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After 25 years, Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive are still working to democratize knowledge | Nieman Journalism Lab
After 25 years, Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive are still working to democratize knowledge | Nieman Journalism Lab
In 1996, Kahle founded the Internet Archive, which stands alongside Wikipedia as one of the great not-for-profit knowledge-enhancing creations of modern digital technology. You may know it best for the Wayback Machine, its now quarter-century-old tool for deriving some sort of permanent record from the inherently transient medium of the web. (It’s collected 668 billion web pages so far.) But its ambitions extend far beyond that, creating a free-to-all library of 38 million books and documents, 14 million audio recordings, 7 million videos, and more. (Malamud’s book is, of course, among them.) That work has not been without controversy, but it’s an enormous public service — not least to journalists, who rely on it for reporting every day. (Not to mention the Wayback Machine is often the only place to find the first two decades of web-based journalism, most of which has been wiped away from its original URLs.) A little while back, the Internet Archive celebrated its 25th birthday, and I used that as an excuse to chat with Kahle about how his vision for it had changed along with the internet it tries to preserve in amber — and about why there is still so much human knowledge locked away on microfilm. Here are some bits of our conversation, lightly edited to make me sound more coherent on Zoom calls.
·niemanlab.org·
After 25 years, Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive are still working to democratize knowledge | Nieman Journalism Lab
A1 Revisited: At a historic moment, this paper missed the mark
A1 Revisited: At a historic moment, this paper missed the mark
In February 1942, a few short months after the attack at Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 designating Japanese Americans as “threats” to national security. They were evicted from their homes on the West Coast and sent to incarceration camps. On March 30, 1942, Bainbridge Island became the first community where the order was fully enforced. The Seattle Times (then known as The Seattle Daily Times) covered the events of that day in 1942 in one story on A1 (the front page) and two brief stories on A2 of our March 30 issue. Eighty years later, in an effort to take accountability for and learn from the harm caused by our coverage that day, The Times has revisited the stories, photos and headlines that told the story of that historic event. We formed a team of reporters, editors, designers, news researchers and photo editors, and collaborated with Seattle-based Japanese American history preservation nonprofit Densho, to scrutinize every word, caption, photo and design decision made in telling those stories. In our examination, we found that our 1942 coverage used racist slurs and stereotypes, inaccurate and offensive language, one-sided sourcing and perspective, and photos and layouts that downplayed the significance of the events of that day. We compiled these observations into notes on the 1942 pages, categorizing and highlighting them.
·projects.seattletimes.com·
A1 Revisited: At a historic moment, this paper missed the mark
Copyright and Creative Work - How can Open Licenses empower Cultural and Creative Workers?
Copyright and Creative Work - How can Open Licenses empower Cultural and Creative Workers?
Based in recent studies, this video explains how copyright affects the work of artists and creative professionals and shows how open licenses can be important strategic instruments to promote their work and increase bargaining power in the cultural scene. The origin of author's rights (copyright) goes back to the emergence of the concept of 'artist' (as we know it in Western societies). The digital revolution and the emergence of the network society have made copyright a central feature of the creative and cultural sector. Although mainstream narrative suggests copyright is an essential asset for artistic careers and creative businesses, oftenly it does not meet the specific characteristics of cultural work: copyright remains an ambiguous and obscure subject, especially to core creative artists and authors. Open licenses such as Creative Commons become an interesting alternative, as they allow artists and creative professionals to decide autonomously how they wish to share and/or explore their own work.
·creativework.creativecommons.pt·
Copyright and Creative Work - How can Open Licenses empower Cultural and Creative Workers?
The latest marketing tactic on LinkedIn: AI-generated faces : NPR
The latest marketing tactic on LinkedIn: AI-generated faces : NPR
Social media accounts using computer-generated faces have pushed Chinese disinformation; harassed activists; and masqueraded as Americans supporting former President Donald Trump and independent news outlets spreading pro-Kremlin propaganda. NPR found that many of the LinkedIn profiles seem to have a far more mundane purpose: drumming up sales for companies big and small. Accounts like Keenan Ramsey's send messages to potential customers. Anyone who takes the bait gets connected to a real salesperson who tries to close the deal. Think telemarketing for the digital age.
·npr.org·
The latest marketing tactic on LinkedIn: AI-generated faces : NPR
Story Dice creative story ideas by Dave Birss - speaker, author, film-maker
Story Dice creative story ideas by Dave Birss - speaker, author, film-maker
How to use story dice As you can see above, you get five story dice (or nine dice, if you prefer), each with a random image on it. Your job is quite simply to turn these prompts into a story. I recommend you try to work with the order they appear on the screen but if you’re finding it tough, you can do some swapsies. You also don’t need to take the image literally. You can use the dice metaphorically or as representations of other concepts. For example, a slice of pizza could represent food in general, cutting a slice out of something, Italy, gooiness, a chef and a heap of other more obscure things. The job of the dice is not necessarily to provide you with literal objects to work with but concepts to nudge your thinking in fresh directions.
