Grossman, Lev. “How Computers Know What We Want - Before We Do.” Time. Time, Inc., 27 May 2010. Web. 27 Jan. 2011.
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In the article, “How Computers Know What We Want - Before We Do”, Lev Grossman fears that recommendation engines may be changing our social world. He believes that recommendation engines are doing this through a concept called collaborative filtering. Collaborative filtering is the principle that the behavior of a large group of people can be used to make an “educated guess” about the behavior of a single individual. The web recently has changed the way we shop, and Grossman believes it is now transforming our social lives too and recommendation engines are coming along for the ride. Grossman states “The risk you run with recommendation engines is that they’ll keep you in a rut” (par. 21). He says they do this because ruts are “comfy” places and so they aim to keep you them. Eventually Grossman believes that this would cause people’s social and cultural world to narrow down into what he called a “cozy, contended, claustrophobic little dot of total personalization” (par. 28). Everyday more and more recommendation engines are gathering up information about us and shaping our reality in a form that hopefully will be to our liking. In sense, Grossman believes it is creating a customized world for each of us that he says is slightly “childproof” and ever so slightly stifling.
Grossman’s point of view is culturally significant because he believes that recommendation engines may be changing the way our culture works. This is important because it makes you think about whether or not Grossman belief is true. For example, Grossman states that dating sites are making predictions about love. These sites put human behavior into data, which in turn they use to look for patterns in order to pair up people. This makes you think that if they are doing it to “match” soul mates then it wont be long until recommendation engines will be controlling all aspects of our cultural world. In the second to last paragraph, Grossman challenges the audience by asking a couple of questions. He asks, “How far will it go?” and “ Will we eventually surf a web that displays only blogs that conform to our political leanings?” These are tough questions to examine because the audience must dig deep in order to understand and answer these questions. Grossman leaves you with the idea that people were not built to play it safe all the time. It is good for us to be disappointed or offended from time to time, because Grossman believe that is what forces us to evolve.
Friday, January 28, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Is Free Software Like Communism
The film Revolution OS is about the creation of the free software movement and the creation of the Linux Operating System. Richard Stallman and Linus Tarvous, which are the founders of the free software movement and Linux Operating Systems, try to explain what there visions were about there creations. In the movie the question was asked about whether or not the free software movement was more along the lines of communism. They say that this is not like communism, because in communism you are forced to share everything with other people. The idea of free software does not force you to share software with other people, but rather gives you the freedom to do so if that person chooses to.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Has The Internet Altered Our Society?
Carr, Nicholas. “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” The Atlantic. The Atlantic Monthly Group, July/Aug 2008. Web. 17 Jan. 2010.
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In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, Nicholas Carr has a fear that people have lost their depth in understanding the works of literature in our society. He is skeptical about the Internets way of providing articles, readings, journals, literature; etc because he fears it has changed our way of thinking. He compares the methodical use of the Internet to that of the clock by saying that instead of “relying on our senses”, people began to “decide when to eat, sleep, work, and to rise by obeying the clock” (Paragraph 15). Furthermore, he said that people began to change their way of thinking “like clockwork” (Paragraph 16). Carr makes the comparison to the Internet by examining how people’s way of information-processing is changing. Although he claims himself to be a “worrywort” like that of Plato, he fears that future generations will rely heavily on Google and any other form of information search engine in order to receive a very “skimmed” summary of a topic (Paragraph 32). While search engines can be efficient and time managing, Carr is not quite sure if the conceptual understanding of the information will be obtained at the depth that a physical book may offer. Therefore, Carr has a very skeptical point of view. He does not disagree with Google or prohibit its use, but rather wonders if search engines are the best possible supplement for the human brain, or will our society one day refer to the human way of thinking as “Google-work”?
In this particular article, Carr focuses on the ways that the Internet has altered our society from the past to the present. He mentions in the last paragraph that his biggest fear is a scene in the movie 2001 when the “humans go about their business with an almost robotic efficiency”. Carr fears that our culture will lack philosophical depth and the capacity to think critically about life. Carr worries that without filling our minds with rich and meaningful texts, our culture will take away our ability to gain the intellectual abilities to understand a concept in-depth rather than on the surface. He feels as though our culture will be one that knows “a little about a lot” rather than “a lot about a little”. Moreover, the founders of Google, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, are very intellectual in Carr’s point of view. He respects their abilities to use a search engine that can enable people to find just about anything and may one day be linked to our brains. However, Carr agrees with Maryanne Wolf when she says that “deep reading is better for us for more than just the intelligence” but it is also good for the “quiet space that allows the reader to focus”. While Carr respects both the Internet and “deep reading” as means of processing information, he wants to challenge our culture to try and look beyond what a computer understands about the world so that we will not display an “artificial intelligence”. Although he is not against using a computer for a means of research, he does not feel as though our culture should rely on it alone for our means of information and deep thinking.
Read this article
In the article, “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”, Nicholas Carr has a fear that people have lost their depth in understanding the works of literature in our society. He is skeptical about the Internets way of providing articles, readings, journals, literature; etc because he fears it has changed our way of thinking. He compares the methodical use of the Internet to that of the clock by saying that instead of “relying on our senses”, people began to “decide when to eat, sleep, work, and to rise by obeying the clock” (Paragraph 15). Furthermore, he said that people began to change their way of thinking “like clockwork” (Paragraph 16). Carr makes the comparison to the Internet by examining how people’s way of information-processing is changing. Although he claims himself to be a “worrywort” like that of Plato, he fears that future generations will rely heavily on Google and any other form of information search engine in order to receive a very “skimmed” summary of a topic (Paragraph 32). While search engines can be efficient and time managing, Carr is not quite sure if the conceptual understanding of the information will be obtained at the depth that a physical book may offer. Therefore, Carr has a very skeptical point of view. He does not disagree with Google or prohibit its use, but rather wonders if search engines are the best possible supplement for the human brain, or will our society one day refer to the human way of thinking as “Google-work”?
In this particular article, Carr focuses on the ways that the Internet has altered our society from the past to the present. He mentions in the last paragraph that his biggest fear is a scene in the movie 2001 when the “humans go about their business with an almost robotic efficiency”. Carr fears that our culture will lack philosophical depth and the capacity to think critically about life. Carr worries that without filling our minds with rich and meaningful texts, our culture will take away our ability to gain the intellectual abilities to understand a concept in-depth rather than on the surface. He feels as though our culture will be one that knows “a little about a lot” rather than “a lot about a little”. Moreover, the founders of Google, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, are very intellectual in Carr’s point of view. He respects their abilities to use a search engine that can enable people to find just about anything and may one day be linked to our brains. However, Carr agrees with Maryanne Wolf when she says that “deep reading is better for us for more than just the intelligence” but it is also good for the “quiet space that allows the reader to focus”. While Carr respects both the Internet and “deep reading” as means of processing information, he wants to challenge our culture to try and look beyond what a computer understands about the world so that we will not display an “artificial intelligence”. Although he is not against using a computer for a means of research, he does not feel as though our culture should rely on it alone for our means of information and deep thinking.
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