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Table of Contents: Next 5 Minutes 4 (TML) "David Garcia" <davidg@xs4all.nl> World Summit on Sustainable Development "up" <up@treerunner.com> Possibilities of a Beautiful Love Marc Lafia <marclafia@earthlink.net> CityScape film programme in Rotterdam "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Call for Submissions "The Netizen - 1992/3 - 2002/3) ronda@ais.org (Ronda Hauben) program of internet researchers conference (maastricht/nl) "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> w3art - la comunidad artistica en internet Invitation w3@w3art.es ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 04 Sep 2002 09:08:34 +0200 From: "David Garcia" <davidg@xs4all.nl> Subject: Next 5 Minutes 4 (TML) A Temporary Media Laboratory for Tactical Media @ Imagine IC in Amsterdam Southeast September 12 - 22, 2002 Opening Program: Thursday September 12 18.00 hrs Imagine IC - Bijlmerplein 1006 - 1008 Amsterdam Full Program and Workshop descriptions can be found on the Next 5 Minutes website: http://www.n5m.org Website Imagine IC http://www.imagineic.nl Imagine IC, the new centre for the visual representation of migration and cultures, is the location for a temporary public media laboratory from September 12th till 22nd. Open at all times to the wider audience, artists, campaigners, local and international media makers and activists will develop and discuss their work for 10 days, hold workshops with local media groups, present examples, realise live media programs on-line and via radio and tv, and execute various projects. This Tactical Media Laboratory (short: TML) will be the first of an international series of TMLs, organised in various cities, and on different continents. The Amsterdam TML will focus on the relationship between media and migrant cultures. At the heart of our concern is the question who is given a voice in the contemporary media landscape, and which voices are left out. How can the individual, as well as the most diverse as possible representation of cultural and political groups, make their own voice be heard by media? Workshops and presentations will run continuously around themes such as: Virtual Shelter, net.radio and Home-Land Connections, GenderChangers: Women and Technology, Migration and Illegality, Wireless Media, and the Power of Personal Testimony. The TML is the joint effort of a large number of artists and media groups, amongst others: ambient tv, ASCII, De Balie, Harwood, dyne.org, Waag Society, RAZO, NYU Center for Media, Culture and History, Gender Changers Academy, expertbase.net, ghetto.ru, Paradox, Salto, and many more. All of the following workshops and presentations are open to the public, and are free of charge: Virtual Shelter First Public Meeting Thursday Sept 12 14.00-18.00 Midpoint Public Review Thursday Sept 19 18.00-21.00 Final Public Meeting Saturday Sept 21 12.00-16.00 Virtual Shelter is an initiative in which a group of refugees will be working on a long term project with Imagine IC, Paradox, and the Amsterdam Tactical Media Lab to develop an online environment for refugees. This will be a space where refugees can network together privately, access vital information and, on a more symbolic level, become a space for personal testimony. Migration and Illegality How the Schengen Information System Works Friday Sept 20 18.00-21.00 Debate and Discussion Saturday Sept 21 18.00-21.00 How can illegal people tell their own stories while still remaining "invisible" to the authorities? What can be done against the systems used to catagories and register people, such as Schengen Information System, a huge database in Strasbourg containing files on illegal immigrants? One presentation will cover this Schengen system, while a debate will ask these and other important questions. Wireless Networks Outdoor Wireless Action: Koopavond ZO Thursday Sept 12 18.00-21.00 Outdoor Wireless Action: (Location TBA) Saturday Sept 14 14.00-17.00 Outdoor Wireless Action: Koopavond ZO Thursday Sept 19 18.00-21.00 Outdoor Wireless Action: (Location TBA) Saturday Sept 21 14.00-17.00 Wireless Tech Workshop Sunday Sept 15 @ Imagine IC: Antenna Building 12.00-15.00 Wireless Panel Discussion Sunday Sept 15 15.00-18.00 Several tactical implementations of wireless technology will be experimented with during this media lab, including mobile public access-points placed in the streets during the koopavonds. There will be hands-on workshops (how to build your own antenna) and discussions about the risks (legal and otherwise) of open access-points. GenderChangers: Women and Technology Hardware workshops Every Day 15.00 - 18.00 Basic Audio workshop Tuesday Sept 17 19.00-21.00 