MK
@mkay
MK
@mkay
Yet the cultural dominance of the iPhone — and the transformation of the open internet into “walled gardens” and apps focused on simplifying the user experience — has taken the “triumph of seamless usability” to a new level. This “tyranny of convenience,” to borrow Tim Wu’s phrase , should sensitize us to what may be lost when democratization
... See moreFor one, social-media operators discovered that the more emotionally charged the content, the better it spread across its users’ networks.
It’s a genre of content I like to call “Type of Guy” syndrome, where people on the internet create a mostly fictional straw man to represent a certain kind of person they dislike and then project it onto the one in front of them.
It’s that these reactions are so normalized online that they’re almost boring.
A democratic cultural politics would be developmentalist — oriented to learning, growth and discovery — rather than presentist.
TikTok enables and invites the pointed, witty, playful, allusive, zany and endlessly inventive combination of video, music and text. But the creative energies of its more than one billion users are circumscribed and channeled by the architecture of the platform.
TikTok’s spectacular success in enlisting consumers as producers depends on making
... See more![Thumbnail of Towards Recommender System Optimization: Our Data Tool for Algorithmic Optimization on Spotify [Part 1]](https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/6206e1343aa2f122195717f8/6310b1a1447a22ac785a50ae_alina-grubnyak-ZiQkhI7417A-unsplash%20(1).jpg)
Inexpensive and user-friendly digital tools for manipulating text, images and sounds — think Photoshop or GarageBand — have dramatically broadened access to the means of cultural production and blurred the lines between amateurs and professionals. But the question is not just how many people engage in cultural production — it’s how people engage.
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