The PG-13 Version of This Blog Entry Has Been Rated NSFW

Posted on Dec 29, 2010 | 0 comments

The following entry is the “SFW” (i.e., PG-13) version of: This Blog Entry Has Been Rated NSFW What is “age appropriate” viewing? Who determines when you can see what? Let’s begin with some representative vignettes. The first from the print-centric paradigm of my youth. When I was a teenager in the seventies, growing up in the South, there were visible, physical boundaries marking what was fit for consumption by...

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This Blog Entry Has Been Rated NSFW

Posted on Dec 29, 2010 | 0 comments

What is “age appropriate” viewing? Who determines when you can see what? Let’s begin with some representative vignettes. The first from the print-centric paradigm of my youth. When I was a teenager in the seventies, growing up in the South, there were visible, physical boundaries marking what was fit for consumption by those who were “under aged.” At the back of the local used paperback bookstore, a curtain...

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Let’s Go to Court: One-Point-Oh Responses to a 2.0 Reality

Posted on Dec 24, 2010 | 0 comments

On December 21st, 2010, the Home News reported that Tyler Clementi’s parents filed notice of their intent to sue Rutgers University. In the notice, the Clementi family’s lawyer contends that the university failed to protect Clementi from the “unlawful or otherwise improper acts perpetrated against” him. The notice goes on to say: it appears Rutgers University failed to act, failed to put in place and/or failed to implement, and...

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Don’t Poke the Bear: Scrimmaging with Anonymous

Posted on Dec 18, 2010 | 0 comments

Hacktivism is in the news, if not exactly grabbing headlines. When major service providers pulled the plug on WikiLeaks, temporarily cutting off access to the site via its domain name, “WikiLeaks.org” in hopes of hobbling financial support the venture, the boys at anonymous sprung into action, unleashing their anarchic, anti-corporate rage in the form of a series of attacks on a host of websites across the globe. What does this mean,...

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In The Spirit of the Season, Time Magazine Rips You a New One: Of Prizes and WMDs

Posted on Dec 16, 2010 | 0 comments

Prizes. At this time of year, you can’t escape them. Top ten viral videos. Best scandals of the year. The Darwin Awards. And, of course, the induction into print media’s Hall of Fame: Time‘s Man of the Year Award. This award, you’ll recall, recognizes the person who “for better or worse has most influenced events in the past year.” Like the Academy Awards, there’s a lot of build up, the pre-hype hype,...

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After Abu Ghraib: Standing By in Silence

Posted on Dec 15, 2010 | 0 comments

At this point in the discussion, it should come as no surprise to learn that an account has surfaced on the free online dating service, OKcupid, that appears to have belonged to Julian Assange back in 2006-2007. There’s nothing particularly startling in the profile of the person who self-identifies as Harry Harrison–it’s a dating site after all, so the convention is braggadocio. The profile pictures are definitely...

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Is Nothing Sacred? Is Nothing Private?

Posted on Dec 14, 2010 | 0 comments

At the end of my last post, I asked the question, “Is nothing sacred?” Here are some responses to that question, via the world of Web 2.0: After a day of denial, Gawker acknowledges that it has been hacked and that the private data of its 1.3M users have been posted to an open site for downloading by others.Meaning?If you have a Gawker account, your password is available to anyone who visits the bit-torrent site. (If you’re...

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148 Followers and Nothing On: Digital Voyeurism and the Public Sphere

Posted on Dec 9, 2010 | 0 comments

My Facebook inbox contained a friend request this morning from a young woman who has three profile pix, including this one: Friend Request, Blurring Added I don’t know her and don’t believe I’ve ever seen her. When I received the request, we had no “mutual friends”–meaning none of my 174 friends on Facebook is friends with her (two hours after the request, the young woman and I now have “1 mutual...

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Don’t Read Wikileaks: The Government Confronts the End of Privacy

Posted on Dec 6, 2010 | 0 comments

“This is not a ‘phone,’” Dr. Englander told the parents who looked, collectively, shellshocked. What you’ve given your child “is a mobile computer.” This quote comes from “As Bullies Go Digital, Parents Play Catchup,” the latest cage-rattling piece in the Times’ ongoing coverage of technology’s disruptive influence on the family. It’s easy enough to interpret parental cluelessness of...

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The Panda Sneezes: Youth Culture and The Digital Tattoo

Posted on Dec 2, 2010 | 0 comments

A little more than a year ago,  On September 29th, 2010 Gawker ran a story with the headline: How a College Kid Livestreamed His Roommate’s Gay Sexual Encounter, Possibly Causing a Suicide.  Dharun Ravi’s trial begins this week and is sure to receive international coverage. The series of essays explores what the original coverage of this tragedy has to tell us about the changing definition of privacy in the 21st century. This was...

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