Hello Everyone! The seventh annual Theorizing the Web is April 7 & 8 at the Museum of the Moving Image. That's in almost two weeks! We hope to see old friends and new faces so if you think you'll be in the NYC please stop by! Register and pay our whatever-you-want registration fee by April 5 to attend the conference and get full access to the Museum of the Moving Image: http://theorizingtheweb.tumblr.com/2017/registration If you don't think you can attend in NYC there's always the internet! To join us remotely, visit http://theorizingtheweb.tumblr.com/2017/livestream during the conference and you'll see all the streams. Ask the panelists questions and contact other attendees through the conference hashtag #TtW17. Each panel has its own dedicated hashtag too, so you can interact with specific panel sessions. If you’re a part of a watch party, cool! Please drop us a line and let us know. The full program is here: http://theorizingtheweb.tumblr.com/2017/program Thank you and hope to see lots of you next month! -David Banks / @da_banks / co-chair *About Theorizing the Web:* Theorizing the Web is an inter- and non-disciplinary annual conference that brings together scholars, journalists, artists, activists, and technology practitioners to think conceptually and critically about the interrelationships between the Web and society. We deeply value public engagement, and consider insights from academics, non-academics, and non-“tech theorists” alike to be equally valuable. The first Theorizing the Web conference was held in 2011 at the University of Maryland, as was the second in 2012. In 2013, the conference moved to New York, where it was hosted by the CUNY Graduate Center in Manhattan. In 2014 we moved outside of institutional settings into a Windmill Studios warehouse in Brooklyn and expanded to two full days of programming. The 2015 event moved back to Manhattan, on the Bowery, to the then-unfinished new International Center of Photography space. In 2016 and 2017, we’re at our third borough, in the beautiful spaces within the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens. The Friday and Saturday daytime sessions feature 18 panels created largely from the competitive submissions we received at the beginning of the year, and the evenings conclude with four keynotes that will take place in the museum’s Redstone Theater. Keynote panelists include Adrian Chen, Jay Rosen, Zeynep Tufekçi, Sharon Zukin, and many more.