Digital Photography workshop Friday Sept 20 19.00-21.00 The GenderChangers Academy will present a series of workshops during the TML aimed at providing hands-on training for women interested in media technology. These workshops will include sessions on recording and streaming audio and video, on DJing and VJing, and on computer hardware and building your own PC from parts. Open Media Studio/Internet Radio and Homeland Connections Every Evening 20.00-22.00 The Open Media Studio provides a free space for personal expression and communication, using the internet as the connecting medium. Technical support from the ASCII group, RAZO (Radio Zuidoost) and various international guests will be on hand to make net.radio broadcasts every evening. These broadcasts operate in connection with the Internet Radio workshop being held at the RAZO studios, which aim to connect local radio makers with their home countries. Expertbase Everyone is an Expert workshop Pt 1 Tuesday Sept 17 12.00-17.00 Everyone is an Expert workshop Pt 2 Wednesday Sept 18 12.00-17.00 Expertbase is a site for people, who are not found in any commercial or official databases. A site for people, who are being ignored by vulgar head- hunters and usually excluded from the labour market -- either because of their residence permit status or because of their origins, but in the last instance because of their unique abilities and singular qualifications. http://www.expertbase.net/ NINE NINE: walk-in studio Saturday Sept 21 12.00-14.00 NINE: walk-in studio Thursday Sept 19 19.00-21.00 NINE: walk-in studio Monday Sept 16 12.00-16.00 In the last year Graham Harwood worked as artist in residence of Waag Society at NINE, a storytelling tool. This is a very user-friendly version of professional multimediaprogrammes: a basic grid of nine images offers room to personal stories build from pictures, texts, sounds and videoimages. Next 5 Minutes 4 : http://www.n5m.org _______________________________________________ N5M4editorial mailing list N5M4editorial@balie.nl https://mailman.balie.nl/listinfo/n5m4editorial ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 31 Aug 2002 09:37:54 -0700 From: "up" <up@treerunner.com> Subject: World Summit on Sustainable Development http://dailysummit.net/ [dailysummit.net] instant news and comment from the World Summit [Summit About] The Daily Summit is the first port of call for anyone who wants to keep up to date with the World Summit on Sustainable Development (aka "WSSD," "the World Summit," and "Earth Summit 2"). Our site is fresh, updated many times every day. It's an unparalleled linker - directing you to all the other summit news on the web. And most importantly, it'll be coming to you live from Joburg from 23rd August to 5th September 2002. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 05 Sep 2002 01:24:06 -0400 From: Marc Lafia <marclafia@earthlink.net> Subject: Possibilities of a Beautiful Love To those on the list in the San Francisco area, please come by this Saturday, Sept 7th, 3-5pm.to the Hosfelt Gallery (address below) FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 3 September 12 October 2002 Reception: Saturday 7 September, 3 - 5 p.m. MARC LAFIA Possibilities of a Beautiful Love For this exhibition, Marc Lafia explores his interest in film as a series of frames, with each frame being the particular of an instant. ³An instant when taken from a film becomes something else,² says Lafia. He uses the 1962 Michelangelo Antonioni film ³Eclipse² as source material. Isolating several frames from the film, he has altered, decelerated, and projected them on separate walls. Hosfelt Gallery is located at 430 Clementina (between Howard and Folsom) at Fifth Street. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday 11:00 - 5:30. For more information, call 415 495 5454 or visit www.hosfeltgallery.com. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 6 Sep 2002 12:28:25 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: CityScape film programme in Rotterdam from: cell@cell.nl=20 Sent: Friday, September 06, 2002 12:14 AM Subject: CELL presenteert CityScape=20 CELL - Initiators of Incidents - presents : 'CityScape' a film programme about 'The Emotion of the City' Friday September 6th & Saturday September 7th 'CityScape The Emotion of the City': An internationally renowned = filmmakers' selection of contemporary and historical reflection of 'the = city and life in an urban environment'.