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  • × classification_ss:"AP 18420"
  1. Webwissenschaft : eine Einführung (2010) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Das World Wide Web unterscheidet sich strukturell erheblich von den traditionellen Medien und hat das Mediensystem von Grund auf verändert. Radikal sind die Auswirkungen der webtechnischen Innovation sowohl für die Medienlandschaft und die Gesellschaft als auch für diejenigen Wissenschaften, die sich mit Medien - deren Geschichte, Inhalten, Formen, Technik, Wirkungen usf. - befassen. In dieser Einführung werden vor diesem Hintergrund einerseits Forschungsfragen einer zukünftigen Webwissenschaft auf einer übergeordneten Ebene diskutiert, andererseits werden die Perspektiven der relevanten Bezugswissenschaften integriert.
    Content
    Inhalt: Ist das Web ein Medium? --Konrad Scherfer Warum und zu welchem Zweck benötigen wir eine Webwissenschaft? 31- Helmut Volpers 'Diese Site wird nicht mehr gewartet'. Medienanalytische Perspektiven in den Medienwechseln - Rainer Leschke Emergente Öffentlichkeit? Bausteine zu einer Theorie der Weböffentlichkeit - Christoph Ernst Das ICH im Web - Auswirkungen virtueller Identitäten auf soziale Beziehungen - Helmut Volpers / Karin Wunder Technikgeschichte des Webs - Tom Alby Visuelles Denken im Interaktions- und Webdesign - Cyrus Khazaeli Das fotografische Bild im Web - Anja Bohnhof / Kolja Kracht Qualität im Web - Interdisziplinäre Website-Bewertung - David Kratz Für eine neue Poesie der Neugier. Das Web verändert den Journalismus - nicht nur online - Mercedes Bunz Das Web braucht Spezialisten, keine Generalisten. Zur Notwendigkeit einer webspezifischen Professionalisierung in der Ausbildung - Petra Werner Online-Forschung im Web - Methodenschwerpunkte im Überblick - Simone Fühles-Ubach Im Spiel der Moden? - Das Web in der Wirtschaft, die Wirtschaft im Web - Jörg Hoewner Medizin im Web - Martina Waitz Das Web und das Medienrecht - Bernd Holznagel / Thorsten Ricke Suchmaschinenforschung im Kontext einer zukünftigen Webwissenschaft - Dirk Lewandowski
  2. Handbuch Soziale Medien (2017) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Soziale Medien erleichtern es Menschen, Informationen aller Art zu teilen und soziale Beziehungen zu pflegen. Sie sind in den letzten Jahren zu einem wesentlichen Bestandteil der digitalen Kommunikation geworden und verändern die Strukturen gesellschaftlicher Öffentlichkeit, aber auch den alltäglichen Austausch über privat-persönliche Themen. Ihre kommunikative Architektur nährt Hoffnungen auf verbesserte gesellschaftliche Partizipation genauso wie Befürchtungen, immer mehr Bereiche des Lebens würden kommerzialisiert und überwacht. Das Handbuch bereitet den aktuellen Forschungs- und Diskussionsstand zu Nutzung, gesellschaftlicher Einbettung und Folgen der sozialen Medien aus der Kommunikationswissenschaft und den angrenzenden Sozialwissenschaften auf.
