Data Humanism — giorgialupi
Keely Adler and added
A data-driven culture is one that respects both the power of data and the humanity of the people who are the source of that data.
Carl Anderson • Creating a Data-Driven Organization: Practical Advice from the Trenches
It teaches them that data is created, not found; and that creating it well demands humanity, rather than objectivity
Melanie Feinberg • The Myth of Objective Data
Keely Adler and added
In a world rapidly accelerating toward automation and measurement, data is a commodity. Filtered, labeled, and processed data is the most valuable asset. Thus, information processing is the most important force of our reality. It’s critical that this power is decentralized.
Kiran Cherukuri • Internet Cities & The Social Uniswap
sari added
Paradoxically, the deployment of technology can also serve as a reflection of our humanity. Techniques such as interactive infographics, augmented reality journalism, and 3D content storytelling go beyond mere technological progress; they emphasize human effort , setting it apart from the facile and inexpensive mass-produced content that is becomin
... See moreMarie Dollé • Embracing Tangible Media?
Keely Adler added
Data is always an abstraction of reality based on underlying assumptions as to how to categorize the unstructured phenomena of the real world.