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[Commlist] PhD course: The datafication of the media industry – infrastructures of data and networks in the future of media
Wed Apr 21 15:09:18 GMT 2021
*PhD Course: THE DATAFICATION OF THE MEDIA INDUSTRY – INFRASTRUCTURES OF
DATA AND NETWORKS IN THE FUTURE OF MEDIA *
Location: AAU Copenhagen, Denmark
November 17-18, 2021
Organized by: The Technical Doctoral School of IT and Design at Aalborg
University, Denmark
As many other industries, the media business is in the middle of a
digital service transformation that changes both power relations,
business structures and daily operations. The datafication of the media
business is visible to citizens/consumers; it has a big societal impact
and is possibly more radical in nature compared to many other industries.
The tech platforms - social media networks, global Video on Demand
services, app stores and digital services in general - now shape both
business conditions and politics. This development pushes traditional
media such as newspapers, broadcasters and other publishers to move into
a territory, which is novel for them: Datafication - understood e.g. as
algorithmic recommendation, audience analysis and algorithmic content
creation (‘robot journalism’). This algorithmic turn challenges many of
the established cultural values in media, e.g. diversity, unbiasedness
and human curation.
These values legitimate the media in their own understanding and in the
public (political) understanding of their role in society. But is there
a fundamental incompatibility between the new algorithmic instruments
and the traditional values of the media? Do the algorithmic instruments
constitute a chance for a new definition of what 'media' are, or will
the mathematical logic of the algorithms destroy the human aspect of
mass media communication?
The datafication of the media is propelled forward by the dynamics of
IP-based communication, which changes the business foundation of media.
'Old’ digital media communication technologies such as DVB (Digital
Video Broadcasting) or DAB (Digital Audio Broadcasting) give way to
'Over-the-top' IP-based solutions such as Video on Demand. For users
this may be experienced as an improvement of the user experience (or a
burden of many new subscriptions), but for national cultural policies
and for the security / stability of the media infrastructure, the shift
to IP-based media has big implications.
This course offers an interdisciplinary approach to the transformations
of the media industry and its implications for societies. Participants
will present and discuss own research. Course lectures will present and
discuss key literature as well as own research. Finally, presentations
from the media industry will provide important insights.
Prior to the course participants will submit on their current research.
After the course, participants will either submit an updated version of
this paper, or a new paper reflecting on one of the PhD course topics.
The approval of this paper is a prerequisite for passing the course
LECTURERS: Anders Henten, professor, CMI/ES, Reza Tadayoni, associate
professor CMI/ES, Jannick Kirk Sørensen, associate professor CMI/ES,
Jannie Møller Hartley, Associate Professor RUC, Head of Research and
Innovation at Ekstrabladet, Kasper Lindskow
Apply at: https://phd.moodle.aau.dk/course/view.php?id=1599
<https://phd.moodle.aau.dk/course/view.php?id=1599>(create a user
login-in and sign up)
ECTS: 2
Contact: Jannick Kirk Sørensen, (js /at/ es.aau.dk)
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