Sunday, December 7, 2008

Digital Natives

This article by Marc Prensky is about the changing habits of the Internet generation and how it is becoming the norm to interact on the web. There is an unprecedented feeling of ease portrayed in the attitudes of modern surfers with their own customs and even language developing. The title Digital Natives is a clever way of summarising the content of his article. On the whole this is an interesting and informative read but I think it isn't quite as deep as the other article Small Pieces. It mentions mostly the same ideas and introduces a few more along the way but the only thing this really adds that could be said to be lacking from the other one is on the second last page where it states how this technology has changed the way an entire generation interacts and that those not of this generation should ACCEPT it and to LEARN as much as they can (me included) about it. I couldn't agree more. It tends to be those with a lesser understanding that hold the reigns and make the rules. Any rules based in ignorance make a mockery of the systems put in place to run society. Knee jerk reactions don't have the best track record when looking back through history.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Small Pieces

I'll break this into sub headings as the article is a bit long.
Being John Malkovich.
The first part of this article tells a story of "Internet intoxication" which involves a boy who made a comment to another on line person about a future second massacre at Columbine. His defence for this was that he had this intoxication and was acting as a character like his favourite actor John Malkovich. Four months in prison and a three year ban from using the Internet seems fair when you think about the distress that would of been felt in Columbine, the dragging up of old memories would have probably brought many to tears. Hopefully it should act as a deterrent from anyone else making such terrifying claims.
Anonymously Shopping & Learning In The TARDIS
The next part of the article dealt with purchasing a quilt on eBay. The story was told in relation to varying aspects. The first was preconceptions in that if it didn't cost enough it wasn't good enough. Next was the fact that there was no geographical boundary as there would be if buying from a shopping centre. After this the topic of time revealed how the bidding could be monitored in increments measured in hours. Try that at Christies. The anonymity of both the vendor and buyer are an apparent difference from shopping in the real world. Finally the buyer realised how much they had learnt from the whole process about quilts that they had not known before, and all from the confines of whichever room the computer is kept in.
The Web: Modern Day Mayflower
This section compares web surfers as modern day pilgrims. The only difference acknowledged between Internet enthusiasts and those that landed at Plymouth Rock is an understanding of geography. The author talks of the unfamiliarity of the new phenomenon that is the Internet. He then discusses the way this effects us depending on our personality "If we're egotistical, then the world appears to center around us. If we're gregarious then the world appears to be an invitation to be with others. If we're ambitious then the world appears to be awaiting our conquest." The main point to come from this is that the user can improve at will. This means increasing traits deemed desirable and lessening those not.
A Different Type of Social
Comparing two different studies, both reported widely in conventional media, that were poles apart in their findings. The first one basically stated that the Internet was a causal factor in significantly reduced social interaction. The second stating that this may have been so in the physical sense but the net gave a wider social circle to those who participate, therefor showing increased social interaction. Although I don't have access to the exact methodology of both studies, I feel fairly safe theorising that the second study would be much closer to the mark if carried out reputably today. Unfortunately this lack of understanding of new technologies has had a negative effect in many cases the funniest of which involved a rogue politician with a few left of centre ideas. To be honest, this blog is getting a bit long, and the rest of the article is more entertaining than informing so I'll end with a quote that I think sums up the rest of the article nicely "... the Web upsets our expectations".

Friday, December 5, 2008

Utopia And Dystopia

The final part of the lecture was called CyberUtopia. We learnt of the first electronic media age in which information generally came from one source to be broadcast to many. The second electronic media age was the decentralization of the source which meant one person could broadcast to an enormous audience. I also learnt a new word dystopia which is simply the opposite of utopia. These were discussed in the context of new media studies in so far as the technology has been viewed as utopia because it can create perfect and sanitised scenarios full of enjoyment but without the danger.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Virtual Philosophy

Although we were talking virtual philosophy all the references to The Matrix were lost on me as I am probably the only person not to have seen any of the series (although I met Keanu Reeves in Sydney when he was filming the third one) and was more interested in the philosophical views of the French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari and their theory that in front of every moment in time (the actual) is a virtual which is like a cluster of possibilities and choices. Something else I found interesting was a quote by Benedikt "TV is images of a life not really lived anywhere but arranged for the viewing". I'm not positive of his intended message but to me it really states well the fact that people can get too immersed in media rather than just using it as a tool. Perhaps I'm reading too much into it but I have heard people talking of characters in soap operas as though they were close personal friends rather than a two dimensional representation of a writers imagination manufactured purely for entertainment.

Democratic Censorship?

The first of today's mini lectures was about cyber democracy. It's amazing how democratic governments can propose such censorship. The Internet is a source that holds information indefinitely. People have been prosecuted for content that still exists on line. As John Gilmore said "The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it". Whether or not you have democracy such as the ancient Greeks, one man one equal vote, or whatever Australia's system is where you vote is worth more or less depending on where you live; whether or not you have a constitutional right to free speech such as America or not; whether or not it's truly representative is all irrelevant. When the basic nature of the internment works against censorship the argument should be more towards education and informed decisions.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008