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By Mark Bahnisch on September 16, 2009
A lot of the most reliable data on web use and social media comes from the World Internet Project. Most of the findings from the project derive from rigorous quantitative research, and unlike a lot of what purports to be [...]
Posted in Blogging, Books, Writers & Writing, Culture, Film, TV, Video etc, Life, Media, Sociology, The Web | Tagged business models, content creation, cultural studies, Culture, Economics, everyday life, facebook, fairfax, future of journalism, future of media, internet, jeffrey cole, lived experience, margaret simons, myspace, newspapers, print journalism, science and technology studies, social media, social networking, social uses of technology, Sociology, swinburne university, user generated content, web, web 2.0, world internet project |
By Mark Bahnisch on April 8, 2009
<img src="http://larvatusprodeo.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/doomsday460.jpg" align=left Part of the whole “death of the newspaper” narrative arc (though not the current focus on Google as a supposedly evil aggregator, driven by the commercial interests of news corporations) is the purported death of the critic. [...]
Posted in Blogging, Books, Writers & Writing, Consumerism, Culture, Film, TV, Video etc, Media, Sociology, The Web | Tagged action movies, audiences, canon, cinema, content creation, creative industries, cultural economics, cultural sociology, cultural studies, Culture, culture industries, David and Margaret, Doomsday, dvd, Fenella Kernebone, Film, film criticism, IMDB, internet, John Howkins, marketing, Media, movies, new media, newspapers, post-apocalyptic, print, review, reviewers, reviews, rhona mitra, science fiction, Sociology, user generated content, user reviews, web |
By Mark Bahnisch on April 6, 2009
Rupert Murdoch and a gaggle of editors/columnists/commentatorsminions have been sounding off about the evils of Google as a news aggregator. News Limited is a “content creator”, it’s asserted, and news aggregation is something akin to theft. A few years ago, [...]
Posted in Blogging, Books, Writers & Writing, Culture, Media, Politics, Sociology, The Web | Tagged blogosphere, blogs, consumer behaviour, content creation, google, media industry, news aggregators, News Limited, newspapers, online, Rupert Murdoch, user generated content |
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