Tuesday, April 1, 2008

P2 Vodcast:Internet me vs Real me

Team Name:
The Unidentified
Team Members:
Annabel Yoon: Research(Blog)
Bo-Mee Song: Research and Interviewer (Blog)Maria Rizvi: Chief Writer and editing, (Blog)Pearl Desa: Art, writing and editingTherese D'Souza: Filming and final editing(Blog).




The Internet, being multi-faceted and ever-changing, provides an unstable environment to our identity growth, thereby confusing us about who we really are. Our video dealt with this thesis by focusing on the confusion of identity and perception caused by the web. Our research was based on the looking glass self theory which states that a self-image is developed on the basis of the message we get from others, as we understand them. This theory states that “we imagine how we appear to others, we imagine their judgment of that appearance and we then develop some self-feeling, such as pride or mortification, as a result of our imagining others’ judgment”. Our main aim was to see how the web interfered with the development of individual identity. People act differently on the web as opposed to reality and their image is dependent on that behavior. Different sides of a person come out on the web as opposed to reality. Therefore the development of identity in this digital age is highly dependent on the web in various ways especially for the new generation who do the majority of their social networking on the web. The web is becoming a signifier of identity and self perception. The web is used as a technological tool to express the different sides of our personality and at times maybe even confuse them.

References:

1) Looking glass self theoryCooley, C. H. (1902). Human Nature and the Social Order. New York: Scribner’s. Pp. 179-185.

2) Yoon, S. (2001). Culture, Computer Literacy, and the Media in Creating Public Attitudes toward CMC in Japan and Korea in Community informatics: shaping computer-mediated social relations (Eds.) Keeble, L. and Loader D. B. New York : Routledge, 2002

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Week 6: Project 2 Proposal

1. Concept
Our area of investigation is going to be identity, and how technology has affected it negatively. Our video will include statistics, reviews, and interviews on this topic.

2. Working Hypothesis
The inevitable development of the network society, has demanded in its core, constant innovation and development of communicative methods. Communication had a different meaning before globalization. Communication meant a phone call from a home line or a letter which reached a person 4-8 weeks depending on their location. Since communicative methods were different, it is safe to assume that relationships carried with them a different meaning as well. This has caused isolation of personal identities. Communication has changed individuality. The way we see and represent ourselves has changed vastly. Since there are more methods of expressing yourself, making friends and networks, learning, and engaging in activities with strangers; there is a misconception that communication has reached its peak. Yes communication has reached its peak, but with the loss of personal identity. According to Freud, we all have many different “persona(s)” hidden within us which only come out when a situation requires it. Persona, according to Wikipedia means “A persona, in the word's everyday usage, is a social role or a character played by an actor”. The World Wide Web has given people more opportunities to communicate, but in return develop more personas within themselves. Hence, the network society has brought a loss of identity and isolation of individuals. This global culture is anonymous to personal feelings and the true identities of individuals. In our podcast we would like to target those people who feel that the wireless borders of the internet have caused them to lose the true essence of face to face, emotional, empathetic, emoticon-less communication, which are requirements of human nature and comfort. The computer has removed the true ways of communication, which have taken place for centuries. We would like to say in this podcast, through various points of views of people who have truly lost/hidden their true identity due to the developments of communicative technologies. We would like to ask people of different ages on how they feel the internet has brought about a loss of personal identity and true human communication.

3. Research Approach
We will be conducting field research as well as scholarly journals and articles which include recent statistics. We will be referring to journal articles, and citing them. Using statistics and research done previously by scholars and psychologists/sociologists we can back up our claim: loss of identity is perpendicular to enhancement of communication.

4. Treatment
For our video we plan to use a lot of real life, unscripted footage like interviews with people from different walks of life. The interviews will be broken down into segments that overlap each other and will be an informal questioning about how people act on the web and how they portray themselves on the internet. The concentration will be on how they willingly change themselves when they go on the internet. And if we find willing participants we might even get people to show us their personal pages and their online ‘personas’ on social networking sites like Facebook. In order to add some diversity to our video we plan to have a few animated sequences or at least a few original cartoon images like thought clouds or speech bubbles at certain points. For instance a possible opening sequence that we’ve thought about includes having a picture of a person divided with one side remaining ‘real’ while the other side is made into a cartoon with different speech and thought bubbles, that show the various identities the person has on the internet and in their daily lives. As for the sound, since our video is going to be interview based, any background music we add will be kept to a minimum so that the voices can be heard clearly. And to make sure that people understand the words spoken we even plan to add sub-titles for better accessibility. If we do have animated sequences, we will definitely add the required sound effects but we don’t intend to use much in that category as we don’t want to pull away from the interviews.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Week 5: My Team

Team Name: Unidentified

Team Members:
Annabel Yoon: Blog --> Research
Bo-Mee Song: Blog --> Research and Interviewer
Maria Rizvi: Chief Writer and editing
Pearl Desa: Blog --> Research, writing and editing
Therese D'Souza: Blog --> Filming and final editing

Initial Concept
The loss of identity and the development of multiple persona's in the essence of indivuality. The global culture has brought about many different sides of a person, but has hidden what truly lies within them. We would like to research the way in which people have been able to manipulate their true identity into multiple clashing personalities that lay within the cover of one person. The internet has become a playing field of identities through various communication networks and platforms.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Week 4: What makes a good video podcast? A Review of My Fav.

