MediaBerkman
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Alexander Heffner on Scoop 08 from MediaBerkman on March 11, 2008 204 views / likes
QuickTime Video Download the MP3 (time: 01:14:23) Alexander Heffner senior at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. He is co-founder and editor-in-chief of Scoop08.com, an online national student newspaper dedicated to coverage of the 2008 presidential election. Heffner discusses how scoop08 is geared towards young adults and represents political ideas across the spectrum. Presently, Scoop08 has a network of several hundred student journalists across the country and abroad, and actively continues to recruit new editors and writers. Runtime: 01:14:23, size: 320×240, 165.4MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Fernando Rodrigues “Journalism and Public Information in Brazil” - Video from MediaBerkman on January 22, 2008 69 views / likes
QuickTime Video Fernando Rodrigues, Brazillian journalist and Harvard Nieman Fellow was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Rodrigues spoke about journalism and access to public information in Brazil. Journalist Fernando Rodrigues assembled a database with some 25,000 records of Brazilian politicians showing electoral information and personal data –including the list of personal assets of each politician who run for office in the three past general elections in Brazil (1998, 2002 and 2006). In 2006, the day the website was last updated, it drew 1,000,000 viewers. It is a free access website and voters can check whether a particular politician has increased his or her patrimony in a compatible way with the declared income. The database has also been an endless source of news stories for media outlets all over Brazil. Collecting all that information was not an easy task, since Brazil does not have a Freedom of Information Act. Mr. Rodrigues also works with the National Forum of Right of Access to Public Information, a new advocacy group in favor of a FoIA for Brazil. The Forum teaches people how to require public information from government agencies despite that there is no clear legislation about it. Runtime: 01:12:43, size: 320×240, 214.3MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Fernando Rodrigues “Journalism and Public Information in Brazil” - Video from MediaBerkman on January 22, 2008 39 views / likes
QuickTime Video Fernando Rodrigues, Brazillian journalist and Harvard Nieman Fellow was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Rodrigues spoke about journalism and access to public information in Brazil. Journalist Fernando Rodrigues assembled a database with some 25,000 records of Brazilian politicians showing electoral information and personal data –including the list of personal assets of each politician who run for office in the three past general elections in Brazil (1998, 2002 and 2006). In 2006, the day the website was last updated, it drew 1,000,000 viewers. It is a free access website and voters can check whether a particular politician has increased his or her patrimony in a compatible way with the declared income. The database has also been an endless source of news stories for media outlets all over Brazil. Collecting all that information was not an easy task, since Brazil does not have a Freedom of Information Act. Mr. Rodrigues also works with the National Forum of Right of Access to Public Information, a new advocacy group in favor of a FoIA for Brazil. The Forum teaches people how to require public information from government agencies despite that there is no clear legislation about it. Runtime: 01:12:43, size: 320×240, 214.3MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Fernando Rodrigues “Journalism and Public Information in Brazil” - Video from MediaBerkman on January 22, 2008 249 views / likes
QuickTime Video Fernando Rodrigues, Brazillian journalist and Harvard Nieman Fellow was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Rodrigues spoke about journalism and access to public information in Brazil. Journalist Fernando Rodrigues assembled a database with some 25,000 records of Brazilian politicians showing electoral information and personal data –including the list of personal assets of each politician who run for office in the three past general elections in Brazil (1998, 2002 and 2006). In 2006, the day the website was last updated, it drew 1,000,000 viewers. It is a free access website and voters can check whether a particular politician has increased his or her patrimony in a compatible way with the declared income. The database has also been an endless source of news stories for media outlets all over Brazil. Collecting all that information was not an easy task, since Brazil does not have a Freedom of Information Act. Mr. Rodrigues also works with the National Forum of Right of Access to Public Information, a new advocacy group in favor of a FoIA for Brazil. The Forum teaches people how to require public information from government agencies despite that there is no clear legislation about it. Runtime: 01:12:43, size: 320×240, 214.3MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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MIT’s Deb Roy on “The Human Speechome Project” from MediaBerkman on January 09, 2008 276 views / likes
