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Who Owns Your Phone?
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Sep 18, 2016
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filed under:
Digital Governance,
Research,
Digital Media,
RAW Research,
Researchers at Work
The capacity of companies to defy standards that work tells an alarming story of what we lose when we lose control of our devices.
Located in
RAW
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Love in the Time of Tinder
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Oct 17, 2016
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filed under:
Researchers at Work,
RAW Blog
Service providers and information aggregators mine our information and share it in ways that we cannot imagine.
Located in
RAW
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Conference Blogs
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Aug 20, 2011
The conferences that CIS participates in, individually or institutionally, and the ideas that emerge from them.
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Uploads
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Jan 05, 2010
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs
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Writing the Future - IIT Delhi
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Nov 03, 2008
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last modified
Nov 05, 2008 05:57 AM
The First Ever Asia-Pacific Festival of Writing: An internationally-supported event for emerging and established writers, scholars of contemporary literature from Asia and the Pacific, publishers, and all those interested in new writing from the region --
New Delhi and Shimla,
India,
October 2008
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs
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The Anxiety of the Future and Internet Technologies
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Nov 03, 2008
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last modified
Nov 06, 2008 05:18 AM
Nishant Shah and Sunil Abraham attended the "Writing the Future" conference organised by the Humanities Department at the IIT Delhi, and supported by the CIS and the Kusuma Trust. Nishant made a presentation at the conference entitled "Some Knowledge in Search of Authority: Cyberspace, Collaborations and Confusions".
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs
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The Future of the Moving Image
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Nov 10, 2008
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last modified
Nov 11, 2008 09:06 AM
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filed under:
internet and society,
Piracy,
Intellectual Property Rights,
YouTube,
internet art,
Cybercultures,
New Pedagogies
All dissimilar technologies are the same in their own way, but all similar technologies are uniquely different. This was probably at the core of the zeitgeist at the international seminar on “The Future of Celluloid” hosted by the Media Lab at the Jadavpur University, Kolkata, at which Nishant Shah, Director - Research CIS, presented a research paper. Practitioners, film makers, artists, theoreticians and academics, blurring the boundaries of both their roles and their disciplines and areas of interest, came together to move beyond convergence theories – to explore the continuities, conflations, contestations and confusions that Internet Technologies have led to for earlier technologies, but specifically for the technology of the moving image.
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs
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CPOV: Critical Point of View
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Jul 10, 2009
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last modified
Jul 13, 2009 09:07 AM
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filed under:
Wikipedia,
art and intervention,
cybercultures,
digital subjectives,
Vandalism,
digital art,
digital pluralism
The Centre for Internet and Society (Bangalore, India) and the Institute of Network Cultures (Amsterdam, Netherlands) seek to bring together ideas, experiences and scholarship about Wikipedia in a reader that charts out detailed user stories as well as empirical and analytical work to produce.. The organisations will jointly host two separate conferences aimed at building a Wikipedia Knowledge Network and charting scholarship and stories about The Wikipedia from around the world.
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs
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Chutnefying English - Report
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Aug 27, 2009
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last modified
Aug 27, 2009 06:03 AM
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filed under:
Conference,
Art,
Cybercultures,
Communities,
Digital subjectivities,
Digital Pluralism
The Centre for Internet and Society, Bangalore, was an institutional partner to India's first Global Conference on Hinglish - Chutnefying English, organised by Dr. Rita Kothari at the Mudra Institute of Communications, Ahmedabad. A photographic report for the event is now available here.
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs
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Wikiwars: 12th, 13th January, Bangalore
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by
Nishant Shah
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published
Jan 05, 2010
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last modified
Mar 13, 2012 10:43 AM
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filed under:
Featured,
Wikipedia
The Centre for Internet and Society and the Institute of Network Cultures brought together a critical range of scholars, academicians, practitioners, artists and researchers to inquire into the new conditions which emerge with the rise of Wikipedia. The first of two events, WikiWars was the beginning of a knowledge network that shall contribute to a reader titled Critical Point of View, becoming the first resource tool to engage creatively and fruitfully with the diverse range of questions that surround Wikipedia.
Located in
Research
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Conferences & Workshops
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Conference Blogs