[iDC] How does social media educate?

Dan Swartz batnoseswartzy at yahoo.com
Sun Feb 11 19:12:03 EST 2007


Couldn't "sociable media" include all objects that
encourage discourse? 
I am thinking of all art objects, fashion items,
technology, etc. 
It just depends on what kind of communication is made,
and the scale of the communication.

I can see a sculpture and respond to it with my own in
another show, but only those people that see my piece
would see the dialogue that was created.  

Like Judith Donath said, these media hae been around
forever, its just that the complexity of the computer
and the internet have given them a more liquid form,
and a much higher memetic leverage.




--- Trebor Scholz <trebor at thing.net> wrote:

> A few responses. In 2004 Judith Donath provided a
> useful, long definition of "sociable media." She
> started: "Sociable media are media that enhance
> communication and the formation
> of social ties among people. Such media are not new
> – letter writing can be traced back thousands of
> years – but the advent of the computer has brought
> about an immense number
> of new forms." 
> 
> The term *sociable* media acknowledges the
> possibility of sociality instead of blindly assuming
> that the online millions will simply come if you
> open up a room. "Sociable web media,"
> then, specifies the meaning a bit more as it
> separates the meaning from its offline equivalents. 
> 
> Web 2.0- I aint your friend. And that is not just
> because of your vagueness or silly suggestion of
> newness or your ties to the O'Reilly publishing
> empire. I am skeptical of your name
> (not the phenomena that you stand for) because your
> branding is meant to explain and frame the emerging
> sociable worlds and the way we act in them.  The
> official discourse that
> you stand for has become an important placeholder
> for corporate agendas in which your "brand began to
> be understood less as 'symbolic extensions of
> products' and more as virtual
> communities constructed in media-space." (Mattelart)
> 
> 
> It matters, which terms we use to name our worlds.
> It is also significant to realize that we are
> tenants and not landladies in most sociable web
> spaces that we inhabit. That Murdoch
> has MySpace in his pocket means, as Ulises points
> out that "... social media create a 'market,' [and]
> we can expect only certain kinds of solutions to
> emerge from its application." 
> 
> Grant:
> >"Theoretical speculation about democratic
> will-formation and participatory ethics is great,
> but how about some discussions of social media that
> are grounded in an analysis of the
> actual complexity, and contradiction, of social
> formations on a more global scale?"
> 
> In response to your two points: first, much of the
> discussions here are not speculation, Grant, but a
> look at the specifics of sociable web media. We are
> working with examples all
> along-- it's not all hypothetical. Second, you ask
> for a global perspective. I, and many others, pay
> close attention to what happens in China, Brazil,
> India, Vietnam, Congo, Malaysia,
> Iraq, Iran, UAE, and Cuba. While today it is still
> important to be tuned in to the American teenager
> who is hooked on MySpace, in a few years, sociable
> web media history will not be
> written in the USA. In Africa, mobile sociality
> moves to the cellphone. In Asia, MySpace clones are
> crowding the WWW. I think your call for a more
> global perspective is useful. It'd be
> silly, however, to ignore the substantial and indeed
> very important developments that currently still
> come with an American stamp on them. And, yes,
> echoing Ulises-- please give us
> more insight into the history of cable TV and its
> parallel to sociable media.
> 
> Armin's account of the young hacker:
> >"having looked at myspace et al, he came to the
> conclusion that whoever called those environments
> 'social' must have a very different idea from his
> about what is 'social' (marked by
> or passed in pleasant companionship with one's
> friends or associates.)
> 
> While I'd not use Danah's exact words
> ("preposterous" and "idiotic") I agree with her that
> we cannot discount the current sociality as being
> social. All I can say, Armin, is: "log on,
> have a look for yourself." Numbers can always be
> viewed with a skeptical eye but it means something
> if a recent Pew report showed that 55% of all
> American teens use social
> networking sites. 
> 
> Armin:
> >"i follow the discussion closeloy enough to see
> that it is very uncritical of those commercial
> spaces and i have not seen much nourishing on this
> list so far of alternatives."
> 
> Well, my former high school teacher comes to mind
> who always demanded: only comment on the book if you
> actually read it (or, as I’d add-- care to dig in
> the archive). For starters:
> 
>
http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2005-December/thread.html
>
http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2006-March/thread.html
>
http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2006-June/thread.html
> 
> Armin
> >"The net is still there and is still much bigger
> than rupert murdoch or myspace or even google."
> 
> Perhaps, Armin, you do not recognize the criticality
> of commercial spaces in our discussions because they
> do not fly the traditional flags of activism (no
> tactical media stickers here). In
> my opinion, one of the tracks for criticality today
> is to device "new 'social scripts' that deal with
> the tensions in these new social architectures." The
> corporate-bad, hacker-good logic
> does not work here. I agree with Ulises who writes
> that "sure, authentic alternatives can emerge, but
> most of them tend to be co-opted sooner or later,
> and those that don't still have
> to operate within a capitalist framework."
>  
> And finally, Danah:
> >"What do we gain from valuing participation?  And
> what does it mean that participation in some arenas
> is perceived as more valuable  than others? (And
> what does it mean that
> enforced participation makes me sulk in a corner
> like a two year old throwing a temper tantrum?)"
> 
> "Lurking" for me is also participation. Forwarding,
> subscribing, commenting, moderating, reading...
> that's all participation. Contributing to knowledge
> networks is a valuable activity in
> my opinion. Here, knowledge unfolds over time, (in
> many cases) not as a broadcast statement but as an
> evolving addition of one point of lived expertise to
> the other.
> 
> However, the various intensities of participation
> that I just mentioned contribute in different ways
> to the value of a research network. Why bother
> participating in this or that arena
> when I can have more (expert) readers, social
> capital, micro-fame and respondents in the other?
> Sure, we situate our participation for a myriad of
> reasons but nudging participation is
> not the same like "enforcing" it.   
> 
> In terms of participation in an educational context,
> I agree with Ulises:
> >"People need to develop the critical skills
> necessary to differentiate between open and
> proprietary platforms, and be aware of the
> repercussions of what happens when the former
> mutates into the latter. People need to be able to
> determine when it's appropriate to use corporate
> platforms to disseminate a message, and how to
> maximize its effect."  
> 
> Best,
> Trebor
> 
> 
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