=20 Every city has its own specific dynamic and growth and her inhabitants = are forever adjusting and dealing with these changes in their own = worlds. Every city dwellers' hopes, expectations and disappointments are = shaped by the often-harsh realities of large urban environments. CELL attempts to bring light through a series of short and feature films = showing how these filmmakers translate their city stories through their = work and how they capture the essence of architecture and its space in = images.=20 The centre of Rotterdam is the perfect public setting for showing these = programmes through an open-air cinema. The daily programme begins with a = couple of short movies, followed by a feature movie. Each presentation = moves between the extremes in outlooks to a more autonomous vision. =20 PROGRAMME FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6th SHORTS / VIDEO:=20 Transfer Points 2002 - Geert Mul 2002, The Netherlands Dutch premi=E8re of the latest piece by this internationally renowned = video maker and artist. Recently only shown once at the Sonar Festival = in Barcelona.=20 Red is the Colour of my Eye - Nesrine Khodr - 2000, Lebanon. Mini-dv, 23 = min. About life and struggle for life in modern day Beirut. Two men guide us = into time and space of one of Beirut's main streets. The men and the = street share a multiplude of stories. Les Autres c'est les Autres/The Others it's the Others - Mounir Fatmi = 1999 France, DV, 11 min.=20 A question of identity is posed in the streets of Mantes-la-Jolie and = Paris, the answers are laconic, evasive, philosophical, tender, trivial = and conniving. A surprise finish when an aggressive turn takes place and = the tables are turned. [Brott]/[Crime] - Antonie Frank 2000 Sweden, mini dvd, 3 min 32 Cops 'n robbers incident in the night shop. Petty thief is just another = victim of the frustrating battle to fight crime. A short film about an = individual caught up in the throes of fate.=20 Hong Kong (HKG) - Gerard Holthuis 1997 Nederland, video, z/w Poetic view on airplanes taking off and landing at the old and now = closed Kai Tak airport in Hong Kong. A mid air choreography, then a = straight dive into the densely populated area of Kowloon..=20 FEATURE / 35 MM:=20 Suzhou River - Lou Ye China 2000 83 min, colour The river Suzhou in Shanghai is witness to a love story taking a fatal = turn. In a restless style with the camera almost continuously seeking = this is an image of China far from its usual tourist image.=20 PROGRAMME SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7th SHORTS / VIDEO:=20 The Bridge: A Celebration - Peter Greenaway 1997 The Netherlands, 11 = min In 1997, Greenaway shot the opening of the Erasmusbridge. Commissioned = by the City of Rotterdam and designed in the spirit of Joris Ivens' = monumental film 'The Bridge', . Elevated Subway - Su Tomesen 2001 The Netherlands. The Broadway Williamsburg Bridge is the setting for this above-ground = journey by subway. Autonomous work by young, Dutch filmmaker. E-the-Real-Roof - Sinichi Yamamoto Japan 1993 10 min 48, colour A journey through one of the unhealthiest cities in this world, Tokyo. = Shaky images of skyscrapers, buildings with scaffolding, neon lights, a = city with permanent lack of space. Only on Sundays, when there is less = traffic, the sky is blue. Here, people make even the weather. Rocking Robin - Uri Urech Switzerland 1998, video, 11 min 42, b/w Uri Urech scratches and samples black and white photographs of New York = to a climax on the pulsating rhythms of a trumpet and drumsticks = trashing a bucket. The life story of DJ Tommy Simms aka Rockin' Robin = Jr. FEATURE / 35 MM:=20 The Fountainhead - King Vidor USA 1949, 114 min, b/w Architect Howard Roark just can't seem to adjust himself or his artistic = ideals to the demands of reality. It's slowly destroying his life - or = isn't it? This is known to be the most bizarre movie out of the careers = of both King Vidor and leading man Gary Cooper. Starting time both days: 21.00 hrs.=20 Location: : Diergaardesingelplein, Centre of = Rotterdam (behind =20 Kruisplein) Admission : FREE CELL - Initiators of Incidents - Postbus=20 3000 CA Rotterdam T ++ 31 (0) 10 412 72 70 F ++ 31 (0) 10 412 70 40 E cell@cell.nl W = www.cell.nl=20 ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2002 23:06:12 -0400 (EDT) From: ronda@ais.org (Ronda Hauben) Subject: Call for Submissions "The Netizen - 1992/3 - 2002/3) Call for Submission for upcoming issue of the Amateur Computerist The emergence of the netizen - 1992/1993 - 2002/2003 What has been the evolution? The emergence of the netizen was formulated by Michael Hauben as part of the online research he was doing in 1992/1993. He recognized that there were people online who considered themselves to be citizens of the net (net.citizen). These users were seeking to spread access for all to the Net. They understood the importance of the Net