regulatory theory in social media society

92
Regulatory theory in social media society Mathias Klang @klang67

Upload: mathias-klang

Post on 29-Jun-2015

412 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Regulatory theory in social media society

Mathias Klang @klang67

Page 2: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The augmented human

Page 3: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Egyptian wood & leather prosthetic toe (ca 1069 to 664 B.C)

Page 4: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Portrait of Hugh de Provence (1352)

Page 5: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Generation zero

Page 6: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

hollerith

Page 7: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Birth of computing 1940s

Page 8: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

memexVannevar Bush; As We May Think; Atlantic Monthly; July 1945

Page 9: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Generation 3 (1964-72)

Page 10: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Arpanet: connections with redundancy (1969-1990)

Page 11: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Bulletin board system (late 1970s)

Page 12: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Ideology

Page 13: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Starting this Thanksgiving I am going to write a complete Unix-compatible software system called GNU (for Gnu's Not Unix), and give it away free to everyone who can use it.

GNU Project, posted by Richard Stallman on September 27, 1983.

Page 14: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

On the one hand information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable… On the other hand, information wants to be free, because the cost of getting it out is getting lower and lower all the time.

Stewart Brand (1984)

Page 15: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Information Wants To Be Free. Information also

wants to be expensive. ...That tension

will not go awaySteward Brand (1985)

Page 16: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The Well: Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link (1985)

stewart Brand & Larry Brilliant

Page 17: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Stallman’s Free software definition (1986)

Freedom 0: The freedom to run the program for any

purpose.Freedom 1: To study &

change the programFreedom 2: To redistribute

copiesFreedom 3: Improve &

publically release the program

Page 18: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

I believe that all generally useful information should be free. By 'free' I am not referring to price, but rather to the freedom to copy the information and to adapt it to one's own uses... When information is generally useful, redistributing it makes humanity wealthier no matter who is distributing and no matter who is receiving.

Stallman (1990)

Page 19: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

World wide web (an open standard)

Hypertext in the wild - Tim Berners-Lee (1990/91)

Page 20: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Mosaic web browser (1993)

Page 21: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it.

John Gilmore (December 1993 quoted in TIME Magazine)

Page 22: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Law in a database

Julian Dibbell (1993) A Rape in Cyberspace

Johnson & Post (1996) Law and Borders - The

Rise of Law in Cyberspace

Page 23: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, I come from Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the future, I ask you of the past to leave us alone. You are not welcome among us. You have no sovereignty where we gather.

John Perry Barlow (1996) A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace

Page 24: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Killer apps 1995: Browser wars

Page 25: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Dot-com bubble (1995-2000)

Page 26: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The rise and fall of edemocracy(1995-2000)

Page 27: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Code and other laws of cyberspaceLawrence Lessig (1999)

Page 28: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Murray & Scott (2001) Modalities of Regulation

Page 29: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Walls & Desire paths

Page 30: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The lawWhom does it serve?

Page 31: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

What coders know that lawyers don’t like to think about?

Page 32: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 33: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Desire path

Page 34: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 35: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Hacking reality

Page 36: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Information wants to be free – the radical approach

Page 37: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Napster 1999 (sued 2000)

Page 38: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Digitalization Internet WWW Fixed cost connections Storage Costs web2.0 Devices Social Media

Page 39: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

91 % Access to the Internet at home83 % Access to broadband at home7 % Never used a computer

Source: Sweden Statistics 2011 (*Individuals aged 16-74)

Page 40: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

From User generated content to Social Media to user entertainment

Page 41: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Blog

ger 1

999

Goo

gle

1999

End of communications monopoly

Page 42: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

2006

Page 43: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

"Out of this anarchy… what was governing the infinite monkeys now inputting away on the Internet was the law of digital Darwinism, the survival of the loudest and most opinionated.”

Andrew Keen: Cult of the amateur (2007)

Page 44: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Normalizing the abnormal

Page 45: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 46: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 47: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Pessimist talk

Page 48: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 49: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 50: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 51: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 52: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

This is not a phone

Page 53: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Always online

Page 54: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The end of boredom

Page 55: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Monotask queuing

Page 56: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Not knowing

Page 57: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Waiting by THE phone

Page 58: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Remember this?

Page 59: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Social networks

Page 60: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Dunbar’s 150

Page 61: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Stimuli or relations

Page 62: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

"If we don't teach our children to be alone all they will be is lonely" Sherry Turkle

Page 63: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Private or Personal

Page 64: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

“My fear is that these technologies are infantilising the brain into the state of small children who are attracted by buzzing noises and bright lights, who have a small attention span and who live for the moment.”

Prof. Susan Greenfield

Page 65: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Performance lifestyle

Page 66: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

My awesome coffee

Page 67: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Truman show delusion

Page 68: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

What does it all mean?

Page 69: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Old stupidity or new intelligence?

Page 70: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Technology changes us & we change it

Page 71: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Who is in control?

Page 72: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

XKCDMicrosoft(Oct 2012)

Page 73: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Only technology(spot the ethical dilemma?)

Page 74: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

What do the people who control what we can do, think?

Page 75: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

What will they let us think?

Page 76: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

A Squirrel Dying In Your Front Yard May Be More Relevant To

Your Interests Right Now Than People

Dying In AfricaMark Zuckerberg

Page 77: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

if you're not paying for

something, you're not the

customer; you're the

product being sold

Page 78: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The weakest link

Page 79: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Performance goes bad…

Page 80: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Channels

Page 81: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Medical news

Page 82: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 83: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Swedish employment law

Page 84: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The blogging policeman

Page 85: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

The sexy Headmaster

Page 86: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

RTFM – read the license.

Page 87: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Law (it’s still there).

Page 88: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Policies and guidelines

Page 89: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society
Page 90: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Support norms: Be that guy!

Page 91: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

THANKS!

Page 92: Regulatory Theory in Social Media Society

Mathias Klang [email protected] or @klang67

www.digital-rights.net

Image & licensing info in the notes section of slides.

Images at www.flickr.com (or specifically stated).

This ppt licensed: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA

Download presentation www.slideshare.net/klang