·davebirss.com·
Story Dice creative story ideas by Dave Birss - speaker, author, film-maker
Black Press Research Collective | Generating knowledge about the historical and contemporary role of black newspapers.
Black Press Research Collective | Generating knowledge about the historical and contemporary role of black newspapers.
The Black Press Research Collective (BPRC) is dedicated to generating digital scholarship and archiving the Black Press to preserve the significance of the historical and contemporary role of black newspapers in Africa and the African Diasporas. Drawing on the work of Colin A. Palmer, the term African Diasporas refers to the “dispersal” of Africans outside of the African continent who are bound together by their struggle against racial oppression. However, and again like Palmer, the BPRC also makes a conscious effort to include the African continent in our understanding of Diaspora. Still, the BPRC focuses its scholarship on newspapers published or written by individuals living outside of Africa who have been dispersed, either through choice or through force, and now live elsewhere. The BPRC strives to avoid homogenizing newspapers of the Diaspora but to explore how they operate in specific periods and settings. At the same time, the BPRC is interested in generating new methodologies that explore the concept of an African Diasporic press in the formation of global communities of people of African descent.
·blackpressresearchcollective.org·
Black Press Research Collective | Generating knowledge about the historical and contemporary role of black newspapers.
Frost - WordPress Theme
Frost - WordPress Theme
Leveraging the power of the WordPress block editor, Frost is a Full Site Editing theme that revolutionizes site building and publishing media-rich content.
·frostwp.com·
Frost - WordPress Theme
Frankenbook
Frankenbook
Frankenbook is a collective reading and collaborative annotation experience of the original 1818 text of Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. The project launched in January 2018, as part of Arizona State University’s celebration of the novel’s 200th anniversary. Even two centuries later, Shelley’s modern myth continues to shape the way people imagine science, technology, and their moral consequences. Frankenbook gives readers the opportunity to trace the scientific, technological, political, and ethical dimensions of the novel, and to learn more about its historical context and enduring legacy.
·frankenbook.org·
Frankenbook
Survey: People Found Freedom, Joy in Gardens During COVID-19 - Government Executive
Survey: People Found Freedom, Joy in Gardens During COVID-19 - Government Executive
People who turned to gardening during the COVID-19 pandemic did so to relieve stress, connect with others, and grow their own food in hopes of avoiding the virus, a new survey shows. The survey report highlights the positive role gardening plays in mental and physical health, says Alessandro Ossola, an assistant professor of plant sciences. “Connection to nature, relaxation, and stress relief were by far the biggest reasons gardeners cited,” she says. Researchers sent links to online surveys via targeted emails to gardening groups, in newsletters, and on social media between June and August 2020. They were hoping to gauge the significance of gardening as a way to cope with risk, how the pandemic changed gardening, and what barriers existed. More than 3,700 gardeners from Australia, Germany, and the United States returned surveys.
·govexec.com·
Survey: People Found Freedom, Joy in Gardens During COVID-19 - Government Executive
Avant-GIFs
Avant-GIFs
Once upon a time, a motion picture lasted somewhere between 90 and 120 minutes. Film shorts weren't entirely dead, but they were limited to classroom movies, music videos, and other relatively marginal outlets. From time to time a TV channel would show a miniseries, allowing writers and directors to tell a longer story. But those too were exceptions. If moving pictures were your medium of choice, you were expected to accept fairly rigid time constraints. And then there is the animated GIF, simultaneously the shortest variety of motion picture (just a few seconds) and the longest (those seconds loop forever). As a technology, these have existed since 1987, but they've only just recently exploded in popularity, as mass access to the Internet allowed them to travel rapidly and virally online. The most popular GIFs are tiny snippets from movies and TV, ripped from one context and plugged into another: a disposable little gag to stick in a Tumblr post or a BuzzFeed article. But serious artists are working with GIFs too—photographers who want to introduce motion to their images, animators more interested in crafting a moment than telling an extended story, cartoonists who'd like to let some of their panels move, collagists delighted to have an extra dimension to play with. All creating strange and striking micro-movies.
·reason.com·
Avant-GIFs
UGPN | University Global Partnership Network
UGPN | University Global Partnership Network
The University Global Partnership Network (UGPN) sets out to create a foundation for international collaboration enabling academics and students from some of the world’s top universities to work together on issues of global importance.