in spreading human to human computer facilitated communication. These users recognized the need to contribute to make the Net a valuable resource for all. Michael formulated the concept in an introduction to the new world that was being born online. (See introduction and conclusion to "The Net and the Netizen: The Impact the Net has on People's Lives", first posted in 1993, and then published in a print edition in 1997 and also available online: http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook ) Some of Michael's early research appeared on Usenet and then in the Amateur Computerist newsletter. His research inspired others to apply or develop the concept of netizen. It is now 10 years later. We would like to document the further development and application of the concept of netizen (and of the vision of the future of the net) that developed since Michael's research in 1992/1993. Also we want to project into the future about what the emergence of the netizen can mean to the further development of the Internet and of our society in general. We are seeking submissions, including articles, poems, cartoons, stories, plays etc. that develop or explore the concept of Netizen that has emerged along with the development of the Internet and Usenet. Submissions are due Sept 30, 2002. Please write and let us know if you will have a submission or if you have an idea/interest/suggestion for the upcoming issue. Long live the netizen and netizenship. Send submissions to jrh@ais.org ronda@ais.org Ronda Hauben Editor The Amateur Computerist http://www.ais.org/~jrh/acn ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 4 Sep 2002 10:03:51 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: program of internet researchers conference (maastricht/nl) The full program: http://aoir.org/2002/ Internet Research 3.0: NET / WORK / THEORY Maastricht, The Netherlands, October 13-16 2002 The Internet has become an integral, ubiquitous part of everyday life in many social domains and international contexts. Yet, most of the public attention on cyberspace remains fueled by utopian or dystopian visions, rather than being informed by the growing body of research on the Internet as a complex fact of modern life. Internet Research (IR) 3.0, an international and interdisciplinary conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (A.o.I.R.), will feature a variety of perspectives on Internet research, in order to develop a better theoretical and pragmatic understanding of the Internet. Building on the previous well-attended international conferences, the IR 3.0 will bring together prominent scholars, researchers, and practitioners from many disciplines, fields and countries for a program of presentations, panel discussions, and informal exchanges. This year's theme is Net/Work/Theory. Contributors are called to reflect on how to theorize what we know about the Internet and on how to apply what we know theoretically in practice. The conference will be held for the first time in Europe, whose intellectual environments have traditionally been a source of social and cultural theory. IR 3.0 will be hosted by the International Institute of Infonomics in the beautiful city of Maastricht in the Netherlands. As the city in which one of the key treaties of the European Union was signed, Maastricht also symbolizes a changing Europe in a changing international setting. The conference will provide opportunities to network, learn from other researchers, hear from leading players in Internet development, and enjoy the "art of fine living" of Maastricht, in the south of the Netherlands. ***Preliminary Program*** Sunday October 13 PRECONFERENCE WORKSHOP 1: Intellectual Property for Internet Researchers PRECONFERENCE WORKSHOP 2: Social, Technical, and Democratic Origins of the Internet Monday October 14 08:00 Registration 09:00 Plenary session I Opening: Director of Infonomics Institute Luc Soete, AoIR President Steve Jones, Conference Coordinator Monica Murero Keynote speaker: Dr. Detlef Eckert, Head of Unit for Policy Planning, European Commission, Brussels 10:00 Break 10:15 Panel session 1 Panel 1A Old Methodologies, New Empirical Issues on the Internet Applying Old Media Theories to New Media: Uses & Gratifications <abstract> Jennifer Stromer-Galley, USA Flow-Experience, the Internet and its Relationship to Situation and Personality <abstract> Robert Tzanetakis, AUSTRIA Peter Vitouch, AUSTRIA Telling Stories: Using Scenario Methodologies in Internet Research <abstract> Erika Pearson, AUSTRALIA Improving Unit-Nonresponse Error Correction in Online Surveys Using Multi-Dimensional Response Models <abstract> Gerhard Lukawetz, AUSTRIA Panel 1B Information Societies