QuickTime Video Deb Roy, director of M.I.T Media Lab’s Cognitive Machines group, and Chair of the Academic Program in Media Arts and Sciences was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Roy s presentation discussed The Human Speechome Project, an effort to observe and computationally model the longitudinal course of language development of one child at an unprecedented scale. The Project is collecting audio and video recordings for the first two to three years of one child’s life, in its near entirety, as it unfolds in the child’s home. To analyze the resulting massive audio-visual corpus, we are developing new data mining technologies to help human analysts rapidly annotate and transcribe recordings using semi-automatic methods, and to detect and visualize salient patterns of behavior and interaction. Runtime: 01:28:31, size: 320×240, 698.2MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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New York Times’ Michael Anti on Blogging in China - Video from MediaBerkman on November 29, 2007 411 views / likes
QuickTime Video Michael Anti, New York Times Beijing bureau researcher and fellow at Harvard University s Nieman Foundation, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Anti discussed how the recent surge in blogging has changed the state-run media landscape of China and altered the centralized control the ruling party holds over free expression in the world s most populace nation. Michael Anti (Zhao Jing), a Nieman Follow at Harvard, is a journalism researcher with the Beijing Bureau of New York Times. He runs several political columns on Chinese top newspapers and magazines. He was a war reporter for a Chinese newspaper in Baghdad in March 2003. His well-known Chinese political blog was shutdown by Microsoft in December 2005. In the wake of this case, he turned to run a collaborative online weekly magazine on International politics. He is an international jury member of Deutsche Welle’s Best of Blogs competition in 2005, 2006 and 2007. Runtime: 01:08:19, size: 320×240, 198.7MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Breaking Down Digital Barriers - John Palfrey and Urs Gasser Present New Research on Interoperability from MediaBerkman on November 16, 2007 60 views / likes
QuickTime Video This week the Berkman Center and the Research Center for Information Law, St. Gallen released the latest study on the state of interoperability: Breaking Down Digital Barriers. This joint report follows the Roadmap to Open ICT Ecosystems released in 2005, as it navigates the nuanced territory of consumer, corporate, and governmental interests in the benefits and roadblocks to interoperable ICT systems. The report and accompanying case studies on DRM-protected music, Digital Identity, and Mashups are available for download on the project website. The presentation and discussion of the report and its findings, took place in Washington, DC. Runtime: 01:04:20, size: 320×240, 181.7MB, .mov, H.264 codec Download the MP3 (time: 01:03:50)
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Breaking Down Digital Barriers - John Palfrey and Urs Gasser Present New Research on Interoperability from MediaBerkman on November 16, 2007 42 views / likes
QuickTime Video This week the Berkman Center and the Research Center for Information Law, St. Gallen released the latest study on the state of interoperability: Breaking Down Digital Barriers. This joint report follows the Roadmap to Open ICT Ecosystems released in 2005, as it navigates the nuanced territory of consumer, corporate, and governmental interests in the benefits and roadblocks to interoperable ICT systems. The report and accompanying case studies on DRM-protected music, Digital Identity, and Mashups are available for download on the project website. The presentation and discussion of the report and its findings, took place in Washington, DC. Runtime: 01:04:20, size: 320×240, 181.7MB, .mov, H.264 codec Download the MP3 (time: 01:03:50)
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Breaking Down Digital Barriers - John Palfrey and Urs Gasser Present New Research on Interoperability from MediaBerkman on November 16, 2007 228 views / likes
QuickTime Video This week the Berkman Center and the Research Center for Information Law, St. Gallen released the latest study on the state of interoperability: Breaking Down Digital Barriers. This joint report follows the Roadmap to Open ICT Ecosystems released in 2005, as it navigates the nuanced territory of consumer, corporate, and governmental interests in the benefits and roadblocks to interoperable ICT systems. The report and accompanying case studies on DRM-protected music, Digital Identity, and Mashups are available for download on the project website. The presentation and discussion of the report and its findings, took place in Washington, DC. Runtime: 01:04:20, size: 320×240, 181.7MB, .mp4, H.264 codec Download the MP3 (time: 01:03:50)
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Gary Kebbel on “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation” from MediaBerkman on November 14, 2007 57 views / likes
