Review of Andrew Keen's "The Cult of the Amateur: How Blogs, MySpace, YouTube, and the Rest of Today’s User-generated Media Are Destroying Our Economy, Our Culture, and Our Values". Viewable online at http://therumpus.net/2009/03/is-the-internet-ruining-our-lives
This book brings together research that addresses some of the most significant cultural, economic, a...
New technologies have a deep impact on the political process, but is it a negative or a positive one
Evgeny Morozov challenges the widely held view of the internet as a tool for promoting democracy in ...
Not everyone will agree with the premise of Andrew Keen’s book, The Cult of the Amateur: How Blogs, ...
Andrew Keen is an Anglo-American Silicon Valley entrepreneur who thinks that the internet is bringin...
Recent literature indicates that the Internet and digital technologies, in general, are creating a r...
In 2009, Google began customizing its search results for each user. Instead of giving searchers the ...
Andrew Keen’s book The Cult of The Amateur has turned him in to the arch-sceptic of the Internet. Bu...
The internet has changed our lives within just a few decades: we watch TV, pay our bills and fill in ...
Books about Internet culture usually focus on the people, places, sites, and memes that constitute t...
Internet critic Andrew Keen might be the man for the times, but his new book fails to convince The...
Can we trust the Internet? There is no more fundamental question about news media today. And yet it ...
We often think of branding in association with products, personalities and organizations. And of cou...
Review of: Barnard, Sara, Holly Bourne, Tanya Byrne, Non Pratt, Melinda Salisbury, Lisa Williamson, ...
Articles by Dutch researcher of new media, co-founder of the Institute of Network Cultures and profe...
This book brings together research that addresses some of the most significant cultural, economic, a...
New technologies have a deep impact on the political process, but is it a negative or a positive one
Evgeny Morozov challenges the widely held view of the internet as a tool for promoting democracy in ...
Not everyone will agree with the premise of Andrew Keen’s book, The Cult of the Amateur: How Blogs, ...
Andrew Keen is an Anglo-American Silicon Valley entrepreneur who thinks that the internet is bringin...
Recent literature indicates that the Internet and digital technologies, in general, are creating a r...
In 2009, Google began customizing its search results for each user. Instead of giving searchers the ...
Andrew Keen’s book The Cult of The Amateur has turned him in to the arch-sceptic of the Internet. Bu...
The internet has changed our lives within just a few decades: we watch TV, pay our bills and fill in ...
Books about Internet culture usually focus on the people, places, sites, and memes that constitute t...
Internet critic Andrew Keen might be the man for the times, but his new book fails to convince The...
Can we trust the Internet? There is no more fundamental question about news media today. And yet it ...
We often think of branding in association with products, personalities and organizations. And of cou...
Review of: Barnard, Sara, Holly Bourne, Tanya Byrne, Non Pratt, Melinda Salisbury, Lisa Williamson, ...
Articles by Dutch researcher of new media, co-founder of the Institute of Network Cultures and profe...
This book brings together research that addresses some of the most significant cultural, economic, a...
New technologies have a deep impact on the political process, but is it a negative or a positive one
Evgeny Morozov challenges the widely held view of the internet as a tool for promoting democracy in ...