around the World Cultural Indexes of Information Society: The Future of the Internet in Asia <abstract> Brian Shoesmith, AUSTRALIA Mark Balnaves, AUSTRALIA Debate on the Internet in Africa: Trends, Typology, and Characteristics <abstract> RaphaÎl Ntambue-Tshimbulu, FRANCE Accurately Measuring the Impact of Information Society/Revolution Conditions upon Public Policy Decision-Making. A Comprehensive Cross- disciplinary Research Agenda <abstract> Adrian Petrescu, USA Surveying the Internet: A Critical Review of the Study of Internet Effects on Society <abstract> Mattia Miani, ITALY Panel 1C September 11: The Web Response The September 11 Collection: Archiving an Emerging Web Sphere <abstract> Diane Kresh, USA Cassy Ammen, USA Online Structure for Action in the September 11 Web <abstract> Kirsten Foot, USA Steven M. Schneider, USA The Multidimensionality of Blog Conversations: The Virtual Enactment of September 11 <abstract> Sandeep Krishnamurthy, USA The Web as News? <abstract> Alex Halavais, USA Panel 1D Gendered Practices of Internet Use Women Empowerment: Internet Perspective <abstract> Chitra Pathak, INDIA Manish Kumar, THE NETHERLANDS Participating in an Electronic Forum: The Difference Gender Makes <abstract> A. Vayreda, SPAIN A. G·lvez, SPAIN F. NuÒez, SPAIN B. CallÈn, SPAIN Gender and Commercialization: The Construction of User- representations in a Changing Design Context <abstract> Els Rommes, THE NETHERLANDS Teenage Intercultural Communications Online: A Redeployment of the Internet Activist Model <abstract> David Gauntlett, UNITED KINGDOM Jayne Rodgers, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 1E Social Movements and Collective Identity on the Internet Shaping Online Welfare Cultures: Social Movements, Identification, and the Internet <abstract> Brian D. Loader, UNITED KINGDOM Leigh Keeble, UNITED KINGDOM The Queer Sisters and Its Electronic Bulletin Board: A Study of the Internet for Social Movement Mobilization <abstract> Joyce Yee-man Nip, CHINA Open Source and the Construction of Collective Identity <abstract> Anna Maria Szczepanska, SWEDEN Standing on the Shoulders of the Real Programmers: An Analysis of the Use of Usenet as a Site for Computer Hacker Cultural Formation <abstract> Matthew Wysocki, USA Panel 1F Anticipations: The Internet in Historical and Future Perspectives Pushers, Plumbers, and Pediatricians: The Symbolism of the Pager in the United States - 1975 to 1995 <abstract> Nalini Kotamraju, USA Internet: The Real Pre-history and Its Consequences for Social Theory <abstract> Laszlo Z. Karvalics, HUNGARY Drop-outs: A Forgotten Category of Internet Users <abstract> Frank Thomas, FRANCE Introducing the Wireless Information Society Research Network (WISER.NET) Project <abstract> Richard Smith, CANADA Gordon A. Gow, CANADA 11:45 Break 12:00 Panel Session 2 Panel 2A The Digital Divide Reassessed Bridging The Have-Not Gap <abstract> Red Bradley, USA Can Adopters Narrow the Digital Divide? The Case of Greece <abstract> Nikos Leandros, GREECE Community Access and the Digital Divide: with Maritime Subtitles <abstract> Vanda Rideout, CANADA The Digital Divide, Individuals and Governance: Opportunities and Challenges <abstract> Andrew Reddick, CANADA Panel 2B Social Relationships on the Internet The Internet as Inspiration, Facilitator, and Sustenance of Affective Dyadic Relationships <abstract> Hongmei Li, USA James R. Beniger, USA Social Networks of Intensive Internet Users <abstract> Valentina Hlebec, SLOVENIA Katja Lozar Manfreda, SLOVENIA Vasja Vehovar, SLOVENIA Users vs. Manipulators: Investigating Two Approaches to Internet Activity <abstract> Andrew Mendelson, USA Zizi Papacharissi, USA The Circadian Geography of Chat ? <abstract> Paul Bevan, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 2C Democracy, Activism, and Online Participation Indymedia: Using a Technology of Abundance to Become the Media <abstract> Victor Pickard, USA Meghan Dougherty, USA Maria Garrido, USA Where 'Fascist' and 'Communist' Citizens Get Together: Virtual Deliberation in Hungarian Online Political Discussion Forums <abstract> Ildiko Kaposi, HUNGARY The Internet as an Instrument and Platform for NGOs to Strengthen Civil Society in Japan <abstract> Iris Wieczorek, GERMANY Resistance. Net. Work: Virtual Coalitions within the Anti-Government Movement in Austria <abstract> Heidi Weinhupl, AUSTRIA Christa Markom, AUSTRIA Panel 2D Online Gaming Multiple Pleasures: Women and Online Gaming <abstract> T.L.Taylor, USA To Kill or Not to Kill. Attraction of Violent Death (and Meaning of Stats) in Online Multiplayer Computer Games <abstract> Gitte Stald, DENMARK If It's In The Game, It's In The Game: Or, What Makes Games Feel