[Air-L] AoIR 2019 reflections

Mark Davis davismr at unimelb.edu.au
Fri Oct 11 03:52:13 PDT 2019


It was my first AoIR conference as well Sacha — and I think the best conference I've ever been too. Such a wonderful, truly collegiate atmosphere and excellent papers; kudos and thanks to Jonathan, Axel, Jean, Terry, and all those student volunteers and everyone else who assisted in putting on a wonderful conference!



Best

Mark



---
Associate Professor Mark Davis
School of Culture and Communication
The University of Melbourne

[signature_66932935]

This email and any attachments may contain personal information or  information that is otherwise confidential or the subject of copyright. Any use, disclosure or copying of any part of it is prohibited. The University does not warrant that this email or any attachments are free from viruses or defects. Please check any attachments for viruses and defects before opening them. If this email is received in error please delete it and notify us by return email.

Recent publications: Davis, M 2019, ‘Transnationalising the anti-public sphere: Australian anti-publics and extremist online media’, in M Peucker & D Smith (eds), The Far Right in Contemporary Australia, Palgrave Macmillan, New York, pp. 127–149; Davis, M 2019, ‘A new, online culture war? The communication world of Breitbart.com’, Communication Research and Practice, available: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/22041451.2018.1558790.





On 11/10/19, 3:33 pm, "Air-L on behalf of Sacha Molitorisz" <air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org on behalf of Sacha.Molitorisz at uts.edu.au> wrote:



    Hi all,



    Following last week's tremendous AoIR 2019, I've cobbled together some reflections, which you'll find below. These may be of interest for those who couldn't make it, or perhaps even for those who could. (These reflections were included in the fortnightly newsletter sent out today by the Centre for Media Transition, where I work. You can see the full newsletter here<https://mailchi.mp/602e3f6a4d31/uts-cmt-newsletter_6_oct_2019>.)



    Cheers

    Sacha





    Sacha Molitorisz, PhD

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Media Transition

    Faculty of Law

    University of Technology Sydney





    Last week I flew to Brisbane for my very first Association of Internet Researchers Conference<https://aoir.org/aoir2019/>, where I learnt three things. One, people in Brisbane don't jaywalk. Two, internet researchers look cool, complete with piercings, tattoos and blue hair. And three, internet researchers are not very positive about the internet.



    In her keynote address, Macquarie University's Professor Bronwyn Carlson<https://www.mq.edu.au/about_us/faculties_and_departments/faculty_of_arts/department_of_indigenous_studies/staff/prof_bronwyn_carlson> detailed the torrent of abuse and vilification that Indigenous Australians cop on social media. Of course, she said, there are benefits too, including for Indigenous sufferers of depression and anxiety, who can connect with others. But on balance, she said, social media is hugely destructive. If she could, she said, she'd pull the plug.



    On Thursday, Dr Sal Humphreys<https://researchers.adelaide.edu.au/profile/sal.humphreys> from the University of Adelaide was glum too. Her research explored whether it's possible for companies to engage in ethical data practice while remaining commercially viable. This wasn't speculative. She was researching on behalf of a company building smartphone games offering in-app purchases, including to children. And her short answer? No. Why act ethically if competitors gain an advantage by acting unethically? Surveillance capitalism wins. "I just don't have any optimism in me about this," Humphreys said.



    This year's AoIR conference was the 20th. Over those two decades, the internet has changed radically, and changed radically again. I can only guess the mood at AoIR has changed radically too. The people who have spent their lives studying the internet now have big concerns. As several participants noted, it's a question of power. Does the internet serve us, or do we serve it? And if it does serve us, which version of us does it serve? The best version of ourselves, or something more base?



    On Saturday, Megan Lindsay Brown revealed research showing the connection between tech-based abuse (such as cyberstalking) and real world violence. Partners in an abusive relationship tend to find it hard to leave; tech can make that separation even more difficult. And scholars including Matt Beard, Terry Flew, Tarleton Gillespie and Stuart Cunningham addressed various emerging challenges in regulating digital speech and digital platforms. How do we classify platforms? What laws do we need?



    But there were lighter moments too. Nancy Baym from Microsoft Research and Limor Shifman from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem revealed their findings about Clippy memes, such as this one. It was a fun session, although, as they said, a joke is never just a joke. Clippy memes often reveal serious concerns about the creepiness of digital assistants. And Stefano Brilli delivered a paper about pornographic exchanges on Italian private group chats. On some of these sites, he said, you can be banned for blasphemy. Hardcore is fine; disrespecting the deity is not.



    Out of it all, though, there was one bright ray of optimism. And that's the collaborative spirit of the researchers, who revealed a consistent commitment to sharing ideas, furthering knowledge and improving the net, and through it the world. In my case, this was particularly true of Charles Ess<https://uio.academia.edu/CharlesEss>. He's a giant of digital media ethics, so you might expect someone preoccupied, if not aloof. Instead, he turned out to be unfailingly helpful and personable.



    In its early years, the internet was touted as the ultimate expression of people power. Sadly, it isn't always turning out that way. But at least the researchers who study it still embody that democratising spirit. And in that vein, a huge shout out to the wonderful efforts of Jonathan Hutchinson, Axel Bruns, Jean Burgess, Terry Flew and everyone else at QUT and AoIR who hosted and organised.



    As Tama Leaver noted in a tweet, "Airport bound, thanks to everyone at #AoIR2019<https://twitter.com/hashtag/AoIR2019?src=hashtag_click> for confirming that it's never just a conference, it's a community". Indeed, and community is just what the net needs now.





    Sacha Molitorisz, PhD

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Media Transition

    Faculty of Law

    University of Technology Sydney



    T. +61 (02) 9514 4329 M. +61 (0) 423 306 769

    PO Box 123 Broadway, NSW 2007 Australia

    cmt.uts.edu.au<http://www.cmt.uts.edu.au/>

    sign up to our e-newsletter<https://mailchi.mp/10f1888d80e6/cmtmalinglistsignup>



    We at UTS Faculty of Law pay our respects to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, upon whose lands and waters we work, and to their Elders past and present. We acknowledge them as the Owners of Country and the Holders of Knowledge for this place. We seek to work with Indigenous communities to ensure the Anglo-Australian legal system advances Indigenous self-determination.



    UTS CRICOS Provider Code: 00099F DISCLAIMER: This email message and any accompanying attachments may contain confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient, do not read, use, disseminate, distribute or copy this message or attachments. If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender immediately and delete this message. Any views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender, except where the sender expressly, and with authority, states them to be the views of the University of Technology Sydney. Before opening any attachments, please check them for viruses and defects. Think. Green. Do. Please consider the environment before printing this email.

    _______________________________________________

    The Air-L at listserv.aoir.org mailing list

    is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org

    Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org



    Join the Association of Internet Researchers:

    http://www.aoir.org/






More information about the Air-L mailing list