[Air-L] Seeking info about famous internet people *not* from North America

Michael Gurstein gurstein at gmail.com
Sat Mar 5 06:05:18 PST 2011


Emily Dickinson: Fame is a fickle food upon a shifting plate.

http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/e/emilydicki154094.html#ixzz1FjYGBc
GL

And Sue, why do you deliberately say "North America" when all of your "net
famous people" are from the USA... 

M

> On Sat, Mar 5, 2011 at 3:14 AM, Sue Thomas <Sue.Thomas at dmu.ac.uk>
> wrote:
>
>> Dear all
>>
>> Can anyone help me with this please?
>>
>> I'm looking for stories about people who have become well-known due 
>> to their involvement with the internet and who are NOT NORTH 
>> AMERICAN! I'm finding it incredibly difficult, and I don't know 
>> whether it's because I'm looking in the wrong places or whether the 
>> US and Canada really do dominate big name cyberculture.
>>
>> I'm looking for people outside North America who have become famous 
>> or successful in net-related R&D or business or government or law, or 
>> be influential thought-leaders, authors and critics, or are notorious 
>> for net exploitation or crime, or are fictional or gaming cyberspace 
>> characters, or online religious leaders etc etc.  I have a few in 
>> mind already, of course, but my list is very short.
>>
>> So, who is your country's Bill Gates or Steve Jobs or Tim O'Reilly? 
>> Your Howard Rheingold or Stewart Brand or Kevin Kelly? Your Steven 
>> Johnson or Henry Jenkins? (You will have noticed btw that these are 
>> also all white men, with the possible exception of Jobs, who is 
>> half-Syrian).
>>
>> Who are your internet criminals and what did they do? Do you know of 
>> any well-known stories or urban legends about  the net which may or 
>> may not be true? Does your country use the internet in a very 
>> culturally-specific way?
>>
>> Apart from individuals themselves, I'm also interested in 
>> culture-specific stories such as haunted mobile phones in Malaysia or 
>> Chinese RPGs based on the Monkey tales.
>>
>> I'm sorry this is vague but hope you get the drift.  Please send 
>> thoughts, links and ideas for reading matter to sue.thomas at dmu.ac.uk
>>
>> Don't worry if the sources are not in English.  I have access to some 
>> translation resources.  NB You might be quoted in a book or paper but 
>> full attribution will be given.
>>
>> Many thanks
>>
>> Sue
>> _________________
>>
>> Professor Sue Thomas
>>
>> Faculty of Humanities/Institute of Creative Technologies Clephan 
>> 1.01d De Montfort University
>>
>> The Gateway
>>
>> Leicester
>>
>> LE1 9BH, UK
>>
>> e: sue.thomas at dmu.ac.uk
>>
>> t: @suethomas
>>
>> w: Nature and Cyberspace: stories, memes and metaphors 
>> http://www.thewildsurmise.com <http://www.thewildsurmise.com/>
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> Radhika Gajjala
> Director, American Culture Studies
> Professor of Communication Studies and Cultural Studies
> 101 East Hall
> Bowling Green State University
> Bowling Green, OH  43403
>
> http://personal.bgsu.edu/~radhik 
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