QuickTime Video Gary Kebbel, journalism program officer at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series. Kebbel’s presentation, entitled “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation: Challenges Posed by Intellectual Property, International Giving, and Grant Administration” discussed the foundation’s grant program. Just ending its third year, the Knight News Challenge is a $25 million contest to find digital news innovations that are used to create community in a given geographic area. At Knight Foundation, Kebbel also helped create the Knight Citizen News Network and the Knight Digital Media Center. The contest was recently revised to meet new and evolving goals, such as making grants to individuals in foreign countries or focusing the wisdom of the crowd on weak applications so that they could be strengthened and resubmitted. Additionally, $500,000 was set aside for the ideas of people 25-years-old and younger. These changes create new problems of grant administration, intellectual property and having a minor win a monetary award. Runtime: 59:36, size: 320×240, 166MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Gary Kebbel on “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation” from MediaBerkman on November 14, 2007 27 views / likes
QuickTime Video Gary Kebbel, journalism program officer at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series. Kebbel’s presentation, entitled “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation: Challenges Posed by Intellectual Property, International Giving, and Grant Administration” discussed the foundation’s grant program. Just ending its third year, the Knight News Challenge is a $25 million contest to find digital news innovations that are used to create community in a given geographic area. At Knight Foundation, Kebbel also helped create the Knight Citizen News Network and the Knight Digital Media Center. The contest was recently revised to meet new and evolving goals, such as making grants to individuals in foreign countries or focusing the wisdom of the crowd on weak applications so that they could be strengthened and resubmitted. Additionally, $500,000 was set aside for the ideas of people 25-years-old and younger. These changes create new problems of grant administration, intellectual property and having a minor win a monetary award. Runtime: 59:36, size: 320×240, 166MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Gary Kebbel on “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation” from MediaBerkman on November 14, 2007 330 views / likes
QuickTime Video Gary Kebbel, journalism program officer at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series. Kebbel’s presentation, entitled “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation: Challenges Posed by Intellectual Property, International Giving, and Grant Administration” discussed the foundation’s grant program. Just ending its third year, the Knight News Challenge is a $25 million contest to find digital news innovations that are used to create community in a given geographic area. At Knight Foundation, Kebbel also helped create the Knight Citizen News Network and the Knight Digital Media Center. The contest was recently revised to meet new and evolving goals, such as making grants to individuals in foreign countries or focusing the wisdom of the crowd on weak applications so that they could be strengthened and resubmitted. Additionally, $500,000 was set aside for the ideas of people 25-years-old and younger. These changes create new problems of grant administration, intellectual property and having a minor win a monetary award. Runtime: 59:36, size: 320×240, 166MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Eszter Hargittai on Young Adult Internet Use, Demographics and Skill Level from MediaBerkman on October 31, 2007 45 views / likes
QuickTime Video Eszter Hargittai, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies and Sociology, and Faculty Associate of the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Hargittai presented a new study using a unique data set on young adults’ Internet uses, skills and participation. She looked at differences in daily digital media uses by type of user background, access and skill level. While all young adults in the sample regularly use the Internet, there are systematic variations in their familiarity with the Web and who does what online. In addition to exploring the relationship of socioeconomic factors and Internet usage, the talk also considers the important mediating role of skill in what people do online. Hargittai heads the Web Use Project at Northwestern University. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from Princeton University where she was a Wilson Scholar. She spent the 2006-07 academic year as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Runtime: 1:02:31, size: 320×240, 177.3MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Eszter Hargittai on Young Adult Internet Use, Demographics and Skill Level from MediaBerkman on October 31, 2007 33 views / likes
