[Open Webinar] José van Dijck on platformisation at SMART Data Sprint 2021
Open Webinar | SMART Data Sprint 2021 A European perspective on platformisation by José van Dijck February, 3rd at 5 PM (GMT) | ONLINE (Zoom) We are pleased to announce that José van Dijck is joining SMART Data Sprint 2021 with a keynote open to the public on the theme of a European perspective on platformization. José van Dijck is a distinguished professor at the University of Utrecht (Netherlands), and a former dean of the University of Amsterdam. From 2015 to 2018, she also served as president-elect of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Van Dijck's field of research focuses on media studies and digital society. Her work covers a wide range of topics in media theory, technologies and communication, social media, and digital culture. She is the co-author and co-editor of ten books and over one hundred journal articles and book chapters. Van Dijck’s book The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media (Oxford UP, 2013) was distributed worldwide and was translated into Spanish, Chinese, and Farsi. Her latest book, co-authored by Thomas Poell & Martijn de Waal is titled The Platform Society. Public values in a connective world (Oxford University Press, 2018). Van Dijck's lecture will be online (via Zoom) and open to SMART Data Sprint participants and the general public under free registration at < https://bit.ly/SMARTDataSprint_keynoteJvD> About SMART Data Sprint SMART Data Sprint is an international event promoted by the SMART research group (iNOVA Media Lab/NOVA University of Lisbon) that provides an intense hands-on experience, driven by online data and digital methods. More info at <http://smart.inovamedialab.org> -- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint iNOVA Media Lab I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa
What is the reason for the registration form asking for info on country or origin and country of residence? This is a rather bizarre form of digital surveillance of participants of a free, open to all event... Dr Adi Kuntsman Reader in Digital Politics Manchester Metropolitan University On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 at 23:30, Smart Inovamedialab<smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt> wrote: Open Webinar | SMART Data Sprint 2021 A European perspective on platformisation by José van Dijck February, 3rd at 5 PM (GMT) | ONLINE (Zoom) We are pleased to announce that José van Dijck is joining SMART Data Sprint 2021 with a keynote open to the public on the theme of a European perspective on platformization. José van Dijck is a distinguished professor at the University of Utrecht (Netherlands), and a former dean of the University of Amsterdam. From 2015 to 2018, she also served as president-elect of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Van Dijck's field of research focuses on media studies and digital society. Her work covers a wide range of topics in media theory, technologies and communication, social media, and digital culture. She is the co-author and co-editor of ten books and over one hundred journal articles and book chapters. Van Dijck’s book The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media (Oxford UP, 2013) was distributed worldwide and was translated into Spanish, Chinese, and Farsi. Her latest book, co-authored by Thomas Poell & Martijn de Waal is titled The Platform Society. Public values in a connective world (Oxford University Press, 2018). Van Dijck's lecture will be online (via Zoom) and open to SMART Data Sprint participants and the general public under free registration at < https://bit.ly/SMARTDataSprint_keynoteJvD> About SMART Data Sprint SMART Data Sprint is an international event promoted by the SMART research group (iNOVA Media Lab/NOVA University of Lisbon) that provides an intense hands-on experience, driven by online data and digital methods. More info at <http://smart.inovamedialab.org> -- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint iNOVA Media Lab I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
Hello Mr. Kuntsman, We hope this mail finds you well. As we have already replied to you on Facebook, as global researchers, we are interested in getting to know our participants and to know how far our event is going. The SMART Data Sprint aims to provide an environment in which researchers and Ph.D. students from all over the place come together to engage with academic and non-academic projects. It is important to see the context of the event that has always been interested in how people are connected (attached you can see last year's world map as an example of how participants were connected). In this form, the questions about nationality and residence are not required to participate. As social platform researchers, we are only interested in how these environments also gather many different nationalities. You can see this in our very research group, in which members are mostly living in countries other than the one they were born in. We are never meant to be invasive or misuse this information. If you have any other questions, please feel free to contact us through smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt Best regards, On behalf of SMART Data Sprint, Ana Marta M. Flores Janna Joceli Omena On Sat, 30 Jan 2021 at 14:55, Adi Kuntsman <adi_kuntsman@yahoo.com> wrote:
What is the reason for the registration form asking for info on country or origin and country of residence? This is a rather bizarre form of digital surveillance of participants of a free, open to all event...
