Social Media in the Post-Truth and Political Manipulation Era: Let’s Re-Debate Michael Gorman Vs. Web 2.0

Author(s):  
Xiaotian Chen
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 (3) ◽  
pp. 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Cochrane ◽  
Laurent Antonczak
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre R. Berthon ◽  
Leyland F. Pitt ◽  
Kirk Plangger ◽  
Daniel Shapiro

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 269
Author(s):  
María Sanz-Lorente ◽  
Ramón Castejón Bolea

Dentro del ámbito sanitario, la evolución de la Web 2.0 también se ha hecho patente, y con el paso de los años se observa un cambio hacia una sociedad cada vez más informada sobre salud en Internet, hasta el punto de adoptar nuevos términos para nuestro vocabulario como el de eSalud. La llegada de las redes sociales (RR. SS.) digitales -consideradas el principal estandarte de este nuevo entorno digital- supuso una nueva vuelta de tuerca en la evolución de la comunicación hipermedia y en los modelos de comunicación tradicionales.Las RR. SS. y la salud han establecido una fuerte relación. Y, es que no hay duda de que los social media están afectando a la forma en la que las personas, de los países con índices de desarrollo humano más altos, gestionan su salud. En el ámbito poblacional, el análisis de patrones y tendencias de las búsquedas en plataformas digitales pueden proporcionar información valiosa sobre el comportamiento relacionado con la salud de las poblaciones.En la atención domiciliaria paciente y familia pasan de espectadores a protagonistas, asumen una posición más activa tanto en la comunicación como en la toma de decisiones. Se podría pensar que las RR. SS. son dominio exclusivo de la generación más joven. Sin embargo, muchos son los adultos, incluso de edad avanzada, que las han adoptado con entusiasmo para mantenerse al día, así como para relacionarse con sus conocidos y familiares.Como ya se ha estudiado, las RR. SS. han demostrado su potencial en la provisión remota de supervisión clínica. No obstante, es importante prestar especial atención a tres importantes circunstancias: la proporción del adecuado aprendizaje, el adecuado proceso de uso y su supervisión.Se puede concluir que en “situaciones ideales” las RR. SS. presentan beneficios para todas las partes implicadas en el cuidado domiciliario de la salud.


1970 ◽  
pp. 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dagny Stuedahl

The article focuses on a study of knowledge creation and organizing in a local history wiki. The background for this study was to understand how web 2.0 and social media might open new possibilities for museums to collaborate with communities and lay professionals in cultural heritage knowledge creation. Digital technologies provide tools that in many ways overcome challenges of physical collaboration between museums and amateurs. But technologies also bring in new aspects of ordering, categorizing and systematizing knowledge that illuminates the different institutional as well as professional frameworks that writing local historical knowledge into digital forms in fact represents. 


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 61
Author(s):  
Mufida Cahyani

The emergence of various kinds of social media applications does not only affect the way people communicate, but also penetrates into the realm of online mass media. Social media platforms that carry the concept of web 2.0 namely user generated content and network effects make it easy for a news to become viral in a short time, regardless of the validity and accuracy of the news. Web 2.0 itself is a direct application of the concept of Knowledge Management (KM) which emphasizes collaboration and user participation, but in a broader domain, it is slightly different from KM which emphasizes internal organizational participation. Hipwee as one of the social media-based online news sites applies both concepts to its content management. The purpose of this study was to analyze the extent of the application of KM in relation to Web 2.0. The method used to explore data through interviews with Hipwee managers and direct observation to the office location and also the Hipwee site. The results obtained are that the adaptation of the KM concept has not been applied to Web 2.0 on the Hipwee site, namely the concept of data mining, while the Web 2.0 concept has been applied to KM, namely unbounded collaboration, user generated content and network effects.


Author(s):  
Mark Coeckelbergh

In chapter 6 objections to these material romanticisms and to the narrative about romanticism and technology are constructed. First, drawing on classic anti-romantics, the argument is constructed that romanticism leads to escapism or what I call cyber narcissism. Then a position is elaborated that criticizes the current material romanticism for not being romantic enough, for failing to reach the romantic aims. It is argued that our hyper-romanticism in the form of Web 2.0 and its social media risks to destroy its very aims. It is concluded that, seen from these perspectives, material romanticism’s promise of a synthesis of enlightenment and romanticism is not kept and there is no “end of the machine” in sight. However, then it is argued that the criticisms discussed here may well be anti-romantic, but largely (but not completely and not always) remain within the “romantic order”. The chapter draws on Coyne’s reading of the phenomenological tradition in order to start exploring what a less dualistic and less romantic view would look like. The chapter ends with a summary of what we can nevertheless learn from the romantic tradition.


Author(s):  
Vedran Podobnik ◽  
Daniel Ackermann ◽  
Tomislav Grubisic ◽  
Ignac Lovrek

In the Web 1.0 era, users were passive consumers of a read-only Web. However, the emergence of Web 2.0 redefined the way people use information and communication services—users evolved into prosumers that actively participate and collaborate in the ecosystem of a read-write Web. Consequently, marketing is one among many areas affected by the advent of the Web 2.0 paradigm. Web 2.0 enabled the global proliferation of social networking, which is the foundation for Social Media Marketing. Social Media Marketing represents a novel Internet marketing paradigm based on spreading brand-related messages directly from one user to another. This is also the reason why Social Media Marketing is often referred to as the viral marketing. This chapter will describe: (1) how social networking became the most popular Web 2.0 service, and (2) how social networking revolutionized Internet marketing. Both issues will be elaborated on two levels—the global and the Croatian level. The chapter will first present the evolution of social networking phenomenon which has fundamentally changed the way Internet users utilize Web services. During the first decade of 21st century, millions of people joined online communities and started using online social platforms, about 1.5 billion members of social networks globally in 2012. Furthermore, the chapter will describe how Internet marketing provided marketers with innovative marketing channels, which offer marketing campaign personalization, low-cost global access to consumers, and simple, cheap, and real-time marketing campaign tracking. Specifically, the chapter will focus on Social Media Marketing, the latest step in the Internet marketing evolution. The three most popular Social Media Marketing platforms (i.e., Facebook, Twitter, and Foursquare) will be described, and examples of successful marketing case studies in Croatia will be presented.


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