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This volume explores how people experience, produce, and manage misinformation in their everyday lives. Synthesizing three scholarly traditions - everyday life, misinformation, and governing knowledge commons - it presents ten case studies of online and offline communities tackling diverse dilemmas regarding truth and information quality.
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This volume explores how people experience, produce, and manage misinformation in their everyday lives. Synthesizing three scholarly traditions - everyday life, misinformation, and governing knowledge commons - it presents ten case studies of online and offline communities tackling diverse dilemmas regarding truth and information quality.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009255158
- ISBN-10: 1009255150
- Artikelnr.: 71911341
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009255158
- ISBN-10: 1009255150
- Artikelnr.: 71911341
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Madelyn Rose R. Sanfilippo studies sociotechnical governance, broadly exploring privacy, inequality, and political consequences of information technology. She co-edited Governing Privacy in Knowledge Commons (2021) and Governing Smart Cities as Knowledge Commons (2023) and co-authored three previous books: Online Trolling and Its Perpetrators: Under the Cyberbridge (2016); Social Informatics Evolving (2015); and Multiculturalism and Information and Communication Technology (2013).
1. Introduction: governing everyday misinformation Melissa G. Ocepek and
Madelyn R. Sanfilippo; 2. Storytelling and/as Misinformation: storytelling
dynamics and narrative structures for three cases of COVID-19 viral
misinformation Kate McDowell; 3. It's not (all) about the information: the
role of cognition in creating and sustaining false beliefs Dominique Kelly
and Jacquelyn Burkell; 4. Information Hazing: An Examination through
Computer Science Education Elizabeth Wickes and Melissa G. Ocepek; 5.
Common nonsense about password security and the expert-layperson knowledge
gap Brett Frischmann and Alexandria Johnson; 6. Hacks, Fakes, and Hot
Takes: Moderating 'bad actors' on Google Maps Local Guides Platform Rebecca
Noone and Aparajita Bhandari; 7. The Human Infrastructures of
Misinformation: A Case Study of Brazil's Heteromated Labor David Nemer and
William Marks; 8. Hidden Virality and the Everyday Burden of Correcting
WhatsApp Mis- and Disinformation Britt Paris and Irene Pasquetto; 9. Do
Your Own Research: Everyday Misinformation and Conspiracy in Online
Information Worlds Gary Burnett and Shannon Williams; 10. How To Manage
Issues on Twitter: Perspectives From Twitter Users Concerned About
Mis/Dis-Information Sin, Sei-Ching Joanna and Kim, Kyung-Sun; 11. Accepting
and Expecting Deception: Community Governance of False, Fabricated,
Omitted, and Out of Context Claims on Instagram Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and
Smita Katherine Nair; 12. Co-constructing misinformation and community:
some conclusions Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and Melissa G. Ocepek.
Madelyn R. Sanfilippo; 2. Storytelling and/as Misinformation: storytelling
dynamics and narrative structures for three cases of COVID-19 viral
misinformation Kate McDowell; 3. It's not (all) about the information: the
role of cognition in creating and sustaining false beliefs Dominique Kelly
and Jacquelyn Burkell; 4. Information Hazing: An Examination through
Computer Science Education Elizabeth Wickes and Melissa G. Ocepek; 5.
Common nonsense about password security and the expert-layperson knowledge
gap Brett Frischmann and Alexandria Johnson; 6. Hacks, Fakes, and Hot
Takes: Moderating 'bad actors' on Google Maps Local Guides Platform Rebecca
Noone and Aparajita Bhandari; 7. The Human Infrastructures of
Misinformation: A Case Study of Brazil's Heteromated Labor David Nemer and
William Marks; 8. Hidden Virality and the Everyday Burden of Correcting
WhatsApp Mis- and Disinformation Britt Paris and Irene Pasquetto; 9. Do
Your Own Research: Everyday Misinformation and Conspiracy in Online
Information Worlds Gary Burnett and Shannon Williams; 10. How To Manage
Issues on Twitter: Perspectives From Twitter Users Concerned About
Mis/Dis-Information Sin, Sei-Ching Joanna and Kim, Kyung-Sun; 11. Accepting
and Expecting Deception: Community Governance of False, Fabricated,
Omitted, and Out of Context Claims on Instagram Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and
Smita Katherine Nair; 12. Co-constructing misinformation and community:
some conclusions Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and Melissa G. Ocepek.
1. Introduction: governing everyday misinformation Melissa G. Ocepek and
Madelyn R. Sanfilippo; 2. Storytelling and/as Misinformation: storytelling
dynamics and narrative structures for three cases of COVID-19 viral
misinformation Kate McDowell; 3. It's not (all) about the information: the
role of cognition in creating and sustaining false beliefs Dominique Kelly
and Jacquelyn Burkell; 4. Information Hazing: An Examination through
Computer Science Education Elizabeth Wickes and Melissa G. Ocepek; 5.
Common nonsense about password security and the expert-layperson knowledge
gap Brett Frischmann and Alexandria Johnson; 6. Hacks, Fakes, and Hot
Takes: Moderating 'bad actors' on Google Maps Local Guides Platform Rebecca
Noone and Aparajita Bhandari; 7. The Human Infrastructures of
Misinformation: A Case Study of Brazil's Heteromated Labor David Nemer and
William Marks; 8. Hidden Virality and the Everyday Burden of Correcting
WhatsApp Mis- and Disinformation Britt Paris and Irene Pasquetto; 9. Do
Your Own Research: Everyday Misinformation and Conspiracy in Online
Information Worlds Gary Burnett and Shannon Williams; 10. How To Manage
Issues on Twitter: Perspectives From Twitter Users Concerned About
Mis/Dis-Information Sin, Sei-Ching Joanna and Kim, Kyung-Sun; 11. Accepting
and Expecting Deception: Community Governance of False, Fabricated,
Omitted, and Out of Context Claims on Instagram Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and
Smita Katherine Nair; 12. Co-constructing misinformation and community:
some conclusions Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and Melissa G. Ocepek.
Madelyn R. Sanfilippo; 2. Storytelling and/as Misinformation: storytelling
dynamics and narrative structures for three cases of COVID-19 viral
misinformation Kate McDowell; 3. It's not (all) about the information: the
role of cognition in creating and sustaining false beliefs Dominique Kelly
and Jacquelyn Burkell; 4. Information Hazing: An Examination through
Computer Science Education Elizabeth Wickes and Melissa G. Ocepek; 5.
Common nonsense about password security and the expert-layperson knowledge
gap Brett Frischmann and Alexandria Johnson; 6. Hacks, Fakes, and Hot
Takes: Moderating 'bad actors' on Google Maps Local Guides Platform Rebecca
Noone and Aparajita Bhandari; 7. The Human Infrastructures of
Misinformation: A Case Study of Brazil's Heteromated Labor David Nemer and
William Marks; 8. Hidden Virality and the Everyday Burden of Correcting
WhatsApp Mis- and Disinformation Britt Paris and Irene Pasquetto; 9. Do
Your Own Research: Everyday Misinformation and Conspiracy in Online
Information Worlds Gary Burnett and Shannon Williams; 10. How To Manage
Issues on Twitter: Perspectives From Twitter Users Concerned About
Mis/Dis-Information Sin, Sei-Ching Joanna and Kim, Kyung-Sun; 11. Accepting
and Expecting Deception: Community Governance of False, Fabricated,
Omitted, and Out of Context Claims on Instagram Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and
Smita Katherine Nair; 12. Co-constructing misinformation and community:
some conclusions Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and Melissa G. Ocepek.