.@MediaXStanford conference Tues, public keynote @Lessig; program http://t.co/qe4CIm5d full PDF http://t.co/mMnmPoSy #mediax2013 #mx2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
.@Lessig: "Forbidden Problems": can we code the Internet to confront us with disagreeing ideas? http://t.co/xi3IMVE8 #mediax2013 @NiemanLab
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
The challenge is [to] build an essential feature of politics — confronting ideas one doesn’t agree with — into the code" @lessig #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
mediaX2013 conference at Stanford. Welcoming by: @MarthaRussell 8:45 a.m. #mediax2013
— mediaX at Stanford (@mediaXStanford) January 8, 2013
So excited for the @MediaXStanford talks today! Hoping @pertslab can get involved. #mediax2013
— Carissa Romero (@clrom) January 8, 2013
Time to start..#lookingforwardonit RT @MediaXStanford: mediaX2013 conference at Stanford. Welcoming by: @MarthaRussell 8:45 a.m. #mediax2013
— Jay de Groot (@jayster) January 8, 2013
Dean Claude Steele, Graduate School of Education #mediax2013 conference. "Today will be an opportunity to hear from many thought leaders."
— mediaX at Stanford (@mediaXStanford) January 8, 2013
Mind-expanding day celebrating #mediax2013 10th anniversary @Stanford
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/tmccormick/statuses/288692102651604992
Attending #mediax2013 today at Stanford. Looking forward to hearing about some #tech innovations, and how we can apply them to #education
— Juliet Kunkel (@juliet_kunkel) January 8, 2013
“The Media Equation” by @byronreeves & @CliffNass, 2003 http://t.co/JEVCsUFb inspired @msbernst as student, @rdp_life notes #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
"the search friction has been replaced by a cognitive friction," marketplaces can have too much info. @rameshjohari #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
"The Engineer as Economist" by @rameshjohari refs A Roth 2002 paper "The Economist as Engineer" PDF http://t.co/cl2lGG2i #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
a visual system to represent/study flow of concept-generation in design teams. PhD thesis Neeraj Sonalkar http://t.co/e0BpoIZw #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
#mediax2013 visual "interaction-dynamics language" to code design conception process (Sonalkar, 2012 http://t.co/e0BpoIZw) public anywhere?
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
"Draft In, Galley Out (DIGO): Automatic Scholarly Article Parsing & Markup" @axfelix & @juancommander http://t.co/0WzIpxKR #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
Follow today's mediaX Conference at #mediax2013!
— Stanford Engineering (@stanfordeng) January 8, 2013
Fruchter: "We are compelled to act when we are faced with our own data." Wondering about implications for personalized learning. #mediax2013
— Juliet Kunkel (@juliet_kunkel) January 8, 2013
Roy Pea – US ranks #31st in mathematics internationally, 23 in science, 17th in science #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288717512336609280
k-12 in school time provides 1 million min for learning #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
I propose we rename #mediax2013 to 'disruptx'… We are investigating disruption of everything from work to media to education to psychology
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
MT @stanfordeng: Follow today's mediaX Conference at Stanford at #mediax2013!
— Stanford Libraries (@StanfordLibs) January 8, 2013
LEAD commission established to determine how technology can help transform education in America #mediax2013 http://t.co/Tu1cy1lx
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
@roypea applying machine learning / analytics to create personalized learning and revolutionize education @MediaXStanford #mediax2013
— Patrick Kennedy (@patrickkennedy1) January 8, 2013
"Learning analytics: collecting learners' traces & using them to improve learning" @ErikDuval http://t.co/frXrWB1j via @rdp_life #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
55 million US K-12 kids – but we have very little data about them; digital learning will create an explosion of big data #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Emerging demand for education data scientists to deal with coming explosion of education big data #getyourstatisticson #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Emerging uses of sensors for emotion detection to detect frustration, engagement & other learning-relevant states in ed #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Ed data scientist challenges – modeling challenge, user behavior & user experience, user profiling, domain modeling #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Roy Pea at #mediax2013 : fine grain matching of learners and learning resources. Fascinating potential in personalized education.
