Geert Lovink (2003) My First Recession, Critical Internet Culture In Transition

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Ned Rossiter (2003).My First Recession, Critical Internet Culture In Transition.Amsterdam:Institute of Network Cultures.

Enlace:http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/no-09-my-first-recession-critical-internet-culture-in-transition-ned-rossiter/#

Wayback Machine:https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/no-09-my-first-recession-critical-internet-culture-in-transition-ned-rossiter/#

Resumen:My First Recession starts after the party is over. This study maps the tran- sition of critical Internet culture from the mid to late 1990s Internet craze to the dotcom crash, the subsequent meltdown of global financial markets and 9/11. In his discussion of the dotcom boom-and-bust cycle, Geert Lovink lays out the challenges faced by critical Internet culture today. In a series of case studies, Lovink meticulously describes the ambivalent attitude that artists and activists take as they veer back and forth between euphoria and skepticism. As a part of this process, Lovink examines the internal dynamics of virtual communities through an analysis of the use of moderation and “col- laborative filtering” on mailing lists and weblogs. He also confronts the practical and theoretical problems that appear as artists join the growing number of new-media education programs. Delving into the unexplored gold mines of list archives and weblogs, Lovink reveals a world that is largely unknown to both the general public and the Internet visionaries.