Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Social networking sites

Facebook

Even though it is currently not the most popular among the younger crowd, Facebook is still currently the most dominant of all social platforms. It is mainly useful because of how ingrained it is across people of all age groups, so it can be a nice way to keep in touch with old friends and family that you do not see very often. However, the way that it handles news feeds can be very annoying, and it can be extra obnoxious when people try to use it as a platform to have gigantic political debates where they link useless articles. Facebook has definitely catered toward the spread of misinformation in the past, though there are hints of them starting to change that.

Twitter

Much like Facebook, Twitter's main issue is how people try to have debates or try to make profound statements that do not come off well due to the character limit. Twitter is one of the best places to get breaking news on various subjects very fast though, as it is usually the first platform that people go to so they can share any events that happen near them.

Steam

While platforms like Facebook and Twitter are for universal audiences, Steam is a platform for people that play video games on their computer. It started as a storefront, but it has a built in community section where people can chat on message boards for every single game that is sold on the platform, or people can share custom modifications for the games through the platform. This helps foster creativity and can even act as a substitute for official troubleshooting as games often have issues on the PC platform that gets resolved quickly by the fans of the games.

Reddit

While this site tends to get known more for the negative things that go down on it, like the Donald Trump board's trolling, Reddit is still a very useful site for discussion about very specific topics. Since Reddit allows for communities on any subject to start they own message board on it, this allows for people with similar interests to gather around and have discussions on that interest. Reddit is basically hundreds of thousands of smaller communities all held under one website.

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Next New

Virtual reality is currently gaining traction. While higher end VR headsets are not exactly very popular outside of the gaming community due to their price of entry, some of the cell phone attachments have been much more popular. It is clear that this will be a viable platform for a form of new media. While the technology gets better, I think that it will be the place for future MMORPG video games like World of Warcraft, or a social media platform with a level of interaction that was not possible before, or even a viable way to hold company meeting, or gatherings for some sort of presentation or convention for people that cannot travel for some reason. Virtual reality will probably be the future of "new media".

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

P2P

File sharing is when one person uploads a files to the internet to make publicly available for anyone else to access online.

P2P (Peer 2 Peer) file sharing is where, instead of uploading files publicly, users connect directly to each other, typically using a program of some sort, so they can share files like music, videos, programs, or various other documents.

The most notorious examples from when P2P file sharing started to initially get very popular was music sharing services like Napster and Kazaa. These days, most people use torrent sites like The Pirate Bay, which give you files that you can open up in a program like BitTorrent and it allows you to anonymously establish a P2P connection with various uses to help share files.

The problem with P2P file sharing is that it is frequently used to pirate stuff like music, films, TV shows, video games, and even books. Companies like the RIAA are constantly trying to find ways to fight against it by aiming to take down sites like The Pirate Bay.

There are legal usages that can benefit these companies that has mostly gone untapped though. The Econsultancy article "Content producers should take advantage of P2P, not fear it" talks about a documentary film that was released several years ago named "Steal This Film - Part One", which looked at the people that set up online P2P and to talk through the negatives and benefits of it. They distributed this film for free through BitTorrent and made their money through donations, which turned out to be a success for them. They ended up discovering that there was a big market for people who would support media monetarily if it was made easily available to them and without advertisements to hinder their experience.

The other major benefit of using P2P to legally share files is that it does not requiring online storage, which typically has to be paid for if the files are big enough. Some MMORPG games have used this when they update their games with major patches that their users all have to download. This reduces their server costs by a very large amount, as these games typically have users in the millions all hammering their servers.

Wiki So Far

Most of what I have contributed to the wiki so far is adding specific information on some of the more popular genres of video games. They have evolved to the point where a lot of the genres blend, or there's variations on many of the genres, so it can be really hard to describe what a video game is like to a person that does not know these genres. Having a baseline idea of the main genres can go a long way toward helping people quickly understand what someone means when someone calls a game a "first person shooter" or a "MOBA".

My other main contribution so far was adding a page for professional wrestling. I only added a basic description on the origins of it and a short explanation on how it evolved into what it is today, but in the future I plan on adding information about a lot of the main organizations in professional wrestling, as it is not only the WWE as most people seem to believe. I also want to add pictures and videos highlighting some of the top performers in each of the organizations.