— Juliet Kunkel (@juliet_kunkel) January 8, 2013
new teacher & school leader roles in data-driven decision making – need to increase their comfort with data #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
No degree programs in education data science, educational data mining #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Wow. Advances in educational research being implemented in the field faces a human resource bottleneck. #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Pamela Hinds on creativity and national culture: understanding team creativity & what fosters it #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
creativity practices develop out of cultural concepts that locally exist; everything happens for a reason #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Excited to be working with @rdp_life on Learning Analytics and bringing data science to education! #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
US & Europe style creativity out of harmony with work style and flows in Korea #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
'the problem with design centers in the US and Europe is they are too creative' : design director, Korea via Pam hinds #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
Western view creativity focuses on novelty & originality; eastern view focuses on subtle improvements, societal contribution #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
iterative prototyping improves creative performance by helping people learn quickly & try more ideas #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Eastern creativity : subtle, procedural. Western : disruptive, fractal. Iterative prototyping works @stanford #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
iteration with feedback: Westerns do better with iteration; Asian students do worse with iteration #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
iteration without feedback: western students did worse; Asian students did better on creativity #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
iteration practices w/feedback seem to be more aligned with a western way of working, therefore more engaged #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
stereotype threat seems to operate with Asian students; amplified when put in creative processes that are more western #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
tolerance for struggle valued more than the right answer in other countries #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Shades of Carol Dweck fixed vs growth mindsets in how we deal w/struggle; how can we normalize struggle as part of learning #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
at #mediax2013 today: learning & self-efficacy theories meet data analytics. Silicon Valley is a machine for learning
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
Should robots be able to choose their own personalities? #mediax2013
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 8, 2013
4 most important things to know about the psychology of media by Cliff Nass #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
media use growing in all age groups; Teens, Tweens; avg 9 year old has a cell phone, 3 years ago it was 13 year olds #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288731987324325888
Babies affected by media; babies attracted to new faces and voices and media is abundant in both #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
In society, immersion is becoming devalued; movie theaters now allocating twitter sections #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Why do we keep consuming and producing more media? Is there a limit? Good question. #mediax2013
— Sean Mulholland (@Illah) January 8, 2013
Parallel play in adults: a bunch of college kids sitting in the lounge together each on their own laptop or tablet-Cliff Nass #mediax2013
— Carissa Romero (@clrom) January 8, 2013
Backstage, CEMEX Auditorium, #mediax2013 conference. @CliffNass pic.twitter.com/9AEoxfR5
— mediaX at Stanford (@mediaXStanford) January 8, 2013
#mediax2013 "Creativity and (National) Culture: Understanding Team Creativity and What Fosters It" cf. Dahlin 2006 PDF http://t.co/kPvarDqW
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
.@cjtman of @startX on "Spinning Out & Scaling Up" RT @stanfordbiz: Follow #mediax2013 for insights from today's @mediaxstanford conference
— StartX (@StartX) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/Paul_Franz/statuses/288734093758312449
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288734330124120064
How Barney the Dinosaur changed American society – "we are friends as friends should be" laid the groundwork for Facebook #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Clifford Nass on the Dramatic devaluing of face to face communication thanks to Barney! #mediax2013 http://t.co/Lzm8MicH
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/jholston/statuses/288735115377524736
Clifford Nass asks why media use continues to grow – partial media displacement – we consume in parallel with other activities #mediax2013
— trace cohen (@traceable) January 8, 2013
Attenuation of trust has changed; fame as #1 value in pre-adolescents – used to be compassion & community #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Cliff Nass: Fame has become the #1 value in pre-adolescents. Not compassion, not happiness, not friendship. Fame. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Social media algorithms create definition of self; used to be we learned about ourselves by how we interacted with others #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Nass on the Implications of media consumption, social media use and cognitive loss –> Fame is the #1 value in pre-adolescents. #mediax2013
