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Archive for the 'Authorship' Category

Top 5 online books about the Web

During my surfing time I have discovered several books about the web, that - i think - are very influential. I make a list here, with the ones I found most intriguing and accurate. They discuss a wide range of topics, some of them really up-to-date.

  1. The Cluetrain Manifesto. [C. Locke, D. Weinberger, R. Levine, D. Searls] A classic. Describes the changes the internet age is bringing to our lives. May sound utopic sometimes, but makes you see the web under another perspective.
  2. Code 2.0. [Lawrence Lessig] That’s a must for anyone interested in the freedom of cyberspace and code. A great resource, especially after the latest stories on privacy and censorship. How data (and consequently code) constitute the law of the web.
  3. We the media. [Dan Gillmor] How the blogosphere revlutionizes journalism and interaction in general. Although it describes services most of us are familiar with (RSS, Wiki, Blogs, etc), it stands as an advocate of an open society and the wisdom of crowds.
  4. We think. Innovation by the masses for the masses. [Charles Leadbeater] A study on the collective intelligence, with numerous examples from BMX bikes to wikipedia. Discusses the motivation of the participators and the reason their innovations succeed.
  5. Cascading Style Sheets. [Hakon Wium Lie] That is actually a PhD thesis. It poses an interesting analysis on a very popular web language.

If you have any addtional resources please let me know.

Authorship & web 2.0 robojiannis 04 Jan 2008 3 Comments

Wikipedia on your Ipod

I’ve been observing the evolution of the IpodLinux project for quite some time. Although I found it a great idea, I was completely satisfied with the Apple interface and found no reason to change to the IpodLinux one.

Until now.

How to install wikipedia on your ipod provides a step by step guide to (yes, you got it) install wikipedia on your ipod. Its size is only 1.7GB and every question you have can be accessed on the road. Pretty funky.

Imagine doing something like that with authoritative articles (see Google Knol). Debates like the ones we are now witnessing about copyright, RIAA, music labels, torrent downloading and so on could come forth about text as well. Of course not in such extent (noone is complaining about book torrents) but you get my point.

Such an initiative (wikipedia on your ipod) could not be possible (or much more difficult to realize).

Authorship robojiannis 02 Jan 2008 No Comments

Google’s Knol and the role of the author

A big fuss today about the role and contribution of Google’s Knol in the social web and actually in knowledge itself (Knol as a short for knowledge). The read/write web and the official google blog are some sources which explain how it is supposed to work. [writing authoritative articles, highlighting authors, socializing (comments, ratings, reviews, references, etc)]

The controversial position of the author

One very interesting point I read from Nick Carr (a comment on a comment) is that “it will (apparently) be up to the authors to decide whether to accept them [the articles] or not”.

If the project actually succeeds (and by succeed, I mean big; moving wikipedia [probably its biggest competitor] aside) we might be seeing a turn in the purpose and structure of the web itself.

The role of the author will suddenly increase online. Copyright issues will come forward; authority issues too. Under that perspective I completely agree with Stan Schroeder, who puts the subject under that lense. He (and so do I) don’t really care who wrote which sentence.

The 80/20 Rule

Although there has been a big discussion lately about the long tail of the web, I’m afraid in wikipedia we are still facing the 80/20 rule (80% of the contributions are made from 20% of the users). But it is a rule that speaks against the community-driven structure of wikipedia; it puts wikipedia (and wikis in general) under severe criticism.

It seems that Google Knols wants to continue this tradition of the 80/20 rule. As Simon Owens noted “only the hard-core editors will contribute, while people like me, who don’t really have any interest in putting a lot of work into the entry, won’t be able to contribute at all”.

The question

Maybe in blogs and online documents, the author should be present, raising restrictions and copyrighting his/her work (I’m still against it).

  • But in collaborative works, where we are dealing with the aggregation of information, what positive outcomes can authorship bring?
  • Will the collective intelligence function better when the individuals constituting the community are all potential experts?

The social side

On the other side Knols will encourage commenting, editing, posing questions, rating and so forth. Communication, can surely promote aggregation and knowledge. It is in the hands of the google team and the user, how this project will actually work. Will it bring only authoritative articles on the community or will it promote a trustworthy aggregation of information?  (one that students can finally reference in their assignments!)

