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Contemporary Culture and the Web

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Contemporary Culture and the Web Dr Axel Bruns Creative Industries Faculty Queensland University of Technology a.bruns_at_qut.edu.au – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Contemporary Culture and the Web


1
Contemporary Cultureand the Web
  • Dr Axel Bruns
  • Creative Industries Faculty
  • Queensland University of Technology
  • a.bruns_at_qut.edu.au

2
A Tale of Two Webs
  • Web development in divergent directions
  • towards greater commercialisation high
    production values, broadband-ready, but
    relatively non-interactive packaged content
  • towards more user co-creativity highly
    interactive, open-ended and unfinished forms,
    emerging from the grassroots

3
A From Homepages to Blogs
  • Homepages
  • began as basic information pages, with personal
    details, favourite links, etc.
  • usually static, using plain HTML, infrequently
    edited, non-interactive
  • Blogs
  • ranging from public diaries to personal
    commentary on current events
  • dynamic, database-driven, frequently updated,
    enabling user commentary and interlinkage with
    other sites (e.g. snurb.info)
  • embedded in a vast, loose network of blogs the
    blogosphere

4
B From Community News to Open News
  • Community News
  • began as a simple way of updating current events
    of interest to a specific group
  • usually on static HTML pages, updated by a small
    group of enthusiasts, non-interactive
  • Open News
  • large-scale Web publications created and edited
    by the community itself
  • dynamic, database-driven content enabling any
    user to submit new content or comment on
    published stories, or even to help edit submitted
    content (e.g. Kuro5hin.org)

5
C From Resource Sites to Wikis
  • Resource sites
  • began as collections of background information on
    specific topics
  • usually on static HTML pages, maintained by a
    small group of experts in their field,
    non-interactive
  • Wikis
  • collaboratively edited, database-driven
    encyclopaedias on specific topics
  • drawing on the expertise of large user
    communities which are able to add and edit
    content at any time (e.g. the Wikipedia)

6
Common Traits
  • Technology
  • reliance on database backends makes sites
    dynamic, interactive, and searchable
  • such technology is now in the hands of end users,
    not just corporations (users are often the
    earliest adopters)
  • Community
  • move from individual to communal authorship
    users comment on and edit one anothers work
    (sites resemble palimpsests)
  • open source model trust in the power of
    eyeballs in improving the quality of content
  • heterarchical rather than hierarchical power
    structures
  • Creativity
  • move from mere interactivity to intercreativity
    (Tim Berners-Lee)
  • free contribution of ones work in support of a
    greater good (a creative commons)

7
Beyond the Webpage
  • Change in the basic unit of information
  • from the individual page to the individual entry
  • e.g. a blog posting
  • e.g. a news story
  • e.g. an encyclopedia entry
  • towards syndication of information
  • e.g. through RSS (Rich Site Summary)
    newsfeeds(see RSS feed for BBC News ? on
    snurb.info)
  • e.g. through feed aggregator and analyser
    services(see Daypop rankings of most popular
    topics and links)
  • e.g. through TrackBack and other networking
    tools(see TrackBacks in Lawrence Lessigs blog)

8
Information as Virus
  • Information becomes viral
  • detached from its traditional host, the Webpage
  • carried rapidly through multiple channels
  • attaching itself to various hosts in mutated
    forms
  • Content is detached from format
  • embedded in different contexts, modified and
    commented upon
  • forming a true web of information, not merely a
    web of pages
  • widely distributed across multiple platforms and
    contexts
  • analogous to filesharing, where music is detached
    from its physical carrier medium (but here
    usually legal and intentional)

9
Implications for Web Archiving
  • What should be archived?
  • it may begin to make more sense to archive
    individual entries rather than whole pages
  • Who is the author?
  • collaboratively edited content has complex,
    multiple authorship which is not always readily
    apparent
  • How to capture the context?
  • distributed webs of information spread across
    multiple Websites are difficult to archive
  • How to capture the functionality?
  • content may only become visible as users query
    these Websites it may be useful to archive the
    database backend
  • How to identify new trends?
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