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
Car important locus of media growth; increasing automation in driving means more attention to media; #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Twitter doesn't know what Cliff Nass is talking about. People care more about fame than relationships? No way… ;) #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
multitasking effects: cognitive/social deficits, selling & measuring attention more difficult, immersion devalued @CliffNass #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
Implications – car makers considering letting driver use iphones & SIri operate the car; abdicating brand to Apple #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Sadness vanishing from social media because it's not engaging; young people do not get to practice negative feelings #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/BestofCA/statuses/288737049782136835
"Facebook is the (un)happiest place on earth": people present as happy, but made unhappier by using it @CliffNass #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 8, 2013
Nass on Facebook: Faces (all happy) Posts (only happy are liked) Likes (algorithm pushes happy) –> No place for -ve emotions. #mediax2013
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
Lack of practice of negative feelings doesn't make us happy, we don't learn how to manage emotions, read others emotions #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
is social media making us autistic? #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/jayster/statuses/288737681993777152
Young people …but not only …have less skills in emotional regulation, reading, and working with other's emotions #mediax2013 Cliff Nass
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
Compare emotional involvement in earlier design group videos w/ social media devaluation of face 2 face interaction #mediax2013
— John-Mark Agosta (@untubo) January 8, 2013
Terry Winograd speaking on the human element of computer human interface #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Human-Computer Interaction or Computer-Human Interaction? Terry Winograd prefers the former. Human first. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288760485397032961
Terry Winograd: The original GUI from Xerox Park is not all that different from what we use today. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Fundamental graphical user interface has remained the same for last 30 years; mobile is the exception #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
@msquihuis okay I'm not so old. I started with punch cards. Turning the crank on a computer? did Ben Franklin do that? :-) #mediax2013
— Maria Hernandez, PhD (@drmghernandez) January 8, 2013
@drmghernandez Babbage machine! It looks like a crazy steampunk mechanical computer #mediax2013 http://t.co/pWWU9m7v
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
what are the impacts of physical embodiment in the virtual world? See Jeremy Bailenson's work #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Unless you believe in the Matrix, we'll always be looking at how computing relates to our bodies #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
2001's Hal malevolent computer passed the Turing Test; a disembodied interface #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288763972918837248
a human is … an information processor #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288764855832416257
Terry Winograd introduces Bubblehead #mediaX2013 http://t.co/cv9qUAfG
— Ruth Ann Crystal, MD (@CatchTheBaby) January 8, 2013
A human is… a source of commitments; how can computers support creative work? #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/msquihuis/statuses/288765411791605763
http://twitter.com/MediaXStanford/statuses/288765535108354048
a human is an information seeker (informavore) #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
a human is a social being; a being in a social space – computers support that social space (our current phase) #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
"You promised me a Mars colony and I got Facebook" ~ Buzz Aldrin #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Humans may be "social beings," but we should not forget the value of sometimes being anti-social beings, as well. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Not just conversation and community, but introversion and introspection can be supported by technology. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
"Who I am" has been associated with a physical body and f2f interactions; now that has been detached #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Social identity – fame & fortune, connecting with family & friends through tech mediation #mediax2013
— Margarita Quihuis (@msquihuis) January 8, 2013
Terry Winograd on CHI: Current computing phase=a human is a social being. #mediax2013
— Carissa Romero (@clrom) January 8, 2013
My friend Byron reeves up next, after terry winograd at #mediax2013 movable intellectual feast @stanford
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
Getting ready to go on stage.. #mediax2013 @persuasionapi http://t.co/DexXro1f
— Jay de Groot (@jayster) January 8, 2013
Byron Reeves going to talk about multiplayer games at the #MediaX2013 conference.
