This link has been bookmarked by 21 people . It was first bookmarked on 07 Aug 2008, by Gerard Barberi.
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04 Feb 09
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31 Dec 08
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09 Sep 08
Michel BauwensThe internet doesn’t make us more creative, I don’t think. But it does enable what we create to be seen, heard, and used. It enables every creator to find a public, the public he or she merits. And that takes creation out of the proprietary hands of the s
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07 Sep 08
Ewan McIntoshThe internet doesn’t make us more creative, I don’t think. But it does enable what we create to be seen, heard, and used. It enables every creator to find a public, the public he or she merits. And that takes creation out of the proprietary hands of the s
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23 Aug 08
Giovanni Boccia ArtieriThe internet doesn’t make us more creative, I don’t think. But it does enable what we create to be seen, heard, and used. It enables every creator to find a public, the public he or she merits. And that takes creation out of the proprietary hands of the s
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20 Aug 08
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One survey I quote says that 81 percent of us say we have a book in us. Another survey says that a coincidental 81 percent of young people think they have a business in them.
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takes creation out of the proprietary hands of the supposed creative class.
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the internet opens up creativity past one-size-fits-all mass measurements and priestly definitions and lets us not only find what we like but find people who like what we do. The internet kills the mass, once and for all. With it comes the death of mass economics and mass media
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o stand out one must now do so on merit - as defined by the public rather than the priests - which will be rewarded with links and attention
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from a culture of scarcity to one of abundance. That is the essence of the Google worldview: managing abundance.
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tamped down by an educational system that insists on sameness; starved by a mass economic system that rewarded only a few giants; and discouraged by a critical system that anointed a closed, small creative class.
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erhaps the role of the creative class is not so much to make finished products but to inspire more to be made.
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18 Aug 08
Will RichardsonOne survey I quote says that 81 percent of us say we have a book in us. Another survey says that a coincidental 81 percent of young people think they have a business in them. We make tens of millions of blogs. We take hundreds of millions of Flickr photos
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10 Aug 08
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09 Aug 08
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08 Aug 08
Oliver Gassner"When we talk about the Google age, then, we do talk about a new society and the rules I explore in my book are the rules of that society, built on connections, links, transparency, openness, publicness, listening, trust, wisdom, generosity, efficiency, m
creative class google age web2.0 creativity ***** culture jeff-jarvis via:mento.info
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David CohnPeople were always creative. Now we have an outlet.
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07 Aug 08
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"internet triumphalists, like me, argue that the internet opens up creativity past one-size-fits-all mass measurements and priestly definitions and lets us not only find what we like but find people who like what we do."
creativity society culture newmedia web2.0 internet media jeffjarvis
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halbluchsThe internet doesn’t make us more creative. But it does enable what we create to be seen, heard, and used. It enables every creator to find a public. And that takes creation out of the proprietary hands of the supposed creative class.
jeffjarvis internet culture creativity web2.0 society media globaltalentnetwork for:frateric
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