Posts Tagged ‘Cyberone’

Blogs Won’t Take Over Newspapers

Thursday, November 23rd, 2006

(Week 6 Journal for Cyberone)

Blogs are certainly a form of citizen journalism, but although they prove to be a complementary addition to the existing forms of journalism, they will never be able to take over existing media.

The most critical disadvantage that blog-generated contents contain is the question about how credible that information is. Currently, news agencies and other news-related service providers act as a gatekeeper, which not only protects reporters, but also protects the public in that the entity takes responsibility for what it publishes. Writers of blogs, however, are not yet required to follow guidelines or certain fact re-checking procedures that are undertaken in major news servicers.

It is also interesting to note that much of the controversial blog-generated contents were created by people already involved to some extent, in journalism. The reason these contents became so widely known was because the writer already had an established credibility from his or her job, although that job necessarily may not have a direct link with the particular contents contained in the blog. This is why perhaps, certain Internet portals, in desperate search of UCC, are thinking of beginning a separate blog newsfeed service- not with citizen reporters, but with real reporters, to ensure a certain level of quality or credibility in the news.

However, as citizen-participated news Web sites such as OhMyNews have shown, sometimes the regular citizen notices things that reporters have not. Even with their extensive network of reporters, even wire news agencies such as Reuters or AP could not cover all aspects of society.

News agencies should therefore encourage citizens to participate in generating news contents, but should also establish a separate department with people who monitor such material. In Scandinavia, some newspapers are already doing such services; the contents that they receive from citizens include not only text but photos as well. The only difference is that based on these citizens’ reports, the newspapers conduct indepth reporting to confirm facts provided by the citizen. If this filtering process does not take place, it would be difficult to determine which citizen reports were created out of the feeling of making the society a better place, and which were merely promotional reports with no sound facts to support the claim.

Blogs, as the word web-log implies, are extremely personal areas being used increasingly as a marketing tool, not only for companies, but for individuals as well. But because of the subjectivity (and one-sided views) that blogs allow, readers should keep in mind that the information contained in blogs has an element of high risk.

[Feedback from Rebecca Nesson]

What I want to push you on is the issue raised by Nick Sylvester’s situation. That is, are credible facts actually what makes journalism reliable or unreliable? In some cases the print media uses facts in a way that causes them to be misleading even if they are true. In other cases, such as Nick’s writing, interesting and worthwhile ideas are communicated without reliance on the reader trusting the facts. I agree with you that there are advantages to having a medium where facts are checked, but it seems to me that we often fail to see the advantages of media like blogs because we are so hung up on the facts not being checked. A medium where facts aren’t checked gives a writer a whole lot more freedom in the communication that is lost when you go to a fact-checked medium like print news. We tend to see the advantages of the fact checking without considering all of the modes of communication that we are prevented from getting because of the fact-checking requirement.

Website link on Berkman’s Cyber Island

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

I caught Becca one day, setting up some “boards” on Berkman Island that link us to the course Web site. She had been talking about (and actually working on) creating a robot that would serve as a tour guide for the island, but making a tour guide is apparently not an easy task that requires extremely advanced scripting skills. So she decided that the first thing to do was to let people know what we’re doing at Berkman, and that providing a link to the Web site would do just that.

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Whenever I talk to Becca through chat, I feel very comfortable with her and only sense her as a very intelligent, young woman. However, when I actually hear her speaking, it is an entirely different story. There is something very empowering about her voice that awes you. It is funny because Professor Nesson also has a very empowering voice, only their styles are completely different. He is the mesmerizing, hypnotizing chanter, sending out heavy puffs of his own logic that settles around you like a thick incense. She is as clear and crisp as an early winter morning, her thoughts ringing out like bells.

Gene, Penguin Instructor for CyberOne

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

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This is Gene, my instructor for Cyber One. In Korea, I would be calling him Prof. Koo, but apparently everyone else addresses him by his first name. It is still something I feel very uncomfortable about.
It was interesting that he chose to make a penguin. The lives of male penguins are not exactly those to be coveted; starving for months sitting over the eggs! Poor things. Gene says he is working on making a mini penguin that will follow him around. I was going to ask him if he were working on making any mini penguins in real life, too, but decided against it. After all, I am a student and I’m sure that would seem extremely rude. Btw, Gene looks nothing like this penguin in RL.

Touring Second Life

Saturday, September 30th, 2006

So here I am on a scavenger hunt (part of assignment for CyberOne class). I am writing this as I go along, toggling the Word document with the SL screen- it is not as inconvenient as I expected it to be.

CRESCENT MOON MUSEUM– As my first destination, I have chosen the Crescent Moon Museum. There is a bleeding heart in front of the door. The heart, stabbed onto a marble base with a long sword, is truly bleeding. The blood is trickling off the base into a pool at the bottom. I try to remind myself that it is not only modern art that is gory- why Renaissance paintings were filled with bloodshed. But somehow, the freshness of the blood nauseates me. I can almost smell it.

I perch myself up on the base, feeling the warm bloom soak my already-crimson plaid skirt. The pattering sound of the blood drops falling on the sand is strangely soothing. I know I am letting my imagination get away with me, but am I really sensing these emotions (through my brain) because of the presence of my cyber avatar? It is a scary question.