Real? <abstract> Charlie Breindahl, DENMARK Net Play Theory: Narrative As Social Control <abstract> Espen Aarseth, NORWAY Panel 2E The Psychology of Internet Use Computer-Mediated Social Support: Where Are We And What Does The Future Hold? <abstract> Shelia Cotten, USA Risky Information Search in Databases <abstract> Michael Schulte-Mecklenbeck, SWITZERLAND The Internet in College Social Life <abstract> Nancy Baym, USA Yan Bing Zhang, USA Mei-Chen Lin, USA Panel 2F Internet Research as Methodological Challenge Measuring Ether: Methodological Issues in Internet Research <abstract> Stephen Tan, CANADA Distributed Collective Practice, Linux, and a Commitment to the Technical <abstract> Matt Ratto, USA Actor-Networks and Genres Analysis of a Mailing List <abstract> Moses Boudourides, GREECE Dimensions of the 'Mode of As-If': Hermeneutics, Narrative, and Virtual Communities <abstract> Gary Burnett, USA Panel 2G Simulations in Internet Research: Value and Sharing of Information, Social Facilitation, Friends and Neighbors <abstract> (Moderator: Sheizaf Rafaeli, ISRAEL) The Lemonade Stand: Experimental Investigation of the Subjective Value of Information <abstract> Daphne R. Raban, ISRAEL Sheizaf Rafaeli, ISRAEL Online Auctions and Social Facilitation <abstract> Sheizaf Rafaeli, ISRAEL Avi Noy, ISRAEL Sharing Information in Virtual Teams: Messaging, Supply Chains and the Disintermediation Promise? <abstract> Gilad Ravid, ISRAEL Sheizaf Rafaeli, ISRAEL Enhancing User Control over Online Recommendation Processes: 'Friends' vs. "Neighbors" in the "Qsia" Recommender System <abstract> Sheizaf Rafaeli, ISRAEL Yuval Dan Gur, ISRAEL 13:30 Free time / lunch 14:30 Panel session 3 Panel 3A Learning from the Internet No Magic Solutions: What Can We Learn from Recent Developments in E- learning? <abstract> Laia Miralles, SPAIN Adela Ros, SPAIN Adolescents and the Use of the Internet - Results of an Exploratory Study in Barcelona, Spain <abstract> Magdalena Albero-AndrËs, SPAIN The Interconnected Youngsters: When Students Teach Us How to Use Technology to Learn <abstract> Jose Jesus GarcÌa Rueda, SPAIN Fernando S·ez Vacas, SPAIN The Internet and Learning: A Qualitative Study <abstract> Amanda Lenhart, USA The Epistemology of Internet Use: Implications for Teaching and Learning <abstract> Thomas J. Scott, USA Michael O'Sullivan, USA Panel 3B The Importance Of Context Sensitivity In Doing Internet Ethnography <abstract> (Roundtable - Moderator: Annette Markham, USA) Presenters: Annette Markham, USA <abstract> Janne Bromseth, NORWAY <abstract> Radhika Gajjala, USA <abstract> Panel 3C Surveillance and Regulation on the Internet Big Brother in Australia: Privacy and Surveillance of the Internet in the Australian Workplace <abstract> Monica Whitty, AUSTRALIA Online Privacy and Consumer Protection: An Analysis of Portal Privacy Statements <abstract> Zizi Papacharissi, USA Jan Ferbank, USA Panopticon.com: Online Surveillance and Commodification of Privacy <abstract> Matt Carlson, USA John Edward Campbell, USA The Work of Being Watched: Interactive Media and the Exploitation of Self-Disclosure <abstract> Mark Andrejevic, USA Panel 3D Art and Web: Towards an Aesthetics of Interactivity ? <abstract> (Moderator: GeneviËve Vidal, FRANCE) Am I an Author Too ? Or, Interactivity as a Source of Hope and Despair on the Internet <abstract> Annie GentËs, FRANCE URBAN CONCERT <abstract> Carol-Ann Braun, FRANCE How to Get into an Artistic Site: Web Art Uses in Question <abstract> Genevieve Vidal, FRANCE Panel 3E E-business: A Comparative View E-commerce and Developing Countries: Deconstructing the Myth <abstract> Daniel Pare, UNITED KINGDOM E-Commerce / E-Business in the People's Republic of China <abstract> Simona Thomas, GERMANY Internet Regime and IT Innovation Patterns in Indonesia: A View from The Actor-Network-Theory Perspective <abstract> Sonny Yuliar, INDONESIA Kusmayanto Kadiman, INDONESIA Leonie T. Wiyati, INDONESIA Fajar Wantah, INDONESIA Saswinadi Sasmojo, INDONESIA Perspectives for B2C E-Commerce in South America: Evidence from Chile <abstract> Michael Shohat, CHILE Panel 3F Issue-Networks on the Web: Theory, Method, Politics <abstract> (Moderator: Richard Rogers, THE NETHERLANDS) All Networks Aren't Equal <abstract> Jodi Dean, USA Introducing a Technocrat and a Democrat to the New Media, or What to Make of the Encounter between the Experts and the Grassroots on the Web? <abstract> Noortje Marres, THE? NETHERLANDS The Issue Has Left the Building - The Web, New Democratic Practice, and the Challenges of De-territorialisation <abstract> Richard Rogers, THE? NETHERLANDS Panel 3G Linguistic Practices on the Internet Causes of Linguistic Interferences in Spanish