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
'I never quite know…' ; common 'work sucks' complaint from modern info workers Byron Reeves #mediax2013 ergo #gamification
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
Play is not the opposite of work. #mediax2013
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 8, 2013
Byron Reeves continued: 5) Gamers already do work. 6) Play is NOT the opposite of work. 7) Engagement is good business. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
http://twitter.com/Paul_Franz/statuses/288770844392583169
http://twitter.com/jholston/statuses/288770958511202304
http://twitter.com/Paul_Franz/statuses/288770967080153089
.@byronreeves explains why games are BIG! #mediax2013 http://t.co/GFzuZs6b
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
Byron Reeves: Kids who play games are often healthier and do better in school. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Byron Reeves ingredients for succesful games: 1) Self-representation. 2) Narrative. 3) Feedback. 4) Transparency. 5) Teams… #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
More… 6) Economics. 7) Ranks and levels. 8) Rules. 9) Communication. 10) Time pressure. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Ingredients for successful games #mediax2013 pic.twitter.com/GhtZDs5k
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 8, 2013
.@byronreeves – games need: self rep, narrative, fdbk, transparency, teams, economies, ranks & lvls, rules, comms, time pressure #mediax2013
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
One thing missing from Byron's list is imagination. Like great books, great games don't give you everything. They let you dream. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Play is not the opposite of work, it is the engine. –@Stanford Professor Byron Reeves #mediax2013
— Stanford Business (@StanfordBiz) January 8, 2013
Note the huge growth in 2D puzzle games and platformers lately (just check Steam to see what I'm talking about). Imagination! #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Crusader Kings 2, Football Manager, and Distant Worlds are all great examples of games that support single player imagination. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
@Paul_Franz good point! Applies to open-ended games like Populous and Sim City. Can imagination/creativity be gamified? #mediax2013
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
Engagement at work #mediax2013 pic.twitter.com/lVAs1XKW
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 8, 2013
I always wonder: is gamification categorically different than traditional ways of building incentive structures? #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
.@byronreeves "People are thinking about gamingifying everything!" #mediax2013 http://t.co/m4JPO2GH
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
Engagement isn't something you DO, it's something you GET @byronreeves #mediax2013
— Laurie Dean Baird (@LawD) January 8, 2013
Gamification can be great, but can also feel really tacky. Remember that games are immersive and fun. Gamifying often isn't. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Gamification course avail @Coursera per Byron Reeves at #mediaX2013
— Ruth Ann Crystal, MD (@CatchTheBaby) January 8, 2013
Cisco 'closer wars' sales game visual .. Ranks, badges, training. @byronreeves #mediax2013 #gamification
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
Language development internal crowd source game at Microsoft #gamification #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 8, 2013
.@ByronReeves on Target 'games' tracking employees vs. standard times. Creepy? Makes me think of Manna: http://t.co/fcLSDyyK #mediax2013
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
If anyone wants a good book on games and narrative, check out "Extra Lives: Why Video Games Matter," by Tom Bissell. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Certain games may be more arousing with a story, but some are better off without (see Europa Universalis series). #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Doing the same activity, those with a story behind the activity show greater arousal. Narratives drive engagement. #mediax2013
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 8, 2013
Martha Russel just gave a shoutout to my recent interlocutor @tonyklai. StartX does fascinating work here at Stanford. #MediaX2013
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
.startx Accelerating the development of founders through experiential education. @cjtman #mediax2013 http://t.co/VAwWCzAp
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
@coursera's Relly Brandman on the StartX panel here at #MediaX2013. Relly was fantastic to work with during the MathThink course.
— Paul Franz (@Paul_Franz) January 8, 2013
Panel on @StartX: student run network for Stanford's best startup founders thru experimental ed and collective intelligence #mediax2013
— Laurie Dean Baird (@LawD) January 8, 2013
.@cjtman founder of startx moderates a panel of Stanford entrepreneurs #mediax2013 http://t.co/IHU38Nzk
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 8, 2013
Beginning to feel information overload, which is exactly what I signed up for. #mediax2013 http://t.co/LeNnO2cb
— Sean Mulholland (@Illah) January 8, 2013
Sneaking a peek @Lessig's deck as he preps 4 his big keynote @Stanford 2nite (his 1st talk here since he left 4 Harvard) #mediax2013
— Johanna Blakley (@Mojojohanna) January 9, 2013
Crowd sourcing may be dependable enough now to build the power into software. #mediax2013
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 9, 2013
But crowd sourcing faces challenges that Michael Bernstein is trying to design software solutions to overcome #mediax2013
— John Alderman (@mrhungry) January 9, 2013
"Soylent: a Word Processor with a Crowd Inside": Word plugin uses crowdsourcing to proofread http://t.co/ZncCFTmK @msbernst #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
30% of results in open tasks come back unsatisfactory #crowdsourcing #mediax2013
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
how do we take something in an open ended fashion and refine it #crowdsourcing #mediax2013
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
The optimal personality type for a collaborative working group? An empathetic extrovert – Larry Leifer #mediaX2013
— Johanna Blakley (@Mojojohanna) January 9, 2013
People who gesticulate a lot in small group problem solving tend to be more successful – Larry Leifer #mediax2013 (score for me!)