Authorship & Collaboration robojiannis 14 Dec 2007 No Comments

Authorship in the blogosphere

Blogging is a practice, which mainly consists of linking and referencing other blogs or sites. At least, it is a practice that I widely use. After reading Lorelle’s post on copyright and translation, I thought about the role of authorship in the blogosphere and in the web in general. The term of authorship often connotes the individualization of ideas, literature, philosophy and science. The role of the author is namely, very tightly connected with his/her work. By that I mean, that in order to fully comprehend the meanings hidden in the article or book or post we desire to know who, when, why and under which circumstances created the piece. If I were to write a post about free software, copyleft rights and the open source movement, you would like to know my background. Do I use Windows or Linux, what are my studies, am I a programmer or a user? Such information could define the post itself. But in some rare occasions the work follows its own course.

The role of the author

Michel Foucault suggests, that the characteristic of the author, which accompanies the work, is in such cases her absence. But Foucault carries on talking about the role of an author, who goes beyond her work, who also succeeds – always through his/her work - in producing an opportunity for discussion and creation. Such authors produce an unlimited room for development and improvement.

One could think of their works as seeds, which other authors have the chance to take, change them at will and plant them as they wish to create new cognition. In such a case, the author is seen as a collector of information and knowledge. His/Her role is to gather and process data – and eventually add new content to the information pool. (as V. Flusser suggests)

New type of authorship

The World Wide Web and its hyperlinked structure has enabled this type of authorship in a literal way. From the first virtual communities to the blogging practices of today, users serve as information gatherers for others. During the 1980s, users met in Usenet newsgroups and today in weblogs and wikis to aggregate information.The first contemporary example of this new form of authorship that comes to my mind is wikis. Tens of millions of people visit Wikipedia and other wiki sites every day. They read, add and transform data in collectively created articles. On wikis, no person considers herself the author of an entry, since authorship is in a way senseless; wikis are collaboratively written works. It is actually considered ‘unwiki’? to claim authorship- or even primary authorship - of an article. I tried to understand authorship under the blogging perspective. Yes of course authorship in weblogs is important, who writes what makes a big difference and is fundamental of the structure of the blogosphere. But it is still in the hands of the reader to collect all the pieces of information from comments, forums and linked blog articles about a specific topic in order to get the whole view of the subject. What I’m saying is that a subject is objectively covered, only when someone collects all the information about it; and in the end, readers are the ones, who gather the information. We are therefore returning to a thought expressed in the late 1960s by Roland Barthes, that “the unity of a text is not in its origin, it is in its destination.” The reader is the one who has the overview of all citations a writing consists of.

Conclusion

We are nowadays witnessing a new form of authorship, which signalizes participation and collective knowledge. The social web gives people the opportunity to share, collaborate, criticize and create a commons of ideas. The role of the individual is important to contribute in this commons but not to lead it. This bottom-up structure that the social web enables, draws the attention of the public, which wants to be a part of the productive process; and hypertext enables interactivity and in a way lifts the boundaries between reader and author.

The notion of the author - of the sole person getting credit for a work - is quite new. In the middle ages someone who copied a text, without adding anything new was considered a scriptor; someone who used works of others was a compilator; author was the one who used other works only to verify his own.

I’m not advocating for copycats or translated versions of a text. On the contrary,

  • I believe that copycats, like the farmers of the example above, collect information and in a way or another add something (maybe something very little) to the original source.
  • I have complete trust in the users constituting the social web, to expose any dishonest intentions.
  • I find the web so intriguing exactly because there is no control of the data running in its streams. I prefer it, when people use my work without giving me any credit, than have a central control, choosing who posts what, when.

For this document I used (and draw inspiration) by the works of: Roland Barthes, Michel Foucault, Martha Woodmansee, Richard Stallman. I hear Jay David Bolter’s book: Writing Space is thematizing this subject. I will return with a complementary post, after reading it. For more accurate information, questions or whatever feel free to contact me.

 

Authorship robojiannis 13 Dec 2007 No Comments

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