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Berkman Buzz: October 11, 2013

Berkman Buzz  October 11th, 2013
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The Berkman Buzz is selected weekly from the posts of Berkman Center people and projects.
To subscribe, click here. | Browse online here.

The Berkman Center is now accepting applications for fellowships in the 2014-2015 academic year! More information is available online.

Alison Head talks to Char Booth about the future of libraries

Quotation mark

The biggest challenge we face is the challenge we’ve always faced: mattering to people on a practical and conceptual level. The pace of information and infrastructural change has certainly accelerated in the last few decades in a way that has provoked increasingly difficult questions about how and why we matter, which in itself is not unique in the history of libraries...Information shifts, societies shift, organizations shift, but the impulse to read and share and inquire openly – which is the essence, the basis of libraries – doesn’t shift: just look at any contemporary or historical culture that suppressed speech and you will find constant evidence of this impulse in spite of terrible consequences.

 

From Alison Head's latest interview for Project Information Literacy, "Char Booth: A DYI Approach to Re-Imagining Libraries,"
About Alison | @alisonjhead

[corrected] ASL19 analyzes Iran's increasingly moderate media landscape

Quotation mark

CORRECTION: the Buzz initially incorrectly attributed this blogpost to Ryan Budish. This post was written by ASL 19 and published in Farsi on their blog. Since the June 14th presidential elections, a number of new, more moderate Iranian news and analysis sites have launched, and we’ve seen a resurgence in activity on many existing reformist websites.

[...] This blog post examines these new sites, and assesses what it may mean for online news in Iran over the coming years.

 

From ASL 19’s post for Herdict, "Moderation of Iran’s Media Landscape"

Quotation mark

How has the shutdown affected you? ?@Ajam is looking for your stories. ?http://alj.am/1fFEGdm
Latoya Peterson (@LatoyaPeterson)

 

Wayne Marshall on Raggamuffin Hip-Hop

Quotation mark

I’m very happy to share some new work that involves quite a bit of collaboration: two articles and a truly epic mega-mix devoted to the rich, ruff-and-ready sound of raggamuffin hip-hop — aka, dancehall-derived flows over breakbeat-based beats (ca. 1987-94). It’s a distinctive and special repertory, near & dear to me and my co-curator, Pacey Foster, and as longtime readers of W&W will discern, it’s a sound that emerges directly from the circumstances I examine in my dissertation.

 


From Wayne Marshall's blog post, "Raggamuffin Hip-Hop Mega-Post!"
About Wayne | @wayneandwax

Sam Klein’s thoughts on the US Government shutdown and what we can learn from it

Quotation mark

Thanks to the US government shutdown, the Library of Congress website went down today. So did NASA, the NSF, the USDA, the FTC, and the National Park Service. On the other hand, privately-run websites such as the Internet Archive (and, thankfully, its glorious Wayback Machine!) remain online and unaffected by these sorts of government changes.

 

From Sam Klein’s blog post, “LOC IS DOWN. ARCHIVE.ORG REMAINS UP. WHAT CAN THIS TEACH US?”
About Sam | @metasj

David Eaves announces new 311 Open Data Competition

Quotation mark

As I shared the other week, I’ve been working on a data competition with Kaggle and SeeClickFix involving 311 data from four cities: Chicago, New Haven, Oakland and Richmond.

So first things first – the competition is now live. Indeed, there are already 19 teams and 56 submissions that have been made. Fortunately, time is on your side, there are 56 days to go.

 

 

From David Eaves’ blog post, "The 311 Open Data Competition is now Live on Kaggle""
About David | @daeaves

Quotation mark

How the 'Failure' Culture of Startups Is Killing Innovation. ?http://bit.ly/1hnqcup
Dave Winer (@davewiner)

 

Faculty Associate Biella Coleman analyzes the digital protest group, Anonymous

Quotation mark

Since 2010, digital direct action, including leaks, hacking and mass protest, has become a regular feature of political life on the Internet. The source, strengths and weakness of this activity are considered in this paper through an in-depth analysis of Anonymous, the protest ensemble that has been adept at magnifying issues, boosting existing — usually oppositional — movements and converting amorphous discontent into a tangible form. This paper, the third in the Internet Governance Paper Series, examines the intersecting elements that contribute to Anonymous’ contemporary geopolitical power: its ability to land media attention, its bold and recognizable aesthetics, its participatory openness, the misinformation that surrounds it and, in particular, its unpredictability.