— Johanna Blakley (@Mojojohanna) January 9, 2013
"EmailValet: Managing Email Overload through Private, Accountable Crowdsourcing" http://t.co/p6TIusha (@msbernst et al 2012) #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
the user loses focus after 10 seconds #crowdsourcing #mediax2013
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
adrenaline realtime crowd-powered camera by @msbernst #crowdsourcing #mediax2013
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
how do you recruit crowds quickly? one method is a retainer model 69-84% in 3 minutes #crowdsourcing #mediax2013
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
"Crowds in Two Seconds: Realtime Crowd-Powered Interfaces." PDF http://t.co/TZ26lv6J (@msbernst, @karger et al 2011) #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
how do we overcome slow work times; synchronous crowds #crowdsourcing #mediax2013
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
integrate social and crowd intelligence as core parts of interaction, software, and computation #crowdsourcing #mediax2013 @msbernst
— Doctor as Designer (@joyclee) January 9, 2013
Transparency is not always preferable 2 opacity in engineered marketplaces (how do we find the optimal balance?) – Ramesh Jahari #mediax2013
— Johanna Blakley (@Mojojohanna) January 9, 2013
"digital footprints" in ch.10 of @InfiniteReality by Blascovich & Bailenson http://t.co/pWiUwLtw ch.1 PDF http://t.co/Q3kliWGJ #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
realtime analysis of facial expressions, w/machine learning, predicts driving accidents 28-37% above chance @InfiniteReality #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
"Honest Signals": unconscious social signaling reveals your attitudes. @alex_pentland http://t.co/M0bz2TdP noted @infinitereal #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
@LarryLessig giving many cases of public goods created as side effect of private effort. Also "hybrid economy" (Remix) #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
"Does participation culture build businesses on our collective backs?" (digital sharecropping) (ignored by reviewers of book) #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
New normal: "hybrid economy" platforms undercut developers/modders all the time @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
'new normal = islands controlling right to innovate on the internet' . we litigated msft vs. netscape on this @larrylessig #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
Q: are public goods ONLY going to be produced as byproduct of private efforts? @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
#mediax2013 Larry Lessig of Creative Commons fame and Harvard Biz school calling on social platforms to stop restricting development.
— Lucy Farey-Jones (@lucyfj) January 9, 2013
Heretics wear the coolest dresses, generally @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
'code based constraints that get us to do what we might need to do' @larrylessig #mediax2013 present of public goods?
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
"money election" = winning the votes of 0.05% of people who fund election campaigns @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
0.00042% of US population gives 60% of SuperPac money in last election @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
Wow: 132 Americans provided over 60% of Superpac money #mediaX2013
— pdeverak (@pdeverak) January 9, 2013
30-70% of congressperson's time spent raising money, primarily with 0.05% of population ("funders") @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
'this is legal corruption' @larrylessig RT @lucyfj: Just 132 Americans gave 60% of the superpac money in the 2012 election. #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
a higher % of Americans had trust in the British Crown in 1776 than have trust in Congress today. @lessig "Forbidden Problems" #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
Wow! @Lessig is great. Erosion of trust / confidence leads to erosion of participation. "Why waste my time?" #mediax2013
— krisscraig (@krisscraig) January 9, 2013
'trivially easy to buy 'no' from our government' @larrylessig #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
.@Lessig: the controlling funders, 0.05% of U.S, want, primarily, *nothing*, just to block change to current dysfunction #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
'opt-in,amplified,small $$ citizen-funded campaigns only way to eliminate corruption' @larrylessig #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
#mediax2013 @lessig: "progress is to make equal the influence that contributions have on political campaigns: citizen contributions."