Dr Adi Kuntsman Reader in Digital Politics Manchester Metropolitan University
On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 at 23:30, Smart Inovamedialab <smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt> wrote: Open Webinar | SMART Data Sprint 2021 A European perspective on platformisation by José van Dijck February, 3rd at 5 PM (GMT) | ONLINE (Zoom)
We are pleased to announce that José van Dijck is joining SMART Data Sprint 2021 with a keynote open to the public on the theme of a European perspective on platformization. José van Dijck is a distinguished professor at the University of Utrecht (Netherlands), and a former dean of the University of Amsterdam. From 2015 to 2018, she also served as president-elect of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Van Dijck's field of research focuses on media studies and digital society. Her work covers a wide range of topics in media theory, technologies and communication, social media, and digital culture. She is the co-author and co-editor of ten books and over one hundred journal articles and book chapters. Van Dijck’s book The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media (Oxford UP, 2013) was distributed worldwide and was translated into Spanish, Chinese, and Farsi. Her latest book, co-authored by Thomas Poell & Martijn de Waal is titled The Platform Society. Public values in a connective world (Oxford University Press, 2018).
Van Dijck's lecture will be online (via Zoom) and open to SMART Data Sprint participants and the general public under free registration at < https://bit.ly/SMARTDataSprint_keynoteJvD>
About SMART Data Sprint SMART Data Sprint is an international event promoted by the SMART research group (iNOVA Media Lab/NOVA University of Lisbon) that provides an intense hands-on experience, driven by online data and digital methods.
More info at <http://smart.inovamedialab.org>
-- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint iNOVA Media Lab I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint <https://smart.inovamedialab.org/> iNOVA Media Lab <http://inovamedialab.org/> I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Dear Ana, Janna The question was placed here on the list for the benefit of the AoIR community (most of whom are not on the ECREA Facebook page where I had commented on your announcement a while ago). The talk you are advertising, as well as your overall event, is timely and important (in fact, I was going to direct my graduate students to attend, until I saw the registration form). It is therefore all the more surprising that , as organisers of an event on data and platformisation, you do not realise how problematic your compulsory request to provide information on one's country of origin and residence is. At the time of uprecedented data mining and sophisticated digital surveillance, in particular in e-governance, border control and state and police violence against many precarious subjects (refugees, migrants, racialised minorities, political activists), the question of origins or residence is not simple, and not neutral. Requesting such information - a rather unusual practice in event regisration where all you need is a working email for confirming zoom link - is not just insensitive and intrusive, but can actually put some of your attendees in danger. Or to deter them from participating- which makes your event hardly an "open" one. If you are interested in knowing the spread of your event and your audience, you can offer a volutary, anoymous survey, to determine that. I am sure that as data scholars and digital practitioners with interests spanning from digital methods to data rights, you can find a way to be more considerate of how your organising practices impact and potentially endanger your participants. Kind regardsAdi DrAdi Kuntsman, Reader in Digital Politics Programme Leader, MA in International Relations and Global Communications Coordinator, PhD pathway in Digital Politics Department of Politics | Manchester Metropolitan University Geoffrey Manton Building| Manchester | M15 6LL| Web| | | | | Dr Adi Kuntsman | | | On Saturday, January 30, 2021, 4:39:18 PM GMT, Smart Inovamedialab <smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt> wrote: Hello Mr. Kuntsman,We hope this mail finds you well. As we have already replied to you on Facebook, as global researchers, we are interested in getting to know our participants and to know how far our event is going. The SMART Data Sprint aims to provide an environment in which researchers and Ph.D. students from all over the place come together to engage with academic and non-academic projects. It is important to see the context of the event that has always been interested in how people are connected (attached you can see last year's world map as an example of how participants were connected). In this form, the questions about nationality and residence are not required to participate. As