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Went to read a yahoo article today and this popped up. I am assuming that this is in response to Facebook/ users being concerned about how their data is being used. It did provide a key points section to (supposedly) provide users with a quick understanding of the updates.
when searching for content on YouTube I often come by videos that wonāt play due to copyright issues. To get around this, some uploaders/remixers will change the pitch to the audio, or add a large section of blank screen in order to pass by copyright infringements.
The law needs to change, but so do we. We need to find ways to chill control-obsessed individuals and corporations that believe the single objective of copyright law is to control use, rather than thinking about the objective ofĀ copyright law as to create incentives for creation. We need to practice respect for this new generation of creators.
Lessig, Lawrence. "Remix: How Creativity Is Strangled by the Law." In: The Social Media Reader:165-166
There are also a ton of youtube videos about how to take the best selfie, secret tips for selfies, and what apps to use. This shows just how important selfies are to our society. Again, interesting to note that the clipart is all women. I think thereās a connection between women and selfies that men donāt have- often we are called vein or conceited for taking selfies. And to some degree there is also internalized patriarchy wherein women feel we have to prove our worth through our beauty, and fear of being judged by our peers (thus why we watch tutorials on how to take selfies)

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When one searches āselfieā on youtube, compilation videos of āthe worst selfies of all timeā come up- most of these include in the clip image partially clothed women. I think this touches on Rachel Syms ( SELFIE: The revolutionary potential of your own face, in seven chapters) who questions the motives of those who shame selfie takers for narcissism, self-indulgence, and in the specific case of women, as less valuable people. The people who makes these videos are so uncomfortable/insecure with technology/women/attention they feel the need to find selfies and shit talk them on the internet???
A visual example of what Noble refers to when she says the content of internet searches is intended for the male gaze.
āWomen are depicted in a quite different way from menā not because the feminine is different from the masculineā but because the āidealā spectator is always assumed to be male and the image of the woman is designed to flatter him. The previous articulations of the male gaze continue to apply to other forms of advertising and mediaā particularly on the Internetā and the pornification of women on the web is an expression of racist and sexist hierarchiesā- Noble, Safiya Umoja in Algorithms of Oppression : How Search Engines Reinforce Racism
Personalization is, to some degree, giving people the results they want on the basis of what Google knows about its users, but it is also generating results for viewers to see what Google Search thinks might be good for advertisers by means of compromises to the basic algorithm. This new wave of interactivity, without a doubt, is on the minds of both users and search engine optimizing companies and agencies. Google applications such as Gmail or Google Docs and social media sites such as Facebook track identity and previous searches in order to surface targeted ads for users by analyzing usersā web traces.
Noble, Safiya Umoja in Algorithms of Oppression : How Search Engines Reinforce Racism