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Mapping the Twittersphere for the EU Election
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 23:21 — Snurb
Politics
Elections
Social Media
Social Media Network Mapping
Twitter
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The final speaker in the ASMC14 session is Axel Maireder, whose focus is on the
structure of the Twittersphere surrounding the recent European Union election. His
approach is to examine the follower networks of participants in relevant discussions,
and to explore which factors explain their structural patterns – such as shared
national and language identity, political ideology, or other factors.
The study captured all tweets containing keywords such as European Parliament,
European Election, and relevant hashtags (in the various European languages), and
gathered tweets from some 440,000 users in total. Filtering these to users with at
least two tweets and at least 250 followers resulted in some 11,000 core users who
were retained for the network analysis.
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1910 reads
Active Audiences for the News
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 23:19 — Snurb
Politics
Journalism
Social Media
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
Up next at ASMC14 is Jacob Ørmen, whose interest is in the processes of news
engagement. News has always been conveyed to others through many different
channels, importantly also including ordinary political conversations between
everyday people. Social media and similar sites facilitate such conversations, but this
also needs to be placed in a wider context that also recognises other such
conversations.
In which situations, then, do people engage in such conversations about politics?
When and where do they do so? Jacob has examined this for the case of Denmark,
where political engagement generally is fairly strong; Danes generally like to talk
about politics, but do not necessarily do so online. Jacob's approach to researching
this has used surveys and interviews to explore how people choose their spaces for
political discussion.
He has defined a number of types: mixed sharers, who talk face to face, but mostly
on social media; conversationalists who mainly use face to face; news consumers
who receive but do not discuss political news; and disengaged citizens.
Conversationalists and news consumers receive information via face to face, email,
SMS, phone, and social media, but do not themselves further the discussion through
electronic media forms; conversationalists tend to be older or of school age, while
mixed sharers are largely early to middle-aged adults.
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1409 reads
Online Media in the Italian Presidential Election
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 23:18 — Snurb
Politics
Elections
Social Media
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The second speaker in this ASMC14 session is Edoardo Novelli, whose interest is in
the online activities around the recent election of the Italian President. While the
President was elected by members of parliament, a great deal of alternative direct
democracy activities took place online, driven especially by the Cinque Stelle
movement of Beppe Grillo.
Edoardo conducted an analysis of social as well as mainstream media activities
around the election, gathering data from newspapers and television, Internet and
social media. During the election, the Net was used by various actors for official and
unofficial forms of communication. This caused a change in the traditional flows of
information and diffusion across a hybrid news system, impacted on traditional
political communication practices, and allowed for the emergence of grassroots
voices.
Largely, the Net has been used by parties and politicians for official and political
communications. Cinque Stelle ran an online poll of its members as an alternative
election to that of the President; important political meetings were broadcast live,
and thereby turned into performances; Twitter was used very widely to convene
demonstrations; social media were used to comment on events during the election
process; political leaders were taking directly to social media to bypass conventional
communication channels; party Websites and politican blogs also played a role.
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1525 reads
Understanding the Norwegian Twitter Elite
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 23:16 — Snurb
Politics
Social Media
Twitter
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The next session at ASMC14 starts with Eirik Vatnøy, who takes a rhetorical
perspective in his approach to Twitter. Social media are an arena for political debate,
but how do they change the norms and praxis of political rhetoric? Eirik interviewed
Twitter users who engaged in continuous political debate on the platform.
Rhetorics considers the public sphere as a reticulate public sphere (made up of many
smaller spheres), and this applies to Twitter as well. Actors recognise the discursive
and social norms which uphold such spheres, and a combination of quantitative and
qualitative analysis of communicative activities can help to explore these norms.
However, this is a complex challenge, as different users may use the various
affordances of Twitter as a platform in different ways.
Eirik interviewed 18 users, chosen through snowball selection; they included active
politicians, editors, journalists, bloggers, communication workers, lawyers, etc.
Interviews were structured around key themes including perceived affordances, toles
and relations, discursive norms, and social norms.
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1527 reads
Social Media and Public Service Media
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 20:07 — Snurb
Journalism
Social Media
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
Television
The final keynote at ASMC14 is by the fabulous Hallvard Moe, whose focus is on the
intersections between social media and public service broadcasting. How can media
researchers contribute to rethinking public service broadcasting? Defining PSB is
difficult, but there is often a belief that policy makers know it when they see it; PSB
is an inherently contested concept, coined a very long time ago in a very different
context – even in Europe alone, how PSBs are positioned and organised is very
different across different countries.