In the future I also want to add content to the music page, specifically more information on rap artists and even a section for music from video games, as I have a lot of personal interest in them.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Privacy

With the rise of social media also came the rise of people being more willing to share their own personal information with the public. Before the initial popularity explosion of Facebook, most people were unwilling to share their real names online. Even when MySpace was popular, most people used an alias over their real names on it. Now however not only can you find people's real names, but you can easily fully profile a person based on what they share. Advertisers have noticed this and used it to great effect with their targeting marketing, especially through Google's ads, which run on an algorithm based on what you share about yourself online and even keeps track of products that you search for. This kind of information is highly valued by a lot of companies to the point where a lot of software platforms, even Windows 10, all ask you for permission to share your information confidentially, so they can make money off of the data.

While people are not willing to share everything publicly, they are willing to send people that are close to them very sensitive material either through text, or video. The problem is that this information gets stored on "the cloud" which is just storage on a server somewhere that can be accessed online, so access to this sensitive material is only a hack away from being public. Most people using these platforms are either unaware of this, do not want to give up the benefits of online storage, or as simply unwilling to figure out how to opt out of using online storage for their private material. Because of this, the importance of internet security is at an all time high.

Advice

If Baruch College hired me to use new media to improve their college experience, my I would help in setting up the integration of student social media accounts into their main website. The website would be set up similarly to something like Brooklyn College's web connect, but the general goal would be letting students who opt in have easy access to each other for various activities like offering tutoring services, selling their old books, setting up social events, or even group study meetings. This would be beneficial because most students like getting all their information through one source, which usually means whatever their preferred social media platform is. Integration like this would mean that it can reach students on those platforms with information that they might be interested in and they would be more inclined to participate, which would improve the college experience for everyone.

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Blog Social networking

When it comes to ways to use social networking sites like Twitter, the main thing that comes to mind is selling yourself. Whether it is a person trying to sell their personality and talents, or if it's an organization trying to sell their product, the audience that you can gain on these platforms are invaluable. 

One specific method that is especially popular on Twitter is the way that hashtags are used. Companies can use hashtags to promote their product, which is usually done via giveaways where they ask people to use a specific hashtag and they randomly choose one or some of the people that used the hashtag to win some sort of prize. This spreads the awareness of the brand and can sometimes cause enough support for the hashtag to make it appear as a top trend, which gets even more attention for the company.

While companies can use hashtags as an advertisement for their product, one way that it can be used to specifically benefit society is to help spread awareness on important social issues, like help spreading the word on fighting against, or preventing diseases, or even to combat social injustices, which has especially been a hot topic on the social media front in recent years. For example the protests from Egypt which was talked about in the New York Times article "New Service Lets Voices From Egypt Be Heard" where social media platforms like Google, Twitter, and a new one at the time called SayNow, gave the protesters several ways to spread their message across the world. This would have been impossible a decade ago, but with the technology that was present at the time, the protests were able to be played out across the world for everyone to see.

One less important, but still useful way that social media has been used to benefit people is the power that it has to gain instant feedback from companies that deliver a bad product, or poor customer service. This is shown in the Slate article "Tweeting Avengers" which brought up an event where Bob Garfield, who was dissatisfied with Comcast's customer service after spending a month trying to get his cable package installed, had finally blogged about it and opened up a site where other customers could air their grievances with the company. This gained enough attention to where Comcast themselves could no longer ignore it, so they went out of their way to help those people out. This is something that couldn't have been done as easily before the social media age, because it was much more difficult to get an organized group going on something like this unless you were a celebrity, or you were another person of massive influence.

Despite the positive uses for social media, there is a dark side. While it can, and has been used to spread positive messages, it is also a hot bed for people who only want to harass others to congregate too. Giving those kinds of people a free and easy access platform to mobilize their efforts makes the spread of their negativity extra effective, and it is typically very hard to go against these groups, who unfortunately have gained enough notoriety so that they can influence public perception.

The world is still in this transitional period where it is very hard to predict the outcome of what this technology will mean for even the next 5 years, let alone 10. Hopefully we can find a happy medium that can get us away from the more negative aspects of social media and focus more on the benefits.