La vie virtuelle
July 26, 2009
I’ve just had a wake-up call from reality. I hate those things, they always mean that I’m going to have to do something I don’t like.
Recap: I applied and was offered a place to attempt my PhD at the other end of the country. I recently went there for the first time. Lovely place, pleasant town, college was a bit run down but they are getting a new one soon.
But it felt wrong. I couldn’t really put my finger on it.
Was it the interactions that I had with people while I was there ? On the whole they weren’t unpleasant, probably not the most helpful folks I’ve every met in the service sector, but honest. They seemed OK online.
Was it physical isolation ? OK it was a long drive from here to there, but here is more isolated than there.
Maybe it was just the weather and sleep deprivation due to heavy rain on canvas.
It was a long drive home, so I thought about it quite deeply (but not to distraction). I think that the place wasn’t sufficiently different to where I was coming from. The physical balance was different with more focus on land and less on sea, but essentially the elements are the same. Even the economies of the areas are similar – mining, farming & tourism. Again, a different balance but the same elements.
And I wondered about how that sort of ambient situational noise would translate into online communities or even if it is relevant since the sense of physical ‘place’ online has no direct analogy. In a way this is what my PhD was supposed to be about – the translation effects between online & offline versions of reality. What do people say when the world is looking over their shoulders vs what do people do in the privacy of their own lives ?
Update – has ‘place’ been replaced by ‘community’ online ? If so, perceiving community is not dependent on any physical parameter, apart from access to the net. What does that mean in terms of nation and of national politics ? If our community only lies in virtual space do we pledge allegiance to the physical embodiment of the virtual space and form our own armies to protect server farms ? Do we take responsibility for that virtual community and its real-world impacts or is there something inherently different about a non-corporeal community ? Does its basis in the commercial world mean that an online community can be expected to persist in the same way as a physical one ? What happens when Facespace goes bust ? Is it the same as a nation going into political turmoil ? Are there online refugees ?
Yes, lots to explore over the next few years. Check out the new report on the Internet and Civic Engagement from the Pew Internet Project. Interesting stuff, but a bit cart before the horse. I think that we need to address some of the deeper questions about how people engage with each other before we start to act on this sort of data.
Loving this app
July 4, 2009
I’m sure that there must be simply oodles of uses for this. I can’t for the life of me think of one
Buzztracker.org – geographic news search
I think that its the irrelevance of location of the news source that tickles me most. You are as likely to see an Australian paper reporting on Micheal Owen’s transfer to Man U as you are to see a Chinese site talking about the coup in Honduras. Since the vast majority of these stories are syndicated news feeds the thought that these maps of associations somehow equate to news rippling out from its origin is a stretch to say the least since there is no significant time lag difference between when Sydney sees a European story and when Beijing sees an Latin American one. But its a nice art project and I love it for that.
Ethical Data Mining
June 14, 2009
I’m starting to think about where the line should be drawn when data mining web content, specifically content provided by individuals. I almost said private individuals there, but if you are posting on a publicly visible blog, comments board or whatever, then by definition private is no longer applicable. Or is it ?
What is the difference between government agencies putting together a profile on me from my electronic footprint and me doing it on someone else as part of a scientific research project, or indeed a third party doing it for commercial reasons (thinking of Phorm) ? What are the methodological and ethical differences ? Are there any ?
There are a couple that leap to mind with regards to government responsibilities and accountability, but I’m still thinking about this so no conclusions yet.