 

From Gabriella Coleman’s contribution to part 3 of the Center for International Governance Innovation’s series on internet governance, "Anonymous in Context: The Politics and Power Behind the Mask"
About Biella | @BiellaColeman

Quotation mark

OH MY GOD aerial robots. That is all. #droneconf
Kate Darling (@grok_)

 

Dan Gillmor celebrates Richard Stallman’s contributions to the open source movement

Quotation mark

Three decades ago, a software programmer named Richard Stallman posted an announcement on an internet newsgroup, a bulletin board conversation service, about a project he was launching. It was called GNU ("for Gnu's Not Unix"): a software system that would be compatible with the Unix operating system but entirely unencumbered by "intellectual property" rights that could limit users' choices.

 

 

From Dan Gillmor’s post for The Guardian, ""In Praise of Richard Stallman, GNU’s open sourcerer""
About Dan | @dangillmor

Sara Watson shares her dissertation, Living with Data: Personal Data Uses of the Quantified Self

Quotation mark

After a whirlwind of handing in, packing up, moving out, and arriving and getting set up back in the States, it’s finally time to share the work I have been building over the last year. I received my marks last week, and have excited to share that I have officially graduated with distinction and the Oxford Internet Institute MSc Thesis award for this work. Now I’m pleased to share the finished product with the QS community, my participants, and anyone else who has been interested in following my research.

 

 

From Sara Watson’s blog post, "Living with Data: Personal Data Uses of the Quantified Self [MY THESIS!]"
About Sara | @smwat

Peter Suber disentangles John Bohannon's "sting" of weak open-access journals.

Quotation mark

This afternoon John Bohannon published an article in Science exposing lamentably low quality at a large number of OA journals. He and Science call it a "sting" and it's easy to see why. Unfortunately it may be hard to disentangle what the article does and doesn't show.

 

 

From Peter Suber’s blog post, "New "sting" of weak open-access journals."
About Peter | @petersuber

This Buzz was compiled by Danielle Schulkin.

To manage your subscription preferences, please click here.

Berkman Buzz  October 11th, 2013
iTunes Facebook Twitter Flickr YouTube RSS
 

The Berkman Buzz is selected weekly from the posts of Berkman Center people and projects.
To subscribe, click here. | Browse online here.

The Berkman Center is now accepting applications for fellowships in the 2014-2015 academic year! More information is available online.

Alison Head talks to Char Booth about the future of libraries

Quotation mark

The biggest challenge we face is the challenge we’ve always faced: mattering to people on a practical and conceptual level. The pace of information and infrastructural change has certainly accelerated in the last few decades in a way that has provoked increasingly difficult questions about how and why we matter, which in itself is not unique in the history of libraries...Information shifts, societies shift, organizations shift, but the impulse to read and share and inquire openly – which is the essence, the basis of libraries – doesn’t shift: just look at any contemporary or historical culture that suppressed speech and you will find constant evidence of this impulse in spite of terrible consequences.

 

From Alison Head's latest interview for Project Information Literacy, "Char Booth: A DYI Approach to Re-Imagining Libraries,"
About Alison | @alisonjhead

[corrected] ASL19 analyzes Iran's increasingly moderate media landscape

Quotation mark

CORRECTION: the Buzz initially incorrectly attributed this blogpost to Ryan Budish. This post was written by ASL 19 and published in Farsi on their blog. Since the June 14th presidential elections, a number of new, more moderate Iranian news and analysis sites have launched, and we’ve seen a resurgence in activity on many existing reformist websites.

[...] This blog post examines these new sites, and assesses what it may mean for online news in Iran over the coming years.

 

From ASL 19’s post for Herdict, "Moderation of Iran’s Media Landscape"

Quotation mark

How has the shutdown affected you? ?@Ajam is looking for your stories. ?http://alj.am/1fFEGdm
Latoya Peterson (@LatoyaPeterson)

 

Wayne Marshall on Raggamuffin Hip-Hop

Quotation mark

I’m very happy to share some new work that involves quite a bit of collaboration: two articles and a truly epic mega-mix devoted to the rich, ruff-and-ready sound of raggamuffin hip-hop — aka, dancehall-derived flows over breakbeat-based beats (ca. 1987-94). It’s a distinctive and special repertory, near & dear to me and my co-curator, Pacey Foster, and as longtime readers of W&W will discern, it’s a sound that emerges directly from the circumstances I examine in my dissertation.

