Centre for Internet & Society

Showing blog entries tagged as: Facebook

Change has come to all of us

Posted by Nishant Shah at Oct 24, 2010 04:20 AM |

The general focus on a digital generational divide makes us believe that generations are separated by the digital axis, and that the gap is widening. There is a growing anxiety voiced by an older generation that the digital natives they encounter — in their homes, schools and universities and at workplaces — are a new breed with an entirely different set of vocabularies and lifestyles which are unintelligible and inaccessible. It is time we started pushing the boundaries of what it means to be a digital native.

Read More…

Does the Safe-Harbor Program Adequately Address Third Parties Online?

Posted by Rebecca Schild at Apr 16, 2010 05:40 AM |

While many citizens outside of the US and EU benefit from the data privacy provisions the Safe Harbor Program, it remains unclear how successfully the program can govern privacy practices when third-parties continue to gain more rights over personal data. Using Facebook as a site of analysis, I will attempt to shed light on the deficiencies of the framework for addressing the complexity of data flows in the online ecosystem.

Read More…

The (in)Visible Subject: Power, Privacy and Social Networking

Posted by Rebecca Schild at Feb 26, 2010 08:10 AM |

In this entry, I will argue that the interplay between privacy and power on social network sites works ultimately to subject individuals to the gaze of others, or to alternatively render them invisible. Individual choices concerning privacy preferences must, therefore, be informed by the intrinsic relationship which exists between publicness/privateness and subjectivity/obscurity.

Read More…