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Web 2.0--The Separation of Form and Content and What that Means for Us


Kansas State University cultural anthropologist Michael Wesch has developed a nice video introduction to Web 2.0 in terms of how it's fundamentally changed our relationship to online information, forcing us to re-examine a few things:

  • we’ll need to rethink copyright
  • we’ll need to rethink authorship
  • we’ll need to rethink identity
  • we’ll need to rethink ethics
  • we’ll need to rethink aesthetics
  • we’ll need to rethink rhetoric
  • we’ll need to rethink governance
  • we’ll need to rethink privacy
  • we’ll need to rethink commerce
  • we’ll need to rethink love
  • we’ll need to rethink family
  • we’ll need to rethink ourselves

You have to watch the video to see how its form better explains the Web 2.0 phenomenon. Hypnotic and fascinating. (Via Idea City ).

Also check out Beth Kanter's recent post on Dion Hinchcliffe's views of the differences between traditional and social media. Dion's ground rules dovetail nicely with Michael's video.

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