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Cyberculture is the culture that has emerged, or is emerging, from the use of computer networks for communication, entertainment and business. It is also the study of various social phenomena associated with the Internet and other new forms of network communication, such as online communities, online multi-player gaming, and email usage. Web 2.0From Wikipedia under the
GNU Free Documentation License From Yahoo Image Search: "Cyberculture" silver in sf: new reviews in cyberculture studies (november 2009)
david silver Fri, 30 Oct 2009 18:23:01 GM new reviews in . cyberculture. studies (november 2009). each month, RCCS Reviews pumps out free, full-length reviews of books about contemporary media and culture. this month, RCCS Reviews features 13 reviews of 9 books with 5 author ... Social Isolation and New Technology
rcachia hu, 19 Nov 2009 14:29:17 GM Social Isolation and New Technology: How the internet and mobile phones impact Americans' social networksThis report adds new insights to an ongoing debate about the extent of social isolation in America. A widely reported 2006 study ... Obama's Offense Against the Press
Cyberculture News hu, 08 Oct 2009 19:42:00 GM folks are keeping aneye on another contest: The White House versus the press. The selected punk'd headlines and their associated pictorial parodies were placed in the . Cyberculture. News automatically by a beta computer software program. From Google Blog Search: "Cyberculture" StageStruck: Minority Report
Valley Advocate Speech & Debate lives in the realm of contemporary cyberculture . Its characters blog, text, IM, webcast and troll for dates, communicating through their ... The Baffler is Back
Reason Online ... what it saw as phony co-opted "alternative" culture and the silly and dangerous hyping of supposedly liberatory "new business models" and cyberculture . ... Feature of the Week: Pregnant Possibility
IcelandReview I realized it for the first time when I went to Japan and saw how a nation can develop on the outside going from an ancient culture to a cyber culture but ... and more » From Google News Search: "Cyberculture" What ultimate role is the giant Myspace network playing in the continuing development of the new cyberculture? Q. What is the significance for the Blade Runner future of cyberculture? Myspace connects kids all over Planet Earth in a massive gathering of savvy cyberspace surfers, plus enough adults to collectively displace the entire population of the Benelux countries, the Hawaiian islands, the tallest mountains of Central America, and the Inuits of Antartica. Google is apparently run by a small group of scientologists located in a remote biosphere somewhere off the northern coast of France. Meanwhile I am waiting for my next girlfriend to comment my new web log entry. What do people think of the sexual revolution and the distribution ofa massive array of pornographic and other erotic materials internationally on the world wide web? When will I… [cont.] Asked by parrotdaryl - Wed Aug 9 01:33:02 2006 - - 3 Answers - 2 Comments A. it sounds like you already dropped the acid. information collection is a multi-billion dollar business. Answered by john d - Wed Aug 9 01:38:41 2006 What would you do with 50 yahoo groups in the category cyberculture? Q. What would you do, if you were the owner of 50 yahoogroups in the category cyberculture? Would you try to influence visitors, and make them think what you want them to think, would you just allow everyone to think what they want to think? Would you moderate your groups? Would you moderate spam? Would you moderate members opinions? Would you open the spam filter? Would you allow everyone to post everything? Would you not want to recruit moderators to help you moderate messages? If one person sends 50 messages a day? Is that still appropriate? Maybe I should ask someone else, but you are in my category, you see my groups, what is your impression? What should I design? what do you want to see? Cyberculture, Cyberclones? I am a… [cont.] Asked by Invincible Phantom - Fri Aug 17 10:57:27 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. 1. I would delete 49 of them and focus my energy on making one very good. 2. I would let the visitors influence themselves. That's how the groups work right? 3. While there is spam, I would moderate it out. I would let any opinion ride but moderate out extremely off topic posts written by those who seek attention and not wisdom (but those posts are just hypothetical aren't they?) 4. Spam filters would stay ON 5. No, redundant questions...er...I mean posts could stay. 6. I would only recruit qualified, sane moderators who seek to make such a forum better instead of a big distracting waste of time. 7. If all 50 messages were on topic and held to the theme and spirit of the charter. If just one dumb and pointless and was there… [cont.] Answered by nonlinear - Mon Aug 20 20:03:20 2007 Any moderators interested in Cyberculture?
Q. I'm not a professional, I'm not a pervert and no child molester, multi billion dollar business sounds great dough. I'd like to clean my groups but it seems a lot of work, are there any moderators who like to help me respond anytime please countxxx3@yahoo.com Asked by Count XXX - Mon Aug 20 07:55:08 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. You could select a member of your group and make him/her a moderator to help you take care of the group. That would be better than taking in a rank stranger as a moderator. Or, just start in one small area of your group and "clean" it yourself, then go to the next, repeat until you have got it taken care of. It's really not that big of a job. Answered by moekittykitty - Mon Aug 20 09:15:25 2007 From Yahoo Answer Search: "Cyberculture"
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Need To Know
Electronic Frontier Foundation: Net.Culture Archives
CyberCulture Zone