Cheating on Love
http://current.com/items/86355371_cheating_on_love

This video podcast was titled “cheating on love”. The podcast was regarding how monogamy is very difficult, and how common cheating on spouses/partners is. The video takes interviews from a few people all under different categories: married, in a relationship, single, happy in a marriage, unhappy in a marriage/relationship. The video is about one topic: cheating on love. A variety of interviews are conducted, all around the same consistent topic. What makes this topic interesting is that all of the interviewee’s had one emotion in common (regret) amidst their multiple perspectives. What makes the video particularly interesting is that the interviews conducted are on a real personal basis, and what the people say has a real emotional meaning to it.

The story covers real life symbols that affect most of us on a regular basis. Strong emotions of trust, experience, honesty, loyalty, betrayal; are all expressed first hand in the interviews which bring about direct viewer involvement. Although the story isn’t about something new, it is instead about something that has been happening for years, and that is exactly what makes it unique. It is a sincere address to those human emotions which have been taken over by the busy, fast paced world which revolves solely around the self.

The goal of the story is to portray first hand emotions. The interviews looked and felt very raw, since they gave out pure emotions on the concepts of love and cheating. Love has become a rare emotion in this wired world, where love is based on lust, on looks, and sexual attraction vs. Loyalty and personality. The one thing I liked about this video was that it didn’t have a lot of the switching and clutter-full visuals which are usually in all videos these days. The simplicity of the topic was evident in the display of the podcast and its representation. This topic didn’t need strong visuals, or abstract/crazy images, instead the full of emotion faces of experienced people were enough to transmit the message of the video. It had a beginning, middle and an end in a very unique way. The beginning included a distinct point of view which was that, monogamy is impossible today. The middle included stories about people who either cheated on or were cheated on. The atmosphere of the video is very comfortable and attaching as well. You feel interconnected with the people. An expert is also in the video, which makes the story line factual especially with the use of statistics. Real people with personal and real stories bring about an emotional atmosphere which makes you relate to these people on a personal basis. Honesty is a relevant symbol in the video, which is also a human emotion so hard to find in this cyber world. Towards the end, an interviewee expressed how honesty and communication are key factors, and another interviewee explains how they learned from their experience. What really worked in this video was how the interviews led the beginning, the middle, and the end, the entire story without explicitly saying so.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Week 3: Web 2.0 and Podcasting where is this heading?

Web 2.0, according to Tim O’Reilly is described as the second generation of the web. It aims to catalyze creativity, collaboration, and sharing between users. In the past the web being a start in a sense had limited offerings, as in it wasn’t developed well enough for us to know what it would bring about. The platform and base was created, but to what extent it would grow was unsure. It held with it a vast amount of promises, such as search engines and information. But to what extent and what efficiency those search engines would go to was unknown. Web 1.0 was Britannica.com, and it evolved into stronger information based sharing system known as Wikipedia.com. The webmaster no longer provides you with information, you can now update, change, and add more information. Web 2.0 is about sharing information; everyone contributes to the single process of viewing or sending information. Everyone on the web is an equal participant of the web. Just by viewing a page you become a participant of the sharing process of Web 2.0, which helps in for example as listed by Tim O’Reilly, ‘cost per click’, ‘folksonomy’, and ‘syndication’. Web 2.0 is now the basis of the web that is ever-growing, and that foreshadows limitless opportunities of participation and growth. In Web 2.0, just by being connected to the internet you are a participant and donator to the World Wide Web, just as Tim Burners Lee had imagined it.


