The Locator -- [(subject = "Internet and activism--United States")]

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001 888DD96668CD11E5AEECD489DAD10320
003 SILO
005 20230510010042
008 150710t20152015nyua     b    001 0 eng d
020    $a 1619256932
020    $a 9781619256934
035    $a (OCoLC)914867015
040    $a DON $b eng $e rda $c DON $d OCLCO $d VP@ $d IEB $d YDXCP $d BTCTA $d LMR $d IBS $d ZLM $d FM0 $d COD $d OCLCF $d OCLCO $d SILO
043    $a n-us---
050 14 $a HM851 $b .D54 2015
082 04 $a 303.48340973
245 04 $a The digital age / $c [compiled by H.W. Wilson].
264  1 $a Amenia, New York : $b Grey House Publishing, $c 2015.
300    $a xiv, 228 pages : $b illustrations ; $c 26 cm.
490 1  $a The reference shelf ; $v volume 87, number 4
500    $a Series previously published by H.W. Wilson, a division of EBSCO Information Services.
505 00 $g 6. $t Is drone warfare fraying at the edges? / $t The Internet of things has arrived, and so have massive security issues / $r Pratap Chatterjee. $t How your data are being deeply mined / $r Alice E. Marwick -- $t Constitutional rights in the digital age / $r Nancy Leong -- $t The right to be forgotten / $r Patricia J. Williams -- $t How one stupid tweet blew up Justine Sacco's life / $r Jon Ronson -- $t After the Silk Road conviction, Tor must be protected / $r Craig A. Newman -- $t The NSA debate we should be having / $r Fred Kaplan -- $g 2. $t Culture, entertainment, and the media. The digital stage and its players -- $t Generation Y, dating, and technology : digital natives struggle to connect offline / $r Lauren Lord -- $t The selfie in the digital age : from social media to sexting / $r Holly Peek -- $t Smartphones are killing us, and destroying public life / $r Henry Grabar -- $t What's next for art in the digital age : a conversation to be continued / $r Lori Kozlowski -- $t Her story : the computer game where True Detective meets Google / $r Keith Stuart -- $t Beyond cute cats : how Buzzfeed is reinventing itself / $r Jennifer Saba -- $t Content and its discontents / $r James Surowiecki -- $t YouTube at 10 : how an online video site ate the pop culture machine / $r Caitlin Dewey -- $t When you "literally can't even" understand your teenager / $r Amanda Hess -- $g 3. $t Education and the brain. The E-volution of education and thought -- $t Can the iPad rescue a struggling American education system? / $r Christina Bonnington -- $t Inside the flipped classroom / $r Katherine Mangan -- $t Educational technology isn't leveling the playing field / $r Annie Murphy Paul -- $t Will MOOCs be flukes? / $r Maria Konnikova -- $t What's lost as handwriting fades? / $r Maria Konnikova -- $t Why digital natives prefer reading in print. Yes, you read that right. / $r Michael S. Rosenwald -- $t Think fast ; smartwatch slices thought into eight-second bursts / $r Kevin Maney -- $t Digital natives, yet strangers to the Web / $r Alia Wong -- $g 4. $t Crime and justice. Digital delinquency and its repercussions. Online piracy grows, reflecting consumer trends / $r Tom Risen -- $t When bullying goes high-tech / $r Elizabeth Landau -- $t Digital harassment is the new means of domestic abuse / $r Keli Goff -- $t The downfall of the most hated man on the Internet / $r Emily Greenhouse -- $t Minnesota detectives crack the case with digital forensics / $r Shannon Prather -- $t Hollywood-style surveillance technology inches closer to reality / $r GW Schultz -- $t Hacker or spy? In today's cyberattacks, finding the culprit is a troubling puzzle / $r Bruce Schneier -- $t The Dark Web remains / $r Russell Berman -- $t Eyes wide open to problems experienced by black men / $r Dan Rodricks -- $g 5. $t Economy and the workforce. Surf and spend economics. Gross domestic freebie / $r James Surowiecki -- $t What the sharing economy takes / $r Doug Henwood -- $t Cryptocurrency exchanges emerge as regulators try to keep up / $r Larry Greenemeier -- $t Silicon Valley gender gap is widening / $r Jessica Guynn -- $t Net neutrality : how the government finally got it right / $r Tim Wu -- $t How robots & algorithms are taking over / $r Sue Halpern -- $g 6. $t Politics and globalism. Virtual war and peace. Welcome to the age of digital imperialism / $r Bill Wasik -- $t The mobile election : how smartphones will change the 2016 presidential race / $r Dylan Byers -- $t Activism or slacktivism? How social media hurts and helps student activism / $r Kate Essig -- $t Hashtag activism isn't a cop-out / $r Noah Berlatsky -- $t Scholars re-examine Arab world's "Facebook revolutions" / $r Ursula Lindsey -- $t How ISIS succeeds on social media where #StopKony fails / $r J.M. Berger -- $t When blasphemy goes viral / $r Christopher S. Grenda and Chris Beneke -- $t Is drone warfare fraying at the edges? / $r Pratap Chatterjee.
504    $a Includes bibliographical references and index.
520    $a "Digital technology has transformed our lives so completely that we hardly recognize it and so quickly that we have yet to grasp its implications. No industry has been left untouched; every aspect of how we communicate and how and where we get our information has been affected. We are connected as never before. Even the chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court has said that a cellphone can contain the "sum of an individual's private life"--surely a combination of the personal and the technological that is unique in history. Yet even as we gain greater and greater access to information, explore new avenues of creativity and new kinds of entertainment, and find new ways to express ourselves and integrate our social activities, we crave still more. Change is the only constant. How are we to make sense of this ever-shifting terrain--as we must, or be overwhelmed by it? The Digital Age challenges us to understand not only the great potential good offered by modern digital technology but its negative consequences: loss of privacy, erosion of face-to-face communication abilities, exposure to cybercrime, even such seemingly mundane consequences as the decline of handwriting among children. None of these issues is abstract; we need to know where digital technology is taking us." -- Publisher's website.
650  0 $a Information society $z United States $v Sources.
650  0 $a Privacy, Right of $z United States $v Sources.
650  0 $a Education $x Data processing $v Sources.
650  0 $a Economics $x Data processing $v Sources.
650  0 $a Computer crimes $z United States $v Sources.
650  0 $a Internet and activism $z United States $v Sources.
650  7 $a Computer crimes. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst00872063
650  7 $a Economics $x Data processing. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst00902130
650  7 $a Education $x Data processing. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst00902579
650  7 $a Information society. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst00972767
650  7 $a Internet and activism. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst01894149
650  7 $a Privacy, Right of. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst01077444
651  7 $a United States. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst01204155
655  7 $a Sources. $2 fast $0 (OCoLC)fst01423900
710 2  $a H.W. Wilson Company.
830  0 $a Reference shelf ; $v v. 87, no. 4.
941    $a 10
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952    $l IBAX173 $d 20180307025441.0
952    $l PNAX964 $d 20161209010704.0
952    $l OIAX792 $d 20160331011958.0
952    $l UXAX826 $d 20151023012758.0
956    $a http://locator.silo.lib.ia.us/search.cgi?index_0=id&term_0=888DD96668CD11E5AEECD489DAD10320
994    $a C0 $b DIV

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