social platform researchers, we are only interested in how these environments also gather many different nationalities. You can see this in our very research group, in which members are mostly living in countries other than the one they were born in. We are never meant to be invasive or misuse this information.If you have any other questions, please feel free to contact us through smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt Best regards, On behalf of SMART Data Sprint,Ana Marta M. Flores Janna Joceli Omena On Sat, 30 Jan 2021 at 14:55, Adi Kuntsman <adi_kuntsman@yahoo.com> wrote: What is the reason for the registration form asking for info on country or origin and country of residence? This is a rather bizarre form of digital surveillance of participants of a free, open to all event... Dr Adi Kuntsman Reader in Digital Politics Manchester Metropolitan University On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 at 23:30, Smart Inovamedialab<smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt> wrote: Open Webinar | SMART Data Sprint 2021 A European perspective on platformisation by José van Dijck February, 3rd at 5 PM (GMT) | ONLINE (Zoom) We are pleased to announce that José van Dijck is joining SMART Data Sprint 2021 with a keynote open to the public on the theme of a European perspective on platformization. José van Dijck is a distinguished professor at the University of Utrecht (Netherlands), and a former dean of the University of Amsterdam. From 2015 to 2018, she also served as president-elect of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Van Dijck's field of research focuses on media studies and digital society. Her work covers a wide range of topics in media theory, technologies and communication, social media, and digital culture. She is the co-author and co-editor of ten books and over one hundred journal articles and book chapters. Van Dijck’s book The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media (Oxford UP, 2013) was distributed worldwide and was translated into Spanish, Chinese, and Farsi. Her latest book, co-authored by Thomas Poell & Martijn de Waal is titled The Platform Society. Public values in a connective world (Oxford University Press, 2018). Van Dijck's lecture will be online (via Zoom) and open to SMART Data Sprint participants and the general public under free registration at < https://bit.ly/SMARTDataSprint_keynoteJvD> About SMART Data Sprint SMART Data Sprint is an international event promoted by the SMART research group (iNOVA Media Lab/NOVA University of Lisbon) that provides an intense hands-on experience, driven by online data and digital methods. More info at <http://smart.inovamedialab.org> -- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint iNOVA Media Lab I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/ -- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint iNOVA Media Lab I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Dear Adi, Thank you for your comment. As organizers of an international online event, we care deeply for everyone attending. The information requested has always been and will continue to be treated with all due respect to privacy and other potentially sensitive issues. At the same time, it is not at all our intention to make anyone feel uncomfortable. We do understand your concerns and have opted out the request to provide information about the country of residence/origins. Kind regards, SMART Team On Sat, 30 Jan 2021 at 18:43, Adi Kuntsman <adi_kuntsman@yahoo.com> wrote:
Dear Ana, Janna
The question was placed here on the list for the benefit of the AoIR community (most of whom are not on the ECREA Facebook page where I had commented on your announcement a while ago). The talk you are advertising, as well as your overall event, is timely and important (in fact, I was going to direct my graduate students to attend, until I saw the registration form). It is therefore all the more surprising that , as organisers of an event on data and platformisation, you do not realise how problematic your compulsory request to provide information on one's country of origin and residence is.
At the time of uprecedented data mining and sophisticated digital surveillance, in particular in e-governance, border control and state and police violence against many precarious subjects (refugees, migrants, racialised minorities, political activists), the question of origins or residence is not simple, and not neutral. Requesting such information - a rather unusual practice in event regisration where all you need is a working email for confirming zoom link - is not just insensitive and intrusive, but can actually put some of your attendees in danger. Or to deter them from participating- which makes your event hardly an "open" one.
If you are interested in knowing the spread of your event and your audience, you can offer a volutary, *anoymous* survey, to determine that.