    BK
    05.38 (Neue elektronische Medien) <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
    Classification
    05.38 (Neue elektronische Medien) <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
    Content
    Inhalt: Grundlagen sozialer Medien -- Entwicklung und Verbreitung sozialer Medien -- Soziale Medien : Funktionen, Praktiken, Formationen -- Einsatzbereiche und Anwendungsfelder sozialer Medien -- Selbstpräsentation und Beziehungsmanagement in sozialen Medien -- Identitätsbildung in sozialen Medien -- Soziale Medien in der politischen Kommunikation -- Soziale Medien und Journalismus -- Soziale Medien in der externen Organisationskommunikation -- Soziale Medien in der internen Organisationskommunikation -- Soziale Medien in der Wissenschaft -- Übergreifende Fragestellungen und Entwicklungen sozialer Medien -- Informationsverbreitung in sozialen Medien -- Soziale Medien als Technologien der Überwachung und Kontrolle -- Kompetenzen für soziale Medien -- Soziale Medien und der Umbau der gesellschaftlichen Wissenskultur -- Die Ökonomie sozialer Medien -- Die Software sozialer Medien -- Rechtliche Aspekte sozialer Medien -- Soziale Medien, Raum und Zeit -- Soziale Medien in der empirischen Forschung
  3. Stalder, F.: Kultur der Digitalität (2016) 0.03
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    BK
    05.38 Neue elektronische Medien Kommunikationswissenschaft
    Classification
    05.38 Neue elektronische Medien Kommunikationswissenschaft
    LCSH
    Information society / Forecasting
    Information society
    RSWK
    Digitales Zeitalter / Digitalisierung / Informationsgesellschaft / Elektronische Medien / Zukunft / Demokratie / Partizipation / Überwachung
    Subject
    Digitales Zeitalter / Digitalisierung / Informationsgesellschaft / Elektronische Medien / Zukunft / Demokratie / Partizipation / Überwachung
    Information society / Forecasting
    Information society
  4. Schmidt, E.; Cohen, J.: ¬Die Vernetzung der Welt : ein Blick in unsere Zukunft (2013) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Welche Konsequenzen wird es haben, wenn in Zukunft die überwiegende Mehrheit der Weltbevölkerung online ist? Wenn Informationstechnologien so allgegenwärtig sind wie Elektrizität? Was bedeutet das für die Politik, die Wirtschaft - und für uns selbst? Diese Fragen beantwortet ein außergewöhnliches Autorenduo: Eric Schmidt, der Mann, der Google zu einem Weltunternehmen gemacht hat, und Jared Cohen, ehemaliger Berater von Hillary Clinton und Condoleeza Rice und jetzt Chef von Googles Denkfabrik. In diesem aufregenden Buch führen sie uns die Chancen und Gefahren jener eng vernetzten Welt vor Augen, die die meisten von uns noch erleben werden. Es ist die sehr konkrete Vision einer Zukunft, die bereits begonnen hat. Und ein engagiertes Plädoyer dafür, sie jetzt zu gestalten - weil Technologie der leitenden Hand des Menschen bedarf, um Positives zu bewirken.
    BK
    05.38 (Neue elektronische Medien) <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
    Classification
    05.38 (Neue elektronische Medien) <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
  5. Baumeister, H.; Schwärzel, K.: Wissenswelt Internet : Eine Infrastruktur und ihr Recht (2018) 0.02
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    BK
    05.38 Neue elektronische Medien Kommunikationswissenschaft
    Classification
    05.38 Neue elektronische Medien Kommunikationswissenschaft
    Footnote
    Rez. in: Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 71(2020) H.1, S.65-66 (M. Ockenfeld).
  6. Bunz, M.; Meikle, G.: ¬The Internet of things (2018) 0.02
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    Abstract
    More objects and devices are connected to digital networks than ever before. Things - from your phone to your car, from the heating to the lights in your house - have gathered the ability to sense their environments and create information about what is happening. Things have become media, able to both generate and communicate information. This has become known as 'the internet of things'. In this accessible introduction, Graham Meikle and Mercedes Bunz observe its promises of convenience and the breaking of new frontiers in communication. They also raise urgent questions regarding ubiquitous surveillance and information security, as well as the transformation of intimate personal information into commercial data. Discussing the internet of things from a media and communication perspective, this book is an important resource for courses analysing the internet and society, and essential reading for anyone who wants to better understand the rapidly changing roles of our networked lives.
    BK
    05.38 (Neue elektronische Medien) <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
    Classification
    05.38 (Neue elektronische Medien) <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
  7. Morozov, E.: ¬The net delusion : the dark side of internet freedom (2011) 0.02
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    BK
    05.38 / Neue elektronische Medien <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
    Classification
    05.38 / Neue elektronische Medien <Kommunikationswissenschaft>
    LCSH
    Freedom of information
    Subject
    Freedom of information
  8. Segev, E.: Google and the digital divide : the bias of online knowledge (2010) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Aimed at information and communication professionals, scholars and students, Google and the Digital Divide: The Biases of Online Knowledge provides invaluable insight into the significant role that search engines play in growing the digital divide between individuals, organizations, and states. With a specific focus on Google, author Elad Segev explains the concept of the digital divide and the effects that today's online environment has on knowledge bias, power, and control. Using innovative methods and research approaches, Segev compares the popular search queries in Google and Yahoo in the United States and other countries and analyzes the various biases in Google News and Google Earth. Google and the Digital Divide shows the many ways in which users manipulate Google's information across different countries, as well as dataset and classification systems, economic and political value indexes, specific search indexes, locality of use indexes, and much more. Segev presents important new social and political perspectives to illustrate the challenges brought about by search engines, and explains the resultant political, communicative, commercial, and international implications.