 


From Wayne Marshall's blog post, "Raggamuffin Hip-Hop Mega-Post!"
About Wayne | @wayneandwax

Sam Klein’s thoughts on the US Government shutdown and what we can learn from it

Quotation mark

Thanks to the US government shutdown, the Library of Congress website went down today. So did NASA, the NSF, the USDA, the FTC, and the National Park Service. On the other hand, privately-run websites such as the Internet Archive (and, thankfully, its glorious Wayback Machine!) remain online and unaffected by these sorts of government changes.

 

From Sam Klein’s blog post, “LOC IS DOWN. ARCHIVE.ORG REMAINS UP. WHAT CAN THIS TEACH US?”
About Sam | @metasj

David Eaves announces new 311 Open Data Competition

Quotation mark

As I shared the other week, I’ve been working on a data competition with Kaggle and SeeClickFix involving 311 data from four cities: Chicago, New Haven, Oakland and Richmond.

So first things first – the competition is now live. Indeed, there are already 19 teams and 56 submissions that have been made. Fortunately, time is on your side, there are 56 days to go.

 

 

From David Eaves’ blog post, "The 311 Open Data Competition is now Live on Kaggle""
About David | @daeaves

Quotation mark

How the 'Failure' Culture of Startups Is Killing Innovation. ?http://bit.ly/1hnqcup
Dave Winer (@davewiner)

 

Faculty Associate Biella Coleman analyzes the digital protest group, Anonymous

Quotation mark

Since 2010, digital direct action, including leaks, hacking and mass protest, has become a regular feature of political life on the Internet. The source, strengths and weakness of this activity are considered in this paper through an in-depth analysis of Anonymous, the protest ensemble that has been adept at magnifying issues, boosting existing — usually oppositional — movements and converting amorphous discontent into a tangible form. This paper, the third in the Internet Governance Paper Series, examines the intersecting elements that contribute to Anonymous’ contemporary geopolitical power: its ability to land media attention, its bold and recognizable aesthetics, its participatory openness, the misinformation that surrounds it and, in particular, its unpredictability.

 

From Gabriella Coleman’s contribution to part 3 of the Center for International Governance Innovation’s series on internet governance, "Anonymous in Context: The Politics and Power Behind the Mask"
About Biella | @BiellaColeman

Quotation mark

OH MY GOD aerial robots. That is all. #droneconf
Kate Darling (@grok_)

 

Dan Gillmor celebrates Richard Stallman’s contributions to the open source movement

Quotation mark

Three decades ago, a software programmer named Richard Stallman posted an announcement on an internet newsgroup, a bulletin board conversation service, about a project he was launching. It was called GNU ("for Gnu's Not Unix"): a software system that would be compatible with the Unix operating system but entirely unencumbered by "intellectual property" rights that could limit users' choices.

 

 

From Dan Gillmor’s post for The Guardian, ""In Praise of Richard Stallman, GNU’s open sourcerer""
About Dan | @dangillmor

Sara Watson shares her dissertation, Living with Data: Personal Data Uses of the Quantified Self

Quotation mark

After a whirlwind of handing in, packing up, moving out, and arriving and getting set up back in the States, it’s finally time to share the work I have been building over the last year. I received my marks last week, and have excited to share that I have officially graduated with distinction and the Oxford Internet Institute MSc Thesis award for this work. Now I’m pleased to share the finished product with the QS community, my participants, and anyone else who has been interested in following my research.

 

 

From Sara Watson’s blog post, "Living with Data: Personal Data Uses of the Quantified Self [MY THESIS!]"
About Sara | @smwat

Peter Suber disentangles John Bohannon's "sting" of weak open-access journals.

Quotation mark

This afternoon John Bohannon published an article in Science exposing lamentably low quality at a large number of OA journals. He and Science call it a "sting" and it's easy to see why. Unfortunately it may be hard to disentangle what the article does and doesn't show.

 

 

From Peter Suber’s blog post, "New "sting" of weak open-access journals."
About Peter | @petersuber

This Buzz was compiled by Danielle Schulkin.

To manage your subscription preferences, please click here.