I am sure that as data scholars and digital practitioners with interests spanning from digital methods to data rights, you can find a way to be more considerate of how your organising practices impact and potentially endanger your participants.
Kind regards Adi
*Dr Adi Kuntsman, Reader in Digital Politics* Programme Leader, MA in International Relations and Global Communications <https://www2.mmu.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/course/ma-international-relations-and-global-communications/>
Coordinator, PhD pathway in Digital Politics <https://www.mmu.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/research-study/research-degree-list/7084.php> Department of Politics | Manchester Metropolitan University Geoffrey Manton Building| Manchester | M15 6LL| Web <https://sites.google.com/site/adikuntsman/> |
Dr Adi Kuntsman
<https://sites.google.com/site/adikuntsman/>
On Saturday, January 30, 2021, 4:39:18 PM GMT, Smart Inovamedialab < smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt> wrote:
Hello Mr. Kuntsman, We hope this mail finds you well.
As we have already replied to you on Facebook, as global researchers, we are interested in getting to know our participants and to know how far our event is going. The SMART Data Sprint aims to provide an environment in which researchers and Ph.D. students from all over the place come together to engage with academic and non-academic projects.
It is important to see the context of the event that has always been interested in how people are connected (attached you can see last year's world map as an example of how participants were connected). In this form, the questions about nationality and residence are not required to participate.
As social platform researchers, we are only interested in how these environments also gather many different nationalities. You can see this in our very research group, in which members are mostly living in countries other than the one they were born in.
We are never meant to be invasive or misuse this information. If you have any other questions, please feel free to contact us through smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt
Best regards,
On behalf of SMART Data Sprint, Ana Marta M. Flores Janna Joceli Omena
On Sat, 30 Jan 2021 at 14:55, Adi Kuntsman <adi_kuntsman@yahoo.com> wrote:
What is the reason for the registration form asking for info on country or origin and country of residence? This is a rather bizarre form of digital surveillance of participants of a free, open to all event...
Dr Adi Kuntsman Reader in Digital Politics Manchester Metropolitan University
On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 at 23:30, Smart Inovamedialab <smart.inovamedialab@fcsh.unl.pt> wrote: Open Webinar | SMART Data Sprint 2021 A European perspective on platformisation by José van Dijck February, 3rd at 5 PM (GMT) | ONLINE (Zoom)
We are pleased to announce that José van Dijck is joining SMART Data Sprint 2021 with a keynote open to the public on the theme of a European perspective on platformization. José van Dijck is a distinguished professor at the University of Utrecht (Netherlands), and a former dean of the University of Amsterdam. From 2015 to 2018, she also served as president-elect of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Van Dijck's field of research focuses on media studies and digital society. Her work covers a wide range of topics in media theory, technologies and communication, social media, and digital culture. She is the co-author and co-editor of ten books and over one hundred journal articles and book chapters. Van Dijck’s book The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media (Oxford UP, 2013) was distributed worldwide and was translated into Spanish, Chinese, and Farsi. Her latest book, co-authored by Thomas Poell & Martijn de Waal is titled The Platform Society. Public values in a connective world (Oxford University Press, 2018).
Van Dijck's lecture will be online (via Zoom) and open to SMART Data Sprint participants and the general public under free registration at < https://bit.ly/SMARTDataSprint_keynoteJvD>
About SMART Data Sprint SMART Data Sprint is an international event promoted by the SMART research group (iNOVA Media Lab/NOVA University of Lisbon) that provides an intense hands-on experience, driven by online data and digital methods.
More info at <http://smart.inovamedialab.org>
-- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint iNOVA Media Lab I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint <https://smart.inovamedialab.org/> iNOVA Media Lab <http://inovamedialab.org/> I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa
-- SMART ˚ ˚ Social Media Research Techniques I #SMARTDataSprint <https://smart.inovamedialab.org/> iNOVA Media Lab <http://inovamedialab.org/> I NOVA FCSH I Universidade Nova de Lisboa
participants (2)
-
Adi Kuntsman -
Smart Inovamedialab