    Content
    Inhalt: Power, communication and the internet -- The structure and power of search engines -- Google and the politics of online searching -- Users and uses of Google's information -- Mass media channels and the world of Google News -- Google's global mapping
  9. Weinberger, D.: Too big to know : rethinking knowledge now that the facts aren't the facts, experts are everywhere, and the smartest person in the room is the room (2011) 0.00
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    Abstract
    In this title, a leading philosopher of the internet explains how knowledge and expertise can still work - and even grow stronger - in an age when the internet has made topics simply Too Big to Know. Knowing used to be so straightforward. If we wanted to know something we looked it up, asked an expert, gathered the facts, weighted the possibilities, and honed in on the best answer ourselves. But, ironically, with the advent of the internet and the limitless information it contains, we're less sure about what we know, who knows what, or even what it means to know at all. Knowledge, it would appear, is in crisis. And yet, while its very foundations seem to be collapsing, human knowledge has grown in previously unimaginable ways, and in inconceivable directions, in the Internet age. We fact-check the news media more closely and publicly than ever before. Science is advancing at an unheard of pace thanks to new collaborative techniques and new ways to find patterns in vast amounts of data. Businesses are finding expertise in every corner of their organization, and across the broad swath of their stakeholders. We are in a crisis of knowledge at the same time that we are in an epochal exaltation of knowledge. In "Too Big to Know", Internet philosopher David Weinberger explains that, rather than a systemic collapse, the Internet era represents a fundamental change in the methods we have for understanding the world around us. Weinberger argues that our notions of expertise - what it is, how it works, and how it is cultivated - are out of date, rooted in our pre-networked culture and assumptions. For thousands of years, we've relied upon a reductionist process of filtering, winnowing, and otherwise reducing the complex world to something more manageable in order to understand it. Back then, an expert was someone who had mastered a particular, well-defined domain. Now, we live in an age when topics are blown apart and stitched together by momentary interests, diverse points of view, and connections ranging from the insightful to the perverse. Weinberger shows that, while the limits of our own paper-based tools have historically prevented us from achieving our full capacity of knowledge, we can now be as smart as our new medium allows - but we will be smart differently. For the new medium is a network, and that network changes our oldest, most basic strategy of knowing. Rather than knowing-by-reducing, we are now knowing-by-including. Indeed, knowledge now is best thought of not as the content of books or even of minds, but as the way the network works. Knowledge will never be the same - not for science, not for business, not for education, not for government, not for any of us. As Weinberger makes clear, to make sense of this new system of knowledge, we need - and smart companies are developing - networks that are themselves experts. Full of rich and sometimes surprising examples from history, politics, business, philosophy, and science, "Too Big to Know" describes how the very foundations of knowledge have been overturned, and what this revolution means for our future.
    LCSH
    Information technology / Social aspects
    Subject
    Information technology / Social aspects
  10. Capurro, R.; Eldred, M.; Nagel, D.: Digital whoness : identity, privacy and freedom in the cyberworld (2013) 0.00
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    Theme
    Information
  11. Gugerli, D.: Suchmaschinen : die Welt als Datenbank (2009) 0.00
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    LCSH
    Information society
    Subject
    Information society
  12. Deep Search : Politik des Suchens jenseits von Google; Deep Search-Konferenz ; (Wien) : 2008.11.08; eine Veröffentlichung des World-Information Institute (2009) 0.00
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  13. Internet Privacy : eine multidisziplinäre Bestandsaufnahme / a multidisciplinary analysis: acatech STUDIE (2012) 0.00
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    Theme
    Information

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