[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Call for Participation - Digital Methods Summer School 2015
Thu Apr 09 05:59:42 GMT 2015
Call for Participation: Digital Methods Summer School 2015
Post-Snowden Media Empiricism and Secondary Social Media: Data Studies
Beyond Facebook and Twitter
Digital Methods Summer School - 29 June - 10 July 2015
The Summer School is pleased to have Lev Manovich give the opening
keynote on Monday, 29 June.
This year's Digital Methods Summer School is devoted to what we call
‘post-Snowden media empiricism’ and 'secondary social media’.
Post-Snowden media empiricism refers to how to study online media since
the revelations in June 2013 about the breadth and scope of NSA
surveillance activities. Writing about the future of media theory,
post-Snowden, scholars are closing the age of Internet innocence. For
years one would study the extent to which cyberspace is an alternative
space, a realm of new politics, corporealities and identity play,
cleared of reputation, institutions and regulatory legal regimes. Such a
point of departure is long dated, but the post-Snowden dates others too.
The likely exception is surveillance studies, once a branch or
sub-field. Such is the context these days for calls for 'post-media' as
well as 'post-digital' studies.
In considering how to rethink the study of online media, post-Snowden,
there is a series of proposals for new theory, but there is not the
concomitant attention to the empirical project. What may be the agenda
for a post-Snowden media empiricism? Are there digital methods for a
post-Snowden surveillance studies? Considering how to approach online
media generally nowadays, we ask:
1 What does it mean for media researchers to treat and study
empirically the web as an intelligence medium? Do we hunt for
confidential documents and study leaks? Would we inevitably slope
towards intelligence work?
2 In post-Snowden media empiricism, would one embrace the study of the
dark web, 'anonymous', onion routers and such? Should we throw a Tor
install party?
3 Ghostery and other software that tracks trackers (like our very own “
tracker tracker” tool) are means to study soft surveillance online
(third party cookies, beacons, etc.). Does such surveillance study
pale in the face of the sheer scale of post-Snowden media?
4 With the cloud we have moved from a user logic of downloading to one
of uploading. Should we replace our scrapers with sniffers?
5 Do the older new media methods still apply? Could we map the cloud as
linked server space?
The NSA did not name all the social media platforms. 'Secondary social
media' is a term we are using to compliment and place opposite to GAFA
(Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon), employed increasingly in French
intellectual circles to denote U.S. digital cultural imperialism. What
value do the other social media platforms have for social research? If
Google can be shown to author new source epistemologies, Apple's iOS
store (together with Amazon's lists) as sources for best-selling issues
and Facebook for most engaged with content, what do secondary social
media such as Instagram, Pinterest and Tumblr have to offer? We are also
interested in social media alternatives and new online spaces offering
conviviality without necessarily resorting to the logic of the social graph.
Big Platforms, or GAFA
Among the big data critiques is the notion of ready-made data. This line
of thought is part of the continuum which sees a wholesale switch from
hermeneutics to pattern-recognition as well as a reputational swing
favouring those with big analytical infrastructure. But there needs to
be data for the machines that learn and the analysts who run them.
Ready-made data as a big data critique refers to an over reliance on API
streams for the study of virtually any societal matter, such as Twitter
data to monitor disasters, revolutions and presidential transitions and
predict flu trends, elections as well as celebrity awards.
Which data are preferred? Whilst the term has deeper roots in the
consideration of publishing old media online, the acronym, GAFA,
standing for Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, has resonated particularly
in the French press and scientific literature as the new term for U.S.
digital cultural imperialism, expanded from allusions to Googlization
nearly a decade ago, which also coincided with a call for a European
search engine, Quaero. Whilst the term may fit well for media publishers
and advertisers, for data analysts Twitter is an obvious addition for
the study of influence and trend as would be Wikipedia, not only for
monitoring attention to matters of concern and cross-cultural comparison
but also for data groundwork such as keyword and source list-building
(with the advantage or disadvantage of often being exhaustive such as
the list of social networking websites).
As a counter-point to GAFA, and the study of big platforms, we would
like to introduce the notion of secondary social media, with the
question, where are the other signals (online) for the potential
purposes of social research? And do they tend to be studied in a similar
fashion as the big platforms (monitoring and prediction)? How else to
study them?