I see Pod casting’s future as this: you don’t need to add a display picture any more, you don’t need to type out your thoughts in your blog or your information for Wikipedia.com, you can just turn on your webcam, and boom you can podcast your face, with your voice, and what you have to say to the world. Podcasting and Web 2.0 show us a digitally wireless enhanced future in communication. Every communicative devise built into your computer, and you do not have to move of your chair to work, or learn. Information is not only your fingertips, but communications is at its BEST and maximum. Web 2.0 promises the web as a central revolving basis to life. According to the Museum of Media History people have “access to a breath and depth of information, everyone participates to create a breathing living medias cape. The year 2014 the press cease to exist”. Automated personalized recommendations will govern the web. According to the Museum of Media history, Information will be custom tailored to each customer, and everyone will not only create but also consume media at the same time. Real Simple Syndication feeds can allow the placing of information automatically, with the creation of Googazon, a mixture of Google.com’s grid and Amazon.com’s recommendations. I believe EPIC is the future of Web 2.0 and pod casting. Evolving personalized information construct, which will help organized and sort the “chaotic” (Museum of Media History) amounts of information and also “unshackle” us from the constraints of not only commercials, but time, computer screens, keyboards. The future is human emotion generously attached to the web. Human emotion, action, thoughts, and energy will be the feeding wire to the web along with its own technology.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Week 3: Video Podcast

Week 2: Seeking a best of: Karen Cheng's Snippets of Life

Karen Cheng’s Snippets of Life
http://www.karencheng.com.au/

This blog is a perfect example of organization. All entries are organized properly and written under subheadings under particular headings. The website has beautiful colors and has a very simple yet attractive layout. The banner is very nice and simple, since the background is white a single picture with looks great. The links on the right go perfectly with the banner layout and sit perfectly on the entire website.

This web-blog is very homely. The author of this blog, Karen Cheng is not solely a publisher or an author, but is also a “designer, writer, artist, web chick, mother”. She writes about all the roles and responsibilities that she holds within her. She doesn’t write just as a mother, author, artist, web chick, or designer. Her blogs are a collaboration of all the jobs she does. This idea is very unique and attractive to the mass population of females who either do or do not work. They can keep up an online diary regardless of their busy schedules as mothers, wives, employees, employers, designers, or whatever it is that they do as an occupation. Karen Cheng invites people to take an insight into her life and what she does. She writes in her first hand experiences in life such as her pregnancies and the upbringing she performs on her son. She talks about her shopping experiences. She even writes about her family and friends and the people she interacts with on a daily basis.

A web blog like this is very insightful and luring towards people who make require inspiration in life. It is also an inspiration for those who can relate to Karen Cheng. Its an experimental devise that women can use, without experiencing those certain things themselves. They can actually learn from Karen Cheng. She has not only her personal emotions and experiences, but also factual information alongside her experiences that can help mothers. It is also an inspiration for those mothers who find themselves to be bored at home taking care of children, and not working. Karen addresses the issues related to those roles of a girl, a mother, a wife, and a partner. Karen talks about pregnancy, sex, and doctors appointments. These are issues that women face on a regular basis whether they are married, in a relationship, or not in a relationship.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Week 1: What is the biggest issue facing blogging, citizenship and the future of media?

According to http://www.dictionary.com/, a blog is “an online diary; a personal chronological log of thoughts published on a Web page. Blogging has replaced the physical entity of a diary through a virtually visible and endless diary of thoughts which maybe changed and altered with time stamps, as opposed to scratches and white-out on actual (scented, coloured) paper. We are in the future of the media we had imagined some generations ago. Anyone with access to the internet is considered a citizen of blogging, but is every citizen in this world a citizen of blogging as well? No, not every citizen is. In fact most third world countries do not even have CPU’s let alone access to the internet and therefore weblogs. The digital divide is the biggest issue facing blogging, and citizenship and the future of media.

North America inevitably has access to the internet, as well as laws that support the future of the media. I would like to put my focus towards the South of our borders, where newly emerged internet access, leading to blogging, is being demoted. I have looked at 2 cases in which internet bloggers were persecuted for typing out their thoughts and views online on their personal blogs. The first case includes a man named Wei, who was beaten to death in China recently. Wei observed a confrontation between villagers and inspectors. The villagers were protesting against the dumping of waste near their homes. Wei took out his cell phone to capture the protest, and within a few seconds he was attacked by over 50 municipal inspectors. In another case taken place in Saudi Arabia, a blogger (who was also an IT professional) was arrested on December 10th, 2007 for including politically revolting writings and thoughts. His blogs included resistance and criticisms of religious extremism. In both these cases, freedom of speech has cost 1 man his life, and another man his health (we still do not know what will become of him). Although China is considered a middle class country and is emerging tremendously economically, its citizens freedom of speech and rights are still not protected. Saudi Arabia condones any person who goes against the governments teachings. These are the biggest issues facing blogging right now that in some nation’s blogging and freedom of expression costs people their lives, even though those people are citizens of that nation. Where the internet exists, and blogs exist, anyone is a citizen of blogging and the internet, but unfortunately blogging doesn’t have its own laws and regulations on a global level. Blogging should not lead to arrests of citizens. If a country accepts the internet, they must with it accept everything that the internet has to bring with it, which is freedom of expression and thoughts and freedom of the exchange of information.