I wander around the rest of the museum, impressed by some of the other artwork and the scripting involved to achieve it, but cyber art in SL cannot never beat going to the MET or MOMA. Some things can never be entirely rebuilt in the context of cyberspace, and the appreciation of true art is one of them. Why would people go to museums when most painting can be viewed online? Clearly it is the entire experience and interacting face to face with a painting or sculpture that is so intriguing.

There are several buildings next to the main Crescent Moon Museum building, and I trespass on some property, and sit down on someone’s couch for some rest. Some of the houses are very nice. One day, maybe I will have a house of my own.

MIDNIGHT CITY– My second stop is Midnight City. Teleporting to Midnight City, I arrive in a phone booth, like in the Matrix. It is a cute detail.

The city certainly lives up to its name. It is dark, studded with glowing streetlights, and almost deserted. The shops shine brightly with clothes, wigs, poses, and skins. I look at all of the clothes and skins and their price tags and feel somewhat depressed that even in SL I have to spend money to look good. And what exactly is “good?” Who set the good-looking standards in SL? Naturally the people who play. And those people inevitably bring into the game their offline desires and prejudices and preconceptions of beauty. Although it may feel real, SL can never be an independent world because SL does not exist without FL.

My criticism of society’s crave on a standard ideal for beauty, however, is only in theory. I have fun browsing and trying on some outfits at stores that let you try things on. I finally end up buying some buns for my hair. When attached to my head, I look like the cartoon character Pucca.

I love cities- the beautiful modern architecture, the busy atmosphere and all the crowds (though not the shoving and pushing)- but somehow Midnight City doesn’t live up to my expectations, or rather standards, of what a good city should be.

The Lost Gardens of Apollo – After Midnight City, I decided I wanted to go to a more classic area, and chose the Gardens of Apollo. When I arrived on the island, a couple was sprawled in front of a fire, probably whispering to each other because I could not hear their voices. It was like being transported back into time, and I felt terribly out of place, wearing a red plaid skirt and black shirt. I quickly made a dress with a huge balloon skirt and an off-the-shoulder top, and tied my hair up into knots on top of my head (thanks to those new buns I bought at Midnight City!) Although I could never look Grecian because of my Asian features, I felt a little more in place as I walked between the white pillars and admired exotic dresses made of filmy chiffon-like textures.

Admiring the beautiful sunset, I was joined by a man from New Zealand, or so he claimed. He did not wear a shirt, revealing a great tattoo of a tiger on his chest.
“Is that a tiger on your chest?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said. “Do you like tigers?”
“I think it would depend on whether it was a friendly tiger,” I said.
“Aye, it is a very righteous tiger,” he said.

We sat for some time by the sea, gazing at the sun, which hovered over the horizon but never disappeared over the edge. The beauty of cyberspace. I later excused myself and told my new friend that I wished to explore more of other worlds, and took a short excursion in one of the boats, just to remember the soft red rays of this place.

Free Swimsuit Event– Because we had to attend one event, and because I am interested in clothes (as anyone reading my blog will undoubtedly have noticed by now) I chose an event where they said they would be handing out free swimsuits. I should have gotten my cue from the number of participants in the event that it wasn’t the most popular around. When I teleported to the location, there was no one in sight. Noting two green blobs on my mini map, I flew over to a beach area, where I found a couple dancing and making out in the rushes (the woman was even making appropriate noises). I pretended to ignore them, but actually was very distracted (because of the noises).

After doing some exploring and riding around on a dolphin, I found out that the towels spread out on the beach were supplied with some nice script poses. I proceeded to undress on the beach, making up a new bikini by scratch, and was distracted again by the woman, who laughed. It may or may not have been at me, but suddenly I felt self-conscious, although I knew that my SL character had a very fit figure, unlike my RL self.

I liked two poses in particular, but unable to get both of them into the same screenshot (duh) I cut out one image of me from one of the screenshots and pasted it in the other with Photoshop. In the end, it offered a form of pseudo satisfaction. You see, until now, I have never worn a bikini and unless a miracle happens with my body, probably never will for the rest of my life.

Lessons that I learned

The scavenger hunt experience of week two proved to be an example of how cyberspace, in its encouragement of democracy, allows itself to run on capitalistic values, which, ironically, turns up confining a person to certain values without necessarily having created any laws.

Although people are allowed to have freedom in how they look, it has almost become somewhat of a consensus that those who want better looks have to spend money to buy new skin and clothes, since certain contours and textures cannot be achieved with the default settings.

It is funny how people in the ‘real’ world say that the media is responsible for broadcasting images of super-skinny models or creating a “norm” for what is considered beautiful and what is not. However, in the world that Linden has created, there is no such media, and people are not pressured to look a certain way; nor are their any health hazards in being obese or dyeing one’s hair every day and so on.

Yet the people playing in SL cannot detach themsevles from the values or mindset which they have developed in the real world, which gets reflected in what is expensive and what not in virtual SL. Because of these characteristics, SL – for all its characteristics which include an independent currency system and free market – can never be truly independent, at least in an emotional context.