When one queries new trending social media networks, most popular social
media sites for teens or other auto-suggested and completed key phrases
in leading search engines, the lists may be concatenated (the exhaustive
approach) or triangulated, serving up LinkedIn, Pinterest, Instagram,
Tumblr, Flickr, Vine, Meetup, and other platforms but also the ‘after
Facebook’ messaging applications such as Snapchat. How to study the
other social media?
The first recognition is that secondary social media is meant as a term
in a research sense rather than one pursued from a political economy
point of view. We realise that Vine is owned by Twitter, Flickr by
Yahoo, Instagram by Facebook, meaning that they are already GAFA-like,
and rising on (potential) market capitalization lists. They are
understudied, however, both generally but also in terms of how they may
be repurposed for social research, which is the digital methods approach.
Secondary social media have specificities as well as similiarities to
Twitter and Facebook, which may makes methods of their study comparable.
Instagram selfies (including their locations and characteristics) have
seen scholarly attention as has (gendered) social curation on Pinterest.
But one may make use of the content tagging and activity on the
platformed social media so as to study issue engagement. Instagram has
hashtags (and comments), and Pinterest likes, repins and comments,
organising content and metrified attention to it in ways similar to
Twitter and Facebook, where one routinely studies most engaged with
content (through the likes, shares, comments, liked comments on Facebook
pages and groups, and retweets and favorites on Twitter), often finding
content with characteristics consistent with memes. With its reblogging
feature, Tumblr is similar, as potentially are its modes of analysis.
Indeed, there may be a temptation to reduce all social media analysis
with digital methods to the study of network metrics, particuarly
through inquiries into influence, be it of an individual (clout) or a
subject matter (trend). The ease with which data can be collected from
such platform APIs as Twitter, and poured into analytics buckets attests
to the admonition. As an analytical strategy, however, one also may
prefer the specificities of the platform over the typical metrics
measures. On the list are mature platforms such as Flickr, where one
typically studies tagging’s new taxonomies, or more specifically the
social life tags, watching which pictures most significantly occupy the
politics tag over time, for example. There is LinkedIn, which one can
study the (new) skill sets of professions, profiling the new job names
and activities in the emerging creative industries. Snapchat to date has
had little scholarship or attention paid to its analytics, apart from a
security breach into its unauthorised API, thus far defying repurposing.
When is a platform less suitable or even useless for repurposing for
social research? Such could also fill in the notion of secondary social
media.
About "Digital Methods" as Concept
Digital methods is a term coined as a counter-point to virtual methods,
which typically digitize existing methods and port them onto the Web.
Digital methods, contrariwise, seek to learn from the methods built into
the dominant devices online, and repurpose them for social and cultural
research. That is, the challenge is to study both the info-web as well
as the social web with the tools that organize them. There is a general
protocol to digital methods. At the outset stock is taken of the
natively digital objects that are available (links, tags, threads, etc.)
and how devices such as search engines make use of them. Can the device
techniques be repurposed, for example by remixing the digital objects
they take as inputs? Once findings are made with online data, where to
ground them? Is the baseline still the offline, or are findings to be
grounded in more online data? There is also a Digital Methods book (MIT
Press, 2013) as well as a complementary Issue Mapping book (Amsterdam
University Press, 2015).
About the Summer School
The Digital Methods Summer School, founded in 2007 together with the
Digital Methods Initiative, is directed by Professor Richard Rogers,
Chair in New Media & Digital Culture at the University of Amsterdam. The
Summer School is one training opportunity provided by the Digital
Methods Initiative (DMI). DMI also has a Winter School, which includes a
mini-conference, where papers are presented and responded to. Winter
School papers are often the result of Summer School projects. The Summer
School is coordinated by two PhD candidates in New Media at the
University of Amsterdam, or affiliates. This year the coordinators are
to be announced. The Summer School has a technical staff as well as a
design staff, drawn from the ranks of Density Design in Milan. The
Summer School also relies on a technical infrastructure of some nine
servers hosting tools and storing data. In a culture of experimentation
and skill-sharing, participants bring their laptops, learn method,
undertake research projects, make reports, tools and graphics and write
them up on the Digital Methods wiki. The Summer School concludes with
final presentations. Often there are guests from non-governmental or
other organizations who present their issues. For instance, Women on
Waves came along during the 2010, Fair Phone to the 2012 Summer School
and Greenpeace and their Gezi Park project in 2013. We worked on the
issue of rewilding with NGOs in the 2014 Summer School. Digital Methods
people are currently interning at major NGOs and international
organizations. Previous Digital Methods Summer Schools, 2007-2014,
https://wiki.digitalmethods.net/Dmi/DmiSummerSchool. See also previous
Digital Methods Winter Schools, 2009-2015,
https://wiki.digitalmethods.net/Dmi/WinterSchool.
