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301 |
Creative Commons |
Copenhagen COP 15: What happened and What next? |
An ECI organised panel discussion following the Copenhagen international climate negotiations in December 2009 to review what happened at the negotiations and what happens next. |
Diana Liverman, Yadvinder Malhi, Mark Lynas, James Painter |
20 Jan 2010 |
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302 |
|
From Weblogs to Twitter: How Did We Get Where We Are Today and What Are the Main Impacts To Date? |
What are the most important milestones in the evolution of social media? What factors have shaped their successes and limitations? |
Kathryn Corrick, Dave Sifry, Bill Thompson, William Dutton |
13 Nov 2009 |
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303 |
|
Parties, Campaigns and Representation: The Political Impact of Blogs and Social Media |
Panel discussion during the Oxford Social Media Convention 2009 on whether the outcome of political careers and even campaigns is increasingly dependent on the successful mastery of new communication tools including social media. |
Helen Margetts, Iain Dale, Andrew Rasiej, Matthew McGregor |
30 Oct 2009 |
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304 |
|
Breaking News: The Changing Relationship Between Blogs and Mainstream Media |
Panel discussion during the Oxford Social Media Convention 2008 on whether social media necessarily threaten traditional news media, and what, if anything they may have to offer in return. |
David Levy, Richard Sambrook, John Kelly, Jonathan Ford |
30 Oct 2009 |
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305 |
|
Breaking News: The Changing Relationship Between Blogs and Mainstream Media |
Among the traditional media, blogs and other contributions to citizen journalism have for a long time been regarded as posing a significant threat to 'quality' news reporting ... is this a valid view? What (if anything) can social media offer? |
David Levy, Richard Sambrook, John Kelly, Jonathan Ford |
07 Oct 2009 |
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306 |
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Parties, Campaigns and Representation: The Political Impact of Blogs and Social Media |
Are social media tools likely to prove effective in engaging any voters except those who are already interested in politics? Is their apparent 'democratisation' of traditional party structures to be believed? |
Helen Margetts, Iain Dale, Andrew Rasiej, Matthew McGregor |
07 Oct 2009 |
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307 |
|
If Fiber is the Medium, What is the Message? Next-Generation Content for Next-Generation Networks |
By investigating price and capacity trends over the past century, Eli Noam shows that it is possible to predict the type, style, and genres of media content of a future ultra-broadband infrastructure, which allows a richer, more bit-intensive content. |
Eli Noam |
03 Jul 2009 |
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308 |
|
Data Protection, Freedom of Expression and the Media |
Antony White QC delivers a seminar on the laws of data protection, the media and freedom of expression and the right to privacy and how the laws are adapting in the light of the Naomi Campbell-Mirror Group and the Michael Douglas-OK magazine cases. |
Antony White |
31 Mar 2009 |
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309 |
|
The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same: Online Audiences and the Paradox of Web Traffic |
Using three years of daily Web traffic data, and new models adapted from financial mathematics, this talk examines large-scale variation in Web traffic. |
Matthew Hindman |
06 Mar 2009 |
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310 |
|
Student Newspapers at Oxford |
An introduction to the student newspapers at Oxford University. Cherwell and the Oxford Student are two student run newspapers with a long history in Oxford. |
Henry Clarke Price, Rosie Macaulay, Natasha Vashisht, Rebecca Molyneux |
18 Sep 2008 |
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311 |
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Through the Network (of Networks): The Fifth Estate |
The Internet and web are creating a new space for networking people, information and other resources: this has the potential to become an important 'fifth estate' to support greater accountability in politics, the media and other institutional arenas. |
William Dutton |
12 Sep 2008 |