·ugpn.org·
UGPN | University Global Partnership Network
SUNY COIL Center
SUNY COIL Center
Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) connects students and professors in different countries for collaborative projects and discussions as part of their coursework.  COIL Collaborations between students and professors provide meaningful, significant opportunities for global experiences built into programs of study. COIL enhances intercultural student interaction through proven approaches to meaningful online engagement, while providing universities a cost-effective way to ensure that their students are globally engaged.  The SUNY COIL Center pioneered the COIL model more than 15 years ago, and has been helping professors and institutions realize the power of COIL ever since.
·coil.suny.edu·
SUNY COIL Center
Welcome to the Archives Unleashed Project
Welcome to the Archives Unleashed Project
The Archives Unleashed project aims to make petabytes of historical internet content accessible to scholars and others interested in researching the recent past. Our team develops web archive search and data analysis tools to enable scholars, librarians and archivists to access, share, and investigate recent history since the early days of the World Wide Web.
·archivesunleashed.org·
Welcome to the Archives Unleashed Project
How to Enable Frontend Editing with Gutenberg Blocks (Part 1) - WebDevStudios
How to Enable Frontend Editing with Gutenberg Blocks (Part 1) - WebDevStudios
Well, depending on your coding preferences, you could build a frontend form to update post meta, or implement some custom jQuery with AJAX, or use a page builder with frontend editing capabilities. If, on the other hand, you’ve been experimenting with your own blocks and are looking for a way to update block content and attributes from outside the confines of the post editor, then buckle up, and keep reading.
·webdevstudios.com·
How to Enable Frontend Editing with Gutenberg Blocks (Part 1) - WebDevStudios
Intertwingled | SpringerLink
Intertwingled | SpringerLink
Presents historical material on the very early years of personal computers that is not available in any other publication Offers fascinating perspectives on the impact of Ted Nelson’s work, assembled from an interdisciplinary collection of globally renowned authors Provides a unique intellectual biography of Ted Nelson and of his contributions to the evolution of personal computing
·link.springer.com·
Intertwingled | SpringerLink
Short online courses
Short online courses
This course explores the world of cats and dogs and how our relationships with them vary around the world and have changed over time. Understanding your pet’s behaviour and the way they communicate will help you understand their needs and strengthen your relationship with them.
·onlinecourses.ed.ac.uk·
Short online courses
Getting going with the YouTube API | by richard bultitude | Medium
Getting going with the YouTube API | by richard bultitude | Medium
Sites using 3rd party APIs has become an integral part of the living web and an essential part of the web developer’s toolkit. However, it can be quite difficult to pin point problems if the API documentation doesn’t cover your particular configuration. Some such configurations are the use of things like require.js (an asynchronous dependancy manager that uses the AMD pattern) or Common JS. Though libraries like require.js are great at lazy loading and helping you write more manageable code they can be troublesome when working with libraries that are not AMD compatible or with code that needs to run in a specific order. In this short piece I’m simply offering a quick guide to help you troubleshoot should you have experienced some pain in these areas.
·medium.com·
Getting going with the YouTube API | by richard bultitude | Medium
Re-designing an Awesome Meeting Experience, Remotely - XPLANE | Organizational Change Management ConsultingXPLANE | Organizational Change Management Consulting
Re-designing an Awesome Meeting Experience, Remotely - XPLANE | Organizational Change Management ConsultingXPLANE | Organizational Change Management Consulting
We’re all grappling with ways to make the remote experience more human, activate the senses, and create “aha” moments that characterize in-person interaction. As more of us transition into remote ways of working, we are finding there’s a considerable learning curve in making the switch. Even XPLANErs with all the facilitation experience in the world are “having a moment” converting the immediacy of the in-person workshop into a similar digital experience. While many of us are familiar with the online tools, we are grappling with bigger “how to” questions like how to make the remote experience more human, how to activate the senses and how to create those “aha” moments that characterize in-person interaction. At XPLANE, we know there’s power in assessing our vulnerabilities, learning together and taking on a beginner’s mindset in order to see this new reality as an opportunity. These past weeks, we’ve been experimenting with various practices, tools, and techniques to quickly develop our remote collaboration capabilities. Here are a few of our learnings:
·xplane.com·
Re-designing an Awesome Meeting Experience, Remotely - XPLANE | Organizational Change Management ConsultingXPLANE | Organizational Change Management Consulting
Nina Simone’s Gum and the Shimmering Strangeness of How Art Casts Its Transcendent Spell on Us – The Marginalian
Nina Simone’s Gum and the Shimmering Strangeness of How Art Casts Its Transcendent Spell on Us – The Marginalian
The metaphysical made physical in a symphonic celebration of imagination, collaboration, and the human heart. That eerie enchantment comes aglow in Nina Simone’s Gum: A Memoir of Things Lost and Found (public library) by Australian musician and composer Warren Ellis — a strange and shimmering book, alive with the deepest questions of what makes us who we are and why we make the life-stuff we call art, using the chewing gum Ellis once pried from under Nina Simone’s piano as a lens on memory, mortality, and our search for meaning. What emerges is something not fetishistic but belonging to the stream of time, which casts ashore the artifacts of the lives it inescapably washes away, just like it will wash away yours and mine and Ellis’s, like it washed away Nina Simone’s. This flotsam of objects — the stories they carry, the past selves they carry — becomes the only time travel available to us, mortal creatures made of dead stars in an entropy-governed universe whose fundamental laws aim the arrow of time at one destination only. These artifacts shimmer for us with meaning beyond their materiality, because somewhere in the core of our being, we recognize them as our only “bright spark of resurrection.”