and Catalan IRC Sessions <abstract> Marta Torres i Vilatarsana, SPAIN Some Cultural and Linguistic Implications of Computer-Mediated Greeklish <abstract> Theodora Tseligka, UNITED KINGDOM Web Search Engines: Information Retrieval in Less Common Languages <abstract> Ewa?Callahan, USA 16:00 Break 16:15 Plenary session II Keynote speaker: Professor Dr. Robin Mansell, London School of Economics: The Internet and the Forces of Capitalism - The Policy Challenge 17:15 Break 17:30 Panel session 4 Panel 4A Toward a History of the Internet Three Histories of the Internet: A Comparative Analysis of Information Networks Between the U.S., the U.K., and Japan <abstract> Junghoon Kim, USA Tomoaki Watanabe, USA Australising the Internet; or, Theorising Cultural Histories of the Internet <abstract> Gerard Goggin, AUSTRALIA International Origins of the Internet and the Emergence of the Netizen: Is the Early Vision Still Viable? <abstract> Ronda Hauben, USA Panel 4B Online Sexuality Cybercheating: Attitudes towards Online Infidelity <abstract> Monica Whitty, AUSTRALIA Analysing Sexuality Web Sites: Evolution of a Procedure and Some Findings <abstract> Cathy Greenblat, USA 'Everything I Know about Sex I Learned from the Internet': The Problems and Potentials of Online Sex Education <abstract> Nicole Isaacson, USA The Life and Loves of a She-Cyborg: The Paradox of Virtual Embodiment <abstract> Jenny SundÈn, SWEDEN Panel 4C The Internet in Work and Organizations Role of ICT in Knowledge Sharing Processes in Organizations <abstract> Marieke Wenneker, THE NETHERLANDS Martine van Selm, THE NETHERLANDS Paul Nelissen, THE NETHERLANDS The Role of Online Working in Combating Barriers to Employment <abstract> Chris Lane, UNITED KINGDOM Internet Training in Context <abstract> Steve Walker, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 4D Dynamics of Online Fan Communities Consuming Vampires in Cyberspace: Online Fandom and Intellectual Property Law <abstract> John Campbell, USA On-Line AIBO Discussion Forums: Talking Robotic Pets or Just Plain Talking? <abstract> Jennifer Hagman, USA Batya Friedman, USA Peter H. Kahn Jr., USA >From Fans to FoLCs: Online Community and the Case of Kerth Awards <abstract> Amy Lauters, USA Music, Meaning, and Digital Exchange <abstract> Chris McVey, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 4E The Form and the Feel: Combining Approaches for the Study of Networks on the Internet <abstract> (Moderator: Anne Beaulieu, THE NETHERLANDS) Mapping Discursive Networks in Controversies <abstract> Paul Wouters, THE NETHERLANDS Tracing Networks of Trust in Scholars' Internet Use: Connectivity as Ethnographic and Formal Object <abstract> Anne Beaulieu, THE NETHERLANDS Han Woo Park, THE NETHERLANDS "Dynamic Networks" - Concepts and Models from Non-linear Physics and Consequences for the Analysis of Networked Research <abstract> Andrea Scharnhorst, THE NETHERLANDS Panel 4F The Internet and the New Transformation of Consciousness <abstract> (Moderator: John Van Ness, USA) The Promise and Peril of Human Conscious Evolution Brought on by the Internet - Psychological and Spiritual Reflections <abstract> John Van Ness, USA How the Internet Is Transforming Human Consciousness through Its Transformation of the Workplace and Business Relationships: A Creative? Demonstration <abstract> Peter W. Van Ness, USA Challenges in Developing User Interfaces That Are Intuitive? for Both Men and Women: A Creative? Demonstration <abstract> Vickie Van Ness, USA Panel 4G Carl J. Couch Internet Research Award Panel <abstract> (Moderator: Mark D. Johns, USA) 19:00 Refreshments Tuesday October 15 08:30 Panel session 5 Panel 5A Space and Time Online: Theoretical Perspectives The Sensed Dimensions of Cyberspace - Three Modes of Spatial Interpretation in Online Social Life <abstract> Stine Gotved, DENMARK >From Online to Offline and Back: Distinctions and Continuities Between the Offline and the Online <abstract> Shani Orgad, UNITED KINGDOM Internet Use and the Socio-cognitive Construction of Time <abstract> Luc JaÎcklÈ, FRANCE Ideas and Metaphors of Space on the Internet ... and How These Help or Restrict Us in Research <abstract> Nils Zurawski, GERMANY Panel 5B International Contexts of Internet Use How Do French Internet Users Search the Web? <abstract> Houssem Assadi, FRANCE Valerie Beaudouin, FRANCE A Structural Analysis of the Use of Internet by Households in Four European Towns <abstract> Alain d'Iribarne, FRANCE The Influence of Cultural Factors on Patterns of ICT Adoption and Adaptation in Uzbekistan <abstract> Beth Kolko, USA Latin American Telecenters: The Long Road toward Empowerment <abstract> Paul Bonilla, UNITED KINGDOM Karin Delgadillo, UNITED