My friend Keith and I were just talking at Interzone, and he mentioned my previous post on distributed knowledge, and he brought up how when we use instant message clients (e.g., AIM), when someone else mentions something that we don’t know about, we often google it instead of admitting we don’t know. For example, if someone mentions a movie I’ve never heard of, I usually go to IMDB and research it so that I have the background knowledge to talk about it as well, even if I admit I haven’t seen it (and even if I admit that I have never heard of it). The internet is a tool that is part of our knowledge base.
About Michael J. Faris
Assistant Professor of English with research areas in digital literacy, privacy and social media, and queering rhetorics.
This blog serves as a place to think through things, record thoughts, share interesting stuff, and hold conversations. Welcome!
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- Elizeth on Bersani (2010): Is the Rectum a Grave?
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- Teaching/Learning in Progress: Thinking about the “Backchannel” – Liz Ahl on Robert Brooke on ‘underlife’
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I love this idea about being conected and all,but I got a stalker this way not too long ago.Did you know all a person has to do is do a Cell Phone Number Search on it to find name, address, and even more personal information? Scarry, huh?