nuances of the cultural impact the internet is having on daily life, Barlow and Leston examine the culture of participation in order to urge others to reconsider the view that the Internet is merely a platform or a set of tools that humans use to suit their own desires. Provocative and engaging,
stands as a challenge on how to rethink the Internet so that it doesn't
out-think
us.