·themarginalian.org·
Nina Simone’s Gum and the Shimmering Strangeness of How Art Casts Its Transcendent Spell on Us – The Marginalian
YouTube Player API Reference for iframe Embeds  |  YouTube IFrame Player API  |  Google Developers
YouTube Player API Reference for iframe Embeds  |  YouTube IFrame Player API  |  Google Developers
The IFrame player API lets you embed a YouTube video player on your website and control the player using JavaScript. Using the API's JavaScript functions, you can queue videos for playback; play, pause, or stop those videos; adjust the player volume; or retrieve information about the video being played. You can also add event listeners that will execute in response to certain player events, such as a player state change. This guide explains how to use the IFrame API. It identifies the different types of events that the API can send and explains how to write event listeners to respond to those events. It also details the different JavaScript functions that you can call to control the video player as well as the player parameters you can use to further customize the player.
·developers.google.com·
YouTube Player API Reference for iframe Embeds  |  YouTube IFrame Player API  |  Google Developers
The non-toxic origins — and future? — of social media
The non-toxic origins — and future? — of social media
The writer Gal Beckerman on the hippies who invented social media and who understood what has since been forgotten: that conversation needs guardrails Social media as we know it was born in a wooden shack in a shipyard in Sausalito. More precisely, it was born in the closet of that shack. Just north of the Golden Gate Bridge, not far from the rickety houseboats floating on the edge of the bay, sat a humming and vibrating VAX computer, the size of a small refrigerator, connected to a dozen modems. And in 1985, an eclectic group of Bay Area professors, engineers, freelance writers, and self-proclaimed futurists began dialing into those modems and talking by typing, at all hours of the day and night, about all manner of things: the worsening AIDS epidemic, their favorite Grateful Dead songs, the ethics of circumcision, the most useful UNIX commands. No one had done this before, engaged in this sort of disembodied, nearly instantaneous communication through writing. They soon began calling themselves a “virtual community.”
·the.ink·
The non-toxic origins — and future? — of social media
Neri Oxman’s Krebs Cycle of Creativity – MIT Spectrum
Neri Oxman’s Krebs Cycle of Creativity – MIT Spectrum
THE KREBS CYCLE OF CREATIVITY, by designer, architect, and MIT Media Lab faculty member Neri Oxman PhD ’10, was featured in the Journal of Design and Science (JoDS) in January 2016. The illustration refers to the Krebs cycle, the sequence of reactions by which organisms generate energy; and to previous matrices put forth by designers John Maeda ’89, SM ’89, a former Media Lab professor, and the late Rich Gold—both of which located Art, Science, Design, and Engineering in quadrants with distinct boundaries and specialized missions.
·spectrum.mit.edu·
Neri Oxman’s Krebs Cycle of Creativity – MIT Spectrum
The Kept and the Killed – The Public Domain Review
The Kept and the Killed – The Public Domain Review
Of the 270,000 photographs commissioned by the US Farm Security Administration to document the Great Depression, more than a third were “killed”. Erica X Eisen examines the history behind this hole-punched archive and the unknowable void at its center.
·publicdomainreview.org·
The Kept and the Killed – The Public Domain Review
GitHub - saltnpixels/crucial.css: Nothing but the crucial CSS
GitHub - saltnpixels/crucial.css: Nothing but the crucial CSS
Crucial CSS sets up your CSS with what you need to start styling and nothing more. Crucial has all the stuff found in modern normalize to normalize the differences between browsers. It takes things a bit further for you though by implementing a few things that will save you lots of hours of tinkering. Simple things you probably do everytime you make a site, either by yourself or through a framework. From resetting differences between browsers, to fixing the box-sizing, to setting images to be responsive, to font-sizes and more. This saves you time and removes a lot of confusion and pain points.
·github.com·
GitHub - saltnpixels/crucial.css: Nothing but the crucial CSS