QuickTime Video Eszter Hargittai, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies and Sociology, and Faculty Associate of the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Hargittai presented a new study using a unique data set on young adults’ Internet uses, skills and participation. She looked at differences in daily digital media uses by type of user background, access and skill level. While all young adults in the sample regularly use the Internet, there are systematic variations in their familiarity with the Web and who does what online. In addition to exploring the relationship of socioeconomic factors and Internet usage, the talk also considers the important mediating role of skill in what people do online. Hargittai heads the Web Use Project at Northwestern University. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from Princeton University where she was a Wilson Scholar. She spent the 2006-07 academic year as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Runtime: 1:02:31, size: 320×240, 177.3MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Eszter Hargittai on Young Adult Internet Use, Demographics and Skill Level from MediaBerkman on October 31, 2007 447 views / likes
QuickTime Video Eszter Hargittai, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies and Sociology, and Faculty Associate of the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Hargittai presented a new study using a unique data set on young adults’ Internet uses, skills and participation. She looked at differences in daily digital media uses by type of user background, access and skill level. While all young adults in the sample regularly use the Internet, there are systematic variations in their familiarity with the Web and who does what online. In addition to exploring the relationship of socioeconomic factors and Internet usage, the talk also considers the important mediating role of skill in what people do online. Hargittai heads the Web Use Project at Northwestern University. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from Princeton University where she was a Wilson Scholar. She spent the 2006-07 academic year as a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Runtime: 1:02:31, size: 320×240, 177.3MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Aaron Swartz on The Open Library from MediaBerkman on October 25, 2007 735 views / likes
QuickTime Video Aaron Swartz, co-founder of Reddit.com and Tech Lead for the Open Library project, spoke at this week s installment of the Berkman Center s Luncheon Series. Aaron spoke about how, thanks to new technology, the grand vision of a library containing every book in the world is now within our grasp. He discussed how the Open Library Project, a loose collection of technologists, publishers, librarians, and book-lovers, has taken up this challenge by trying to create a website collecting everything we know about books — including library records, publishers’ blurbs, full-text and scans, reviews, and more. Aaron was previously a co-founder of Reddit.com, which was purchased by Condé Nast in late 2006. He was worked on Internet specifications for RSS and RDF and was one of the early team members of the Creative Commons project. He is the author of a number of free software packages and a co-founder of Jottit.com. + Open Library demo + Open Library vision + Aaron Swartz’s website Berkman Fellow David Weinberger live-blogged the lunch, and you can check out his comments and summary here. Runtime: 1:03:52, size: 320×240, 178MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Oliver Goodenough on “Modeling Cooperation for First and Second Lives: Suggesting a General Case” from MediaBerkman on October 18, 2007 30 views / likes
QuickTime Video The Berkman Luncheon Series continued yesterday with Oliver Goodenough, who, in addition to being a Berkman fellow, is a Professor of Law at Vermont Law School and an Adjunct Professor at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College. Oliver discussed how the institution of game theory and other economic institutions can take a broad range of forms, such as conventions of property, promise keeping, truth-telling, and submission to authority, and how they can exist in a similarly broad range of milieu. Examples included the internal psychology of values and commitment, informal cultural expectations, formal institutions like law, mechanical devices like a coke machine and computer code. You can also read David Weinberger s great play-by-play of the discussion and Q & A. Please visit the Luncheon Series page to learn about future guests and be sure to RSVP to save your spot at these wonderful weekly gatherings. Runtime: 1:07:22, size: 320×240, 184MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Oliver Goodenough on “Modeling Cooperation for First and Second Lives: Suggesting a General Case” from MediaBerkman on October 18, 2007 12 views / likes