— mediaX at Stanford (@mediaXStanford) January 9, 2013
“Capitol hill has become the farm league for K street.” – Larry Lessig #mediax2013
— NoGodsNoMasters (@NoGodsNoMasters) January 9, 2013
According to Public Citizen, in recent years 50% of Senators have become lobbyists after leaving office #mediaX2013
— pdeverak (@pdeverak) January 9, 2013
Inside vs. Outside is more impt/relevant than Right vs. Left. "DC is from Mars. We are from Earth" @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
Force of change: "open source political energy"; eg http://t.co/jVID7w8y, (early) Tea Party (pre-Corp takeover) @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
the key U.S. political divide is not Left vs. Right, but Insider vs. Outsider @lessig #mediax2013 pic.twitter.com/TMJvAcwQ
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
problem with exo-political movements: they are increasingly polarized, depending on demonizing the Enemy. @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
To solve Insider/Outsider + polarization: "I am willing to make my friends (fellow believers) uncomfortable" @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
i.e. "the broccoli of information" @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
"need to find a way to speak (about political reform) in a way so that others (on the other pole) can hear" @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
'the republic crisis' ; letting the 132 donors dictate our democracy to us @lessig #mediax2013 #rootstrikers
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
To join with @LarryLessig : http://t.co/AY8OcEqK #rootstrikers #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
"architecture-based coercion" might help people "speak so others can hear," find common cause for political reform @Lessig #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
Preso at https://t.co/5WIECDS2 — avail. for remix under CC @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
#rootstrikers should seek "generative reforms" and "reform platforms" (from @zittrain) @LarryLessig #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
@moraveji on using wearable tech to maintain calm and be our best self. Very cool. Read here http://t.co/GF1sgGe8 #medtech #mediax2013
— Patrick Kennedy (@patrickkennedy1) January 9, 2013
Is political funding reform impossible? @LarryLessig sez: "I don't have the right to pass down a broken America" #mediax2013
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
"You [Silicon Valley] need to look up from the machine, take on the task of fixing this [republic]." @lessig #mediax2013
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
.@lessig ends w/poignant note on terminal cancer of corruption. "The odds are irrelevant, you do what you can" #loveofcountry #mediax2013
— Tony K. Lai (@lai) January 9, 2013
The public keynote for #mediax2013 by @LarryLessig was one of the clearest + most compelling talks I've heard in a long time. Great job, all
— Russell Thomas (@MrMeritology) January 9, 2013
thanks for stellar #mediax2013 @MediaXStanford: @MarthaRussell @rdp_life @ByronReeves @ProfKeithDevlin @monsusana, Addy Dawes, et al
— Tim McCormick (@tmccormick) January 9, 2013
#MediaX2013 summit @Stanford was incredible. So much talent working to reinvent the way we connect to ourselves and each other.
— Patrick Kennedy (@patrickkennedy1) January 9, 2013
To all #mediax2013 @Stanford attendees and speakers: Thank you for making this year's conference such a success! pic.twitter.com/0pxhKaGA
— mediaX at Stanford (@mediaXStanford) January 9, 2013
#mediax2013 -Smart tweets coming from this conference – congrats attendees – much appreciated / kudos
— Paul Armstrong (@paul__armstrong) January 9, 2013
Per @lessig : Priorities : http://t.co/yWsEE9xt #mediax2013
— JB Holston (@jholston) January 9, 2013
Eye witness testimony is notoriously unreliable, but new MRI research reliably determines whether you've seen a face before #mediax2013
— Johanna Blakley (@Mojojohanna) January 9, 2013