cct109 final Flashcards
Political Economy
definition
- an examination of society
- regards the law, economy, political environment
- interrelated and helps establish and sustain social order
- new media studies focus on an examination of the regulation and ownership of media
Immaterial Labour
definition
Participatory culture is vulnerable to the accusation that the immaterial labour of participants is being co-opted by owners of websites without any meaningful control over how it is being used
Surveillance & Privacy
definition
- the coordinated and organized observation of someone to control their behaviour
- surveillance is commercial, state, personal, and criminal aspects
- new media generally influence all
- e.g.. analyzing purchasing power trends from trends according to status updates on twitter
Governance
definition
- a blend of policy, regulation, law, commercial, consumer practice, & organizational behaviour
- during considerable uncertainty about who has control over the internet, there is a lot of concern over “internet governance”
- especially as a partial antidote to the free rein of “cyber-liberation” notions
Regulatory Capture
- Regulatory capture happens when a political entity is undercut by the same forces it is trying to regulate
- Government policies are then developed to serve a special interest over that of the public
- This is especially troubling when it comes to technology policy
Platforms Economy
definition
- the extent where the modern economy has become dependent on what it is built on
- online platforms: google (search), Microsoft (software), amazon (sales)
Some of the companies that were the most successful in the 2000s (e.g., Amazon, eBay, and Google) were able to leverage scale.
● Digitization of content transformed the distributional models of the media and entertainment industries
● When a wider range of content is made more accessible through tightly contained online distribution and retail
● With traditional constraints of geography and scale being eliminated, it is niche content that accounts for a rapidly growing proportion of total online sales
Knowledge-Economy
definition
- an economy characterized by a high level of dependence
- internally and in the form of trade, on knowledge creation, distribution, and exports
Networked Publics
definition
publics that are restructured by networked technologies
Affordance
definition
- Affordance comes from networked publics
- what is new and what is not?
-we must recognize how tech introduces new social possibilities and how these challenge assumptions people have about everyday interaction - the design and architecture of environments enable certain types of interaction to occur
- the characteristics of an environment are affordances because they make it possible & in some cases, encourage certain types of practices
eCommerce
definition
- online transactions: consumer purchases (buying online) and business-to-business (B2B ordering new stock from a supplier)
- the growing number of industries
- fully electronic model is the norm even for goods that are consumed (apple music)
Gig Economy
definition
- an economy that has a lot of people working in short-term, transient work, often online but not always
- often seen by a platform like uber
Astroturfing
definition
(linkig it to artificial grass that covers a soccer field), this practice of generating “fake buzz” (or opposition) is being applied in commercial and political realms and is driven by algorithms and machine learning that can be said to constitute a form of AI
Globalization
definition
- Markets, technology, cultures, and businesses are blended, becoming accessible everywhere globally
- term also refers to the process of moving jobs and capital to where they will get the biggest return (jobs moving to low-wadge countries)
Copyright infringment
definition
- the use of copyrighted materials without permission
- normally, in a digital age
- copying a song, movie or text without payment or permission
Digital Rights Management
definition
- in response to copyright issues in the media and entertainment, often are aggressive
- ## at the technological level, there is a focus on the development on technological protection measures (TPMs), and digital rights management (DRM)
Open-source Movement (alternative internet)
Open-software and free-software movements have pioneered decentralized, networked, and collaborative initiatives developing new forms of software licensed through non-proprietorial general public licences
- not only can users acquire the software at no cost, but they can also get access to the source code, which they can apply, modify, or reconfigure
Underpinning the emergence of this large community of software developers are a series of broad principles:
- A general belief in freely available content
- A belief that collaborative, non-proprietorial initiatives ultimately generate better product and that open source has a compelling commercial, as well as moral, logic
- An implicit belief in the value of a gift economy
Panopticon
definition
A prison design where all inmates were always in view of an unseen camera and would therefore police themselves since they never knew when they were being watched
Platform Society
definition
- social relations and culture that build up within a platform economy
- including new jobs (content creator, influencer)
- new norms of influence and celebrity, new ways of entertainment (netflix)
What are Networked Publics Simtoaneously?
- the space constructed through networked technologies, &
- the imagined community that emerges from the intersection of people, technology, and practice.
What do Networked Publics Afford their Users?
Affordance
Affordance of Networked Publics
Networked publics have different characteristics than traditional physical public spaces. Four affordances shape the mediated environments that are created by social media. Although these affordances are not in and of themselves new, their relation to one another because of networked publics creates new opportunities and challenges. They are:
- persistence: the durability of online expressions and content;
- visibility: the potential audience who can bear witness;
- spreadability: the ease with which content can be shared
- searchability: the ability to find content.
what do public networks inhabit for teens?
Paradoxically, the networked publics they inhabit allow them a measure of privacy and autonomy that is not possible at home, where parents and siblings are often listening in
how workers navigate platforms
- YouTube creators have to manage questions of respectability and representation. Too far in any one direction, and they might lose audience—or worse, face demonetization from YouTube.
- Over time, Youtubers have seen a depreciation in the value of their work, as YouTube has sought to capture more of that value for itself.
-On other platforms, access to monetary compensation can be shaped by everything from audience demand to geography.