QuickTime Video The Berkman Luncheon Series continued yesterday with Oliver Goodenough, who, in addition to being a Berkman fellow, is a Professor of Law at Vermont Law School and an Adjunct Professor at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College. Oliver discussed how the institution of game theory and other economic institutions can take a broad range of forms, such as conventions of property, promise keeping, truth-telling, and submission to authority, and how they can exist in a similarly broad range of milieu. Examples included the internal psychology of values and commitment, informal cultural expectations, formal institutions like law, mechanical devices like a coke machine and computer code. You can also read David Weinberger s great play-by-play of the discussion and Q & A. Please visit the Luncheon Series page to learn about future guests and be sure to RSVP to save your spot at these wonderful weekly gatherings. Runtime: 1:07:22, size: 320×240, 184MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Oliver Goodenough on “Modeling Cooperation for First and Second Lives: Suggesting a General Case” from MediaBerkman on October 18, 2007 480 views / likes
QuickTime Video The Berkman Luncheon Series continued yesterday with Oliver Goodenough, who, in addition to being a Berkman fellow, is a Professor of Law at Vermont Law School and an Adjunct Professor at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College. Oliver discussed how the institution of game theory and other economic institutions can take a broad range of forms, such as conventions of property, promise keeping, truth-telling, and submission to authority, and how they can exist in a similarly broad range of milieu. Examples included the internal psychology of values and commitment, informal cultural expectations, formal institutions like law, mechanical devices like a coke machine and computer code. You can also read David Weinberger s great play-by-play of the discussion and Q & A. Please visit the Luncheon Series page to learn about future guests and be sure to RSVP to save your spot at these wonderful weekly gatherings. Runtime: 1:07:22, size: 320×240, 184MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Drew Clark on the Politics of Telecom, Media and Technology from MediaBerkman on October 10, 2007 489 views / likes
QuickTime Video Drew Clark of the Center for Public Integrity joined an enthusiastic crowd at today s Berkman Luncheon Series to discuss Media Tracker, FCC Watch, and the Politics of Telecom, Media and Technology. Drew, a senior fellow and project manager at the Center, not only provided great insight into the difficult and confusing intersection of technology s 700 MHz auction and the Connect Kentucky project. For more information on Drew s work, the Center for Public Integrity, and future luncheon guests, check out the Events & Webcast blog. Runtime: 1:03:25, size: 320×240, 175MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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James Vasile of the Software Freedom Law Center from MediaBerkman on October 05, 2007 762 views / likes
QuickTime Video This past Tuesday, the Berkman Luncheon Series continued with a presentation and discussion by James Vasile of the Software Freedom Law Center. James is Counsel for the center, which seeks to provide legal representation and other law-related services to protect and advance free software. In addition to his vast experience in a range of new media related cases, James has also contributed code and documentation to numerous FOSS software projects. Runtime: 50:30, size: 320×240, 142MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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Berkman.TV Presents “Has Common Sense Flown the COOP?” from MediaBerkman on October 04, 2007 423 views / likes
QuickTime Video Not too long ago, a student was escorted out of the Harvard University Bookstore (The Coop) for copying ISBNs from course materials only available at that store. The Coop claimed that the student was infringing on their intellectual property, because they were going to be used on the Crimson Reading website, which allows students to compare prices of course materials available online. Clinical student Angela Kang and the Berkman Center s John Palfrey and Wendy Seltzer joined together in noting the unfounded claims of The Coop in a recent Op-Ed published by The Harvard Crimson: We’re not sure what intellectual property right the Coop has in mind, but it’s none that we recognize. Nor is it one that promotes the progress of science and useful arts, as copyright is intended to do. While intellectual property may have become the fashionable threat of late, even in the wake of the Recording Industry Association of America’s mass litigation campaign the catch-phrase—and the law—has its limits. Now Berkman TV, the new video production channel from the Berkman Center, has an episode featuring Angela and Wendy, as they elaborate on this argument and the trends in intellectual property claims. Visit MediaBerkman for this episode of Berkman TV and the many more to come! About Berkman.tv is a frequently produced video segment on internet-related news and hot button issues with comments from Berkman fellows, faculty, and friends. Berkman.tv will explore a broad spectrum of issues, including, but not limited to, the future of the internet, copyright, net neutrality, intellectual property, public radio, and more. Keep an eye out on this space for more informed commentary from the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School.