The Digital Methods Initiative was founded with a grant from the
Mondriaan Foundation, and the Summer School has been supported by the
Center for Creation, Content and Technology (CCCT), University of
Amsterdam, organized by the Faculty of Science with sponsorship from
Platform Beta. It also receives support from the Citizen Data Lab,
Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences. The Digital Methods Summer
School is self-sustaining.
Applications and fees
To apply for the Digital Methods Summer School 2015, please use the
University of Amsterdam Summer School form. Or, please send a one-page
letter explaining how digital methods training would benefit your
current work, and also enclose a CV, a copy of your passport (details
page only), a headshot photo as well as a 100-word bio. Mark your
application "DMI Training Certificate Program," and send to info [at]
digitalmethods.net. Please also mention in your application e-mail
whether you'd like to make use of the accommodation service (for more
information see below "Housing and Accomodation”). The deadline for
applications for the Summer School is 23 April 2015. Notices will be
sent on 24 April. Please address your application email to the Summer
School coordinators, Saskia Kok and Liliana Bounegru, info [at]
digitalmethods.net. Informal queries may be sent to the email address as
well. The Summer School costs EUR 595 (non-credits) or EUR 895 with
credits (6 ECTS). Accepted applicants will be informed of the bank
transfer details upon notice of acceptance to the Summer School on 24
April 2015. The fee must be paid by 24 May 2015.
Scholarships
The Digital Methods Summer School is part of the University of Amsterdam
Summer School programme, which has a video giving a flavor of the Summer
School experience. Students from universities in the LERU and U21
networks are eligible for a scholarship to help cover the cost for
tuition and housing for the DMI Summer School. Please consult their
websites in order to see whether you are eligible for a scholarship and
to begin the application procedure.
Housing and Accommodations
The Summer School is self-catered, and there are abundant cafes and a
university mensa nearby. The Digital Methods Summer School is located in
the heart of Amsterdam. There are limited accommodations available to
participants at The Student Hotel at reasonable rates. In your
application please indicate whether you are interested in making use of
this service. In your acceptance notification, you will be given
information about the reservation as well as payment. For those who
prefer other accommodations, we suggest airbnb or similar. For shorter
stay, there is Hotel Le Coin, where you may request a university discount.
Summer School Credits (6 ECTS)
For those following the Digital Methods Summer School for credit, 6
credits (ECTS) are granted to participants who follow the Summer School
program, and complete a significant contribution to a Summer School
project (evidenced by co-authorship of the project report as well as
final (joint) presentation). Templates for the project report as well as
for the presentation slides are supplied. For previous Summer School
projects, see for example
https://wiki.digitalmethods.net/Dmi/WikipediaAsASpaceOfControversy.
Schedule
The Summer School meets every weekday. Please bring your laptop. We will
provide abundant connectivity. We start generally at 9:30 in the
morning, and end around 5:30. There are morning talks one to two days
per week. On the last Friday we have a boat trip on the canals of Amsterdam.
For your Summer School to be especially successful we would recommend
highly that you watch (or listen to) the Digital Methods tutorials.
Please see: https://wiki.digitalmethods.net/Dmi/SummerSchool2015
Social Media & User-Generated Content
Twitter hashtag #dmi15
We shall have a list of summer school participants and make an
old-fashioned Facebook with the headshots and bio's you send to us.
We look forward to welcoming you to Amsterdam in the Summertime!
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chauss�de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]