Search (3 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × subject_ss:"Internet / Social aspects"
  1. Welzer, H.: ¬Die smarte Diktatur : der Angriff auf unsere Freiheit (2016) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Unsere Gesellschaft verändert sich radikal, aber fast unsichtbar. Wir steuern auf einen Totalitarismus zu. Das Private verschwindet, die Macht des Geldes wächst ebenso wie die Ungleichheit, wir kaufen immer mehr und zerstören damit die Grundlage unseres Lebens. Statt die Chance der Freiheit zu nutzen, die historisch hart und bitter erkämpft wurde, werden wir zu Konsum-Zombies, die sich alle Selbstbestimmung durch eine machtbesessene Industrie abnehmen lässt, deren Lieblingswort »smart« ist. Was heißt das für unsere Gesellschaft? Nach seinem Bestseller >Selbst denken< analysiert Harald Welzer in >Die smarte Diktatur. Der Angriff auf unsere Freiheit<, wie die scheinbar unverbundenen Themen von big data über Digitalisierung, Personalisierung, Internet der Dinge, Drohnen bis Klimawandel zusammenhängen. Daraus folgt: Zuschauen ist keine Haltung. Es ist höchste Zeit für Gegenwehr, wenn man die Freiheit erhalten will! Bestseller-Autor Harald Welzer legt mit >Die smarte Diktatur. Der Angriff auf unsere Freiheit< eine neue und frische Analyse der großen gesellschaftlichen Zusammenhänge in Deutschland vor, eine umfassende Diagnose der Gegenwart für alle politisch Interessierten.
    RSWK
    Data Mining
    Subject
    Data Mining
  2. Rogers, R.: Digital methods (2013) 0.01
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    Content
    The end of the virtual : digital methods -- The link and the politics of Web space -- The website as archived object -- Googlization and the inculpable engine -- Search as research -- National Web studies -- Social media and post-demographics -- Wikipedia as cultural reference -- After cyberspace : big data, small data.
  3. 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.