Reset : reclaiming the internet for civil society / Ronald J. Deibert.
Tipo de material:
- text
- 9781487008055 (softcover)
- 1487008058 (softcover)
- 9781487008086 (print)
- 1487008082 (print)
- Reclaiming the internet for civil society
- 302.231 23
- Issued also in electronic format.
Tipo de material | Biblioteca atual | Coleção | Número de chamada | Número do exemplar | Situação | Devolver até | Código de barras | |
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Biblioteca NIC.br | Coleção Principal | 302.231 D324r (Percorrer estante(Abre abaixo)) | EX. 1 | Disponível | 23989781487008055 |
Percorrer Biblioteca NIC.br estante, Coleção: Coleção Principal Fechar navegador de prateleira (Oculta o navegador da estante)
302.230981 B238h História da comunicação no Brasil | 302.231 C448d The digital era 2: | 302.231 C822 Corpo e cultura digital : diálogos interdisciplinares / | 302.231 D324r Reset : reclaiming the internet for civil society / | 302.231 F533m A máquina do caos: como as redes sociais reprogramaram nossa mente e nosso mundo | 302.231 H662e Ethnography for the Internet : embedded, embodied and everyday / | 302.231 L911s Stuck on the platform : reclaiming the Internet / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 333-399) and index (pages 407-419).
"Once, it was conventional wisdom to assume that digital technologies would enable greater access to information, facilitate collective organizing, and empower civil society. Rather than facilitating unity and the emergence of a common ideology based on science, the internet and social media have proven to be vehicles used to spread falsehoods, pollute the public sphere, and subject populations to wholesale surveillance. People are also spending an unhealthy amount of time staring at their devices, "socializing" while in fact living in isolation and detached from nature. As a consequence, there are pushes to regulate social media and to encourage tech giants to be better stewards of their platforms, respect privacy, and acknowledge the role of human rights. A prerequisite of any such regulation, however, is a complete understanding of the precise nature and depth of the problems. Technology and security expert Ronald J. Deibert examines the scope and scale of the personal, social, political, economic, and ecological implications of social media. Drawing from the cutting-edge research of the Citizen Lab (which he directs), Deibert analyzes consumer compulsion and the information economy; the disturbing rise of authoritarian practices, cyberwarfare services, and social engineering campaigns; and the negative environmental impact of digital devices, data farms, and electronic waste. Ultimately, Deibert exposes social media's disproportionate influence in every aspect of life to the detriment of society and of our humanity--so much so that we are now in urgent need of a wholesale shift in our lifestyles, a fundamental revision of culture, work, and politics. And not just in one country, but around the world."-- Provided by publisher.
Issued also in electronic format.
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