I try to adopt this strategy.
1. Qu'est-ce que la culture et pourquoi est-ce si important?
2. La culture des amateurs
1 You! THE CONSUMER AS CREATOR WHY YOU MATTER: They've long said the customer is always right. But they never really meant it. Now they have no choice. You--or rather, the collaborative intelligence of tens of millions of people, the networked you--continually create and filter new forms of content, anointing the useful, the relevant, and the amusing and rejecting the rest. You do it on websites like Amazon, Flickr, and YouTube, via podcasts and SMS polling, and on millions of self-published blogs. In every case, you've become an integral part of the action as a member of the aggregated, interactive, self-organizing, auto-entertaining audience. But the You Revolution goes well beyond user-generated content. Companies as diverse as Delta Air Lines and T-Mobile are turning to you to create their ad slogans. Procter & Gamble and Lego are incorporating your ideas into new products. You constructed open-source and are its customer and its caretaker. None of this should be a surprise, since it was you--your crazy passions and hobbies and obsessions--that built out the Web in the first place. And somewhere out there, you're building Web 3.0. We don't yet know what that is, but one thing's for sure: It will matter.
2.1 La culture des experts
3. Le contexte social de la participation
I try to adopt this strategy.
Of course, they're the most vocal. Especially online. And the most fickle.
Elle serait préétablie??
Impliquant une hiérarchie?
4. La publication ouverte
Classic take on the flaws associated with the concept of "intellectual property."
5. Les effets de la participation
40 items | 27 visits
Sélection de textes pour le module «Culture de participation et l'ère de l'amateur».
Updated on Sep 20, 15
Created on May 20, 09
Category: Schools & Education
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