An archaeology of digital attention: radar, war, and the birth of ubiquitous vigilance
An archaeology of digital attention: radar, war, and the birth of ubiquitous vigilance
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An archaeology of digital attention: radar, war, and the birth of ubiquitous vigilance
Organised with the support of the international project « Who cares ? Rebuilding care in a post pandemic world », Plateforme Transatlantique (T-AP)/Call RRR, in France with the support of the ANR
Transversal Politics of Legitimacy: Big Tech and the Reconfiguration of the Political
Participatory warfare revised: innovation and the role of digital crowds in the Russia-Ukraine war
This paper is a response to Michael Curtin’s call for media scholars to consider the “topographies of contemporary media industries” which are “growing more plastic and complicated as media
“Data Collaborative” refers to an emergent form of public-private partnership in which actors from different sectors exchange and analyze data (and/or provide data science insights and expertise) to
“Data Collaborative” refers to an emergent form of public-private partnership in which actors from different sectors exchange and analyze data (and/or provide data science insights and expertise) to
Recent years have seen an emergence of a diverse range of online male communities, primarily through sites such as 4chan and Reddit. Theorists, as well as the users of these spaces themselves,
A research paradigm is defined by different aspects: its ontology, epistemology and methodology. The realities that Contact Improvisation brings forth, how knowledge is constructed and shared,
We are living through a revolution in the production of artistic, literary and musical works that have been generated in some shape or form by artificial intelligence (AI). Take the following
Évènement GdT Communs numériques, en anglais. Benjamin J. Birkinbine (Reynolds School of Journalism and Center for Advanced Media Studies, University of Nevada, Reno) will discuss his book,
Le séminaire du CIS #20 accueille en visioconférence Anne Helmond (University of Amsterdam) et Fernando van der Vlist (Utrecht University and University of Siegen)