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February 23, 2008The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet
This book examines the darker side of personal expression and communication online, looking at some of the social costs of what I'm always rambling on about as "persistence, searchability, replicability, and invisible audiences." Our reputation is one of our greatest assets. What happens when our own acts or the acts of others sully that? What role does the technology play in enabling or stopping that? How should the law modernize its approach to privacy and slander to address the networked world? While this book is written by a professor, it's written in extremely accessible manner and should be devoured by parents, marketers, technologists, teachers, HR professionals, policy makers, and anyone else who might have a stake in the world of reputation. I also found excerpts helpful for students who are trying to make sense of the costs of their practices. Oh, and it's a fun read. If you hate reading from the screen, just go and buy the book. The author and his publisher will thank you. (Oh, and go Yale University Press! You're batting well in the CC/open-access publishing baseball game!) Category: privacy Tags: reputation book Posted by zephoria at February 23, 2008 2:15 PM
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Comments (3)
Reading now...
also, was talking to the publisher of YUP the other day, he's really cool! He seems to have a great handle on the future, and is doing a good job steering a nice path between nonprofit and trade.
looks good after the first few pages!
p.s. please send me that table of contents???
Posted by Sam Jackson | February 23, 2008 4:41 PM
Posted on February 23, 2008 16:41
Also, it's pretty easy to convert PDFs to Kindle-mats. I wish I had a (free) kindle or sony reader... yay shiny things. Not the same, though.
Posted by Sam Jackson | February 24, 2008 5:02 PM
Posted on February 24, 2008 17:02
Damn, now I have to buy one. It's not the printing out of the online freebie that hurts... it's finding a stapler big enough to put it together!
I'm fascinated by reputation and digital identity, multiple identies and the values which are potentially created by both.
Re free downloads: I have a white paper on Reed's Law and how multiple identities make the long tail just a little longer, which I'm presenting at BlogTalk on March 4.
http://fasterfuture.blogspot.com/2007/08/reeds-law-and-how-multiple-identities.html
The question I struggle to answser is: Is there more value created in having one consistent id which carries your reputation where ever you go, or more in the additionaly value to Reed's Law which emerges when you allow your ID to mean different things among different communities?
Posted by David Cushman | February 25, 2008 5:40 AM
Posted on February 25, 2008 05:40