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Participation, Design, Search: How the Internet is Transforming from MediaBerkman on October 03, 2007 498 views / likes
QuickTime Video Michael Maier, former Shorenstein Fellow and founder and CEO of the German company Blogform Publishing, joined the Berkman Luncheon Series on September 25 to present on the next generation of digital media platforms in his talk: Participation, Design, Search: How the Internet is Transforming. Michael s thoughts centered on the idea that digital magazines are starting to pick up, by bringing editorial structure and integrated publishing. Search will not remain Google’s monopoly. The Internet is transforming from an experimental space to a quite mature and professional platform. The next generation (which is today’s) of innovation will introduce more sustainable models and hence change the old media much more than the shockwaves of Web 1.0. Runtime: 1:03:30, size: 320×240, 176MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
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The Future of the Net from MediaBerkman on September 21, 2007 492 views / likes
QuickTime Video In the spirit of One Web Day, a celebration of global online life taking place on September 22nd, as well as Berkman’s 10th anniversary, we dedicated today’s luncheon series to a discussion on “The Future of the Net.” In a packed house, four Berkman Faculty/Fellows talked about their visions of the Net 10 years from now. Presenters included: MIT Media Lab professor Judith Donath, CALI fellow Gene Koo, visiting assistant professor at Northeastern School of Law Wendy Seltzer, and Berkman co-founder Jonathan Zittrain. Produced by Leah Weinberger. Runtime: 59:42 , size: 320×240, 86MB, .MOV, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 license.
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De-localized Production of Scientific Knowledge from MediaBerkman on September 21, 2007 390 views / likes
QuickTime Video The Berkman Center kicked off this year s Luncheon Series on Tuesday, September 11 with a stimulating presentation from world renowned physicist and professor at Harvard s Department of the History of Science, Peter Galison. Peter is the Joseph Pellegrino University Professor at Harvard University, a MacArthur Fellow, and spoke on his work around the de-localized production of scientific knowledge on the ways in which trading zones form at the boundary between different scientific languages and practices. Peter summarized the kind of work he has done on contemporary, massive, spatially dispersed collaborations in physics experiments, and more recent work on the early telegraph networks that so shaped the early formulation of relativity theory. Runtime: 1:03:34 , size: 320×240, 185MB, .MP4, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 license.
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danah boyd on MyFriends, MySpace from MediaBerkman on June 26, 2007 417 views / likes
QuickTime Video On June 19, danah boyd participated in the Berkman Luncheon Series to discuss her work and research in the area of social networks. She provided a great historical context to the various sites that have come and gone from the center of Internet activity, as well as some insight into what brought about their successes and failures. Prior to her presentation she explained, Publics offer youth a space to engage in cultural identity development. By engaging in public life, youth learn to interpret the cultural signals that surround them and incorporate these cultural elements into their life. For a diverse array of reasons, contemporary youth have limited access to the types of publics with which most adults grew up. As a substitute for these inaccessible publics, networked publics like MySpace and Facebook are emerging to provide contemporary American youth with a necessary site for peer engagement. danah boyd is a doctoral candidate in the School of Information at the University of California-Berkeley and a fellow at the USC Annenberg Center for Communications. Runtime: 1:26:24, size: 320×240, 247MB, .MOV, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 license.
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Final Words from David Weinberger at Internet & Society 2007 from MediaBerkman on June 17, 2007 456 views / likes
QuickTime Video David Weinberger, Research Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society and author of the new book Everything is Miscellaneous, offers some final words at Internet & Society 2007 on June 1. Runtime: 19:32, size: 320×240, 55MB, .MOV, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is a production of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 2.5 license.
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Working Group Report and Action Plan at Internet & Society 2007 from MediaBerkman on June 17, 2007 489 views / likes
QuickTime Video Harvard Business School Professor and Berkman Center Faculty Fellow, Karim Lakhani leads the Working Group Report and Action Plan afternoon session at Internet & Society 2007 on June 1. Runtime: 56:21, size: 320×240, 157MB, .MOV, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is a production of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 2.5 license.
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John Palfrey Keynote at Internet & Society 2007 from MediaBerkman on June 17, 2007 441 views / likes
QuickTime Video Professor John Palfrey, Executive Director of the Berkman Center for Internet Born Digital at Internet & Society 2007 on June 1. Runtime: 1:02:32, size: 320×240, 175MB, .MOV, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is a production of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 2.5 license.
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Professor Mary Wong at Internet & Society 2007 from MediaBerkman on June 17, 2007 426 views / likes
QuickTime Video Professor Mary Wong of Franklin Pierce Law Center presents a summary of day one and looks ahead at Internet & Society 2007 on June 1. Runtime: 10:54, size: 320×240, 31MB, .MOV, H.264 codec VideoBerkman is a production of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 2.5 license.
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