What such institutions have in common, though, is the general aim that PSBs should
provide vital information and contribute to the public good; they are a policy tool to
provide journalism and bring citizens together as a public. PSB institutions around
the world do not necessarily always achieve such an ideal – they now exist in almost
constant turmoil, due to a range of contextual factors. They can only survive by
externalising their internal challenges; these challenges are always present, and in
recent years especially associated with the rise of digital media and the media
practices such media enable and promote.
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2354 reads
The Passion in New Journalistic Models
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 18:20 — Snurb
Journalism
Industrial Journalism
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The final speakers in the ASMC14 session is by Tamara Witschge and Mark Deuze.
Tamara begins by noting her skepticism about the current state of journalism, and
highlights the fact that many journalists are highly reluctant to work as freelancers
outside of the conventional newsroom – yet those journalists who do work as
freelancers often say that they would not go back to an institutional setting.
This is a question relating to the social dimension of news production, of course. New
models challenge the conceptualisation of what is news, who produces it, and what
it is for; new news startups show remarkable passion and innovation in rethinking
the idea of news, and do not necessarily work with conventional conceptualisations
of journalism. Tamara's and Mark's project aims to gain insight into such new
organisations.
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1847 reads
The Individualism of Online Social Movements
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 18:19 — Snurb
Produsers and Produsage
Produsage Communities
Social Media
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The third speaker at this ASMC14 session is Paolo Gerbaudo, whose interest is in the
organisational processes of informal collaboration in social media activism. In order
to understand these processes it is not enough to study the large datasets of their
outputs, but to also ask the people behind such activities why and how they do this
work.
Across the various cases of social media activism in recent years there has been a
clear power distribution – a handful of leading accounts have been driving protests
such as Occupy, Indignados, or the Arab Spring. These accounts have attracted a
large number of followers and serve as movement leaders and organisers. Who is
behind these accounts; who is working to keep such feeds going, and how?
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1528 reads
Wikipedia's Role as a Gatekeeper
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 18:19 — Snurb
Produsage Communities
Wikipedia
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The next ASMC14 speaker is Heather Ford, who shifts our focus to Wikipedia. In its
early days, the site was seen as an underdog challenging existing publishing models
– this includes news publishers, and Wikipedia was seen as a challenger to the
conventional gatekeepers. It was also shown that the quality of its content was not
necessarily any worse than that of traditional encyclopaedias, even though it had
been collaboratively compiled. Nonetheless, a persistent view of its inaccuracy due
to this collaborative model remains.
Wikipedia itself offers a range of self-definitions, which inter alia point out that
Wikipedia is not a social network (or even a dating service), so personal profiles
should be kept short; not a soap box from which to promote personal views or original
research. Wikipedia also defines reliable sources which should be used as evidence
for its articles, and in doing so for the most part explicitly rules out self-published
media (blogs, etc.) as unreliable.
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1539 reads
Journalists' Reluctance to Engage with New Media
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 18:17 — Snurb
Journalism
Industrial Journalism
Social Media
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The final day at ASMC14 starts with Chris Anderson, who begins with noting the
strange, halting, and unexpected adoption of new digital tools in journalism; there
has been treat reluctance to engage with some technologies, while others have been
adopted much more quickly. For example, the New York Times has one of the best
data journalism operations in the business, but on the other hand only began to
hyperlink to other sites about a year ago – why this strange imbalance?
This likely has something to do with professional culture and attitudes in journalism,
deeply embedded with journalists' own understanding of how they maintain their
cultural authority. Journalism arises from the valorisation of a socially odd form of
work, and from a particular vision of the public. This interacts in complex ways with
the organisational routines in journalistic practice. The current crisis of news, then,
is one of management, economics, and technology, but also of culture, authority and
professional identity.
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1354 reads
Entering the Age of the Generative Algorithm
Fri, 20/06/2014 - 01:04 — Snurb
'Big Data'
Social Media
Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space (ASMC) 2014
The final keynote at ASMC14 for today is by Bernhard Rieder from the Digital
Methods Initiative, who stepped in at short notice for Tarleton Gillespie who could not
be here. He begins by noting the role of algorithms in our experience of information
and media; they select what information is considered most relevant to us, and are
now a crucial part of our participation in public life. This raises a number of questions
– and starting with search engines, such algorithms have been considered
increasingly by researchers.
One way to approach algorithms is by considering the question of knowing: what
style of reasoning do algorithms implement, and how do they connect this to forms
of performativity. Bernhard has been one of the chief developers of the Digital
Methods Initiative, and in this role works closely with as well as thinks critically
through algorithms; this is also a process of opening the black box of the algorithms
which shape our online experiences.
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