KINGDOM Klaus Stoll, UNITED KINGDOM Michael Menou, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 5C Identities Across Media I Am Myself, Am I Not?: Construction and Presentation of Identities in IRC <abstract> Susana Nascimento, PORTUGAL Designing Bodies in Cyberspace: The Blurring of the Boundaries between Designers and Users of a 3D Sociability Platform <abstract> Mario Guimaraes, UNITED KINGDOM Dutch Web Radio as a Medium for Audience Interaction <abstract> Martine van Selm, THE NETHERLANDS Nicholas W. Jankowski, THE NETHERLANDS BeliefNet: Commercial Enterprise or Community? <abstract> Mark D. Johns, USA Panel 5D Community Online and Offline The Social Construction and Early Shaping(s) of a Community (Network) Database <abstract> Christina Prell, USA Geography and On-line Community: The Relationship between State-level Social Capital and Emergence of Virtual Communities <abstract> Sorin Matei, USA Jonathan Sabella, USA David Williams, USA Social Network Incentives or Hope for Reciprocity as Stimuli for the Information Transfer in Electronic Groups?? An Empirical Test of Two Theories with the Help of Academic Internet Discussion Groups <abstract> Uwe Matzat, GERMANY Online Communities in a 'Glocal' Context <abstract> Christoph M¸ller, SWITZERLAND Panel 5E E-Government and Democratic Participation Internet Voting: a Universal Remedy? <abstract> Anne-Marie Oostveen, THE NETHERLANDS Peter van den Besselaar, THE NETHERLANDS Surfing the Net or Serving the People? Local E-Government in Fujian and Guangdong <abstract> Jens Damm, GERMANY Public Spheres on the Internet - Anarchic or Government-sponsored: A Comparison <abstract> Jakob Linaa Jensen, DENMARK Behind the Bits: Construction of an On-Line Persona/Campaign/Community in a U.S. Senate Compaign <abstract> Gretchen Haas, USA Panel 5F A Survey of Recent Pew Internet & American Life Project Data <abstract> (Moderator: Lee Rainie, USA) Getting Serious Online: A Longitudinal Study <abstract> Susannah Fox, USA The Impact of Broadband at Home <abstract> John Horrigan, USA Barriers to Online Access & Use <abstract> Amanda Lenhart, USA The Rise of the e-Citizen: How People Use Government Agencies' Web Sites <abstract> Lee Rainie, USA 10:00 Break 10:15 Panel session 6 Panel 6A The Internet as Research Instrument: Potentials and Problems Beyond Usability: Using the "Webpage Interview" to Explore Literary Practices <abstract> Dena Attar, UNITED KINGDOM Health Information on the Internet: an Investigation of the Methodological Dilemmas and Opportunities Offered by Email Interviewing <abstract> JoÎlle Kivits, UNITED KINGDOM Gender Identity and HIV Risk: An Internet-based Study <abstract> Walter O. Bockting, USA Laura Gurak, USA Examining the Determinants of Who is Hyperlinked to Whom <abstract> Han Woo Park, THE NETHERLANDS Chiung-Wen Hsu, USA Panel 6B Communities of Practice and Learning Locating Possibility - Telling Stories Across Frontiers <abstract> Sandra Semchuk, CANADA Vince Dziekan, AUSTRALIA Using a Journalism Course Web Site to Construct Knowledge in a Community of Practice <abstract> Bruce Henderson, USA The Digital I: Psycho-social and Cultural Impact of Internet in Young People from a Developing Country <abstract> Jose Cabrera, COLOMBIA Panel 6C Copyright, Creativity, and Public Interest A Copyright "Cold War": The Polarized Rhetorics of Peer-to-Peer File Sharing <abstract> John Logie, USA CD Copy-Protection: Proprietary Stealth and the Pragmatics of Noise <abstract> Alana Lowe-Petraske, UNITED KINGDOM Copyright's Black Box: How Intellectual Property Aligns Creative Networks <abstract> Dan L. Burk, USA Copyright in the Web: Proposing New Paradigms for Copyright in Digital Media <abstract> Benjamin Bates, USA Panel 6D Gender Representations on and of the Internet Representations of Gender: New Amazones <abstract> Merete Lie, NORWAY Hacking Women: How Popular Media Represent the Technologically Proficient Woman <abstract> Sarah Stein, USA Packaged Feminism/Packaged Enlightenment?: A Textual Analysis of NikeUSA's New Women's Destination, www.nikegoddess.com <abstract> Tara Kachgal, USA Panel 6E Productive Surveillance: Consumption, Community, and the Commercial Exploitation of Interactivity <abstract> (Moderator: Mark Andrejevic, USA) Using Community to Sell: The Commodification of Community in Retail Web Sites <abstract> Jan Fernback, USA The Panoptic "State" of the Web: Cutting the Cookies, Crashing the Web <abstract> Greg Elmer, USA Space: the Final Frontier for E-commerce <abstract> Mark Andrejevic, USA Psychogeography and the Virtual Society of Control <abstract> Rob Shields, CANADA Panel 6F International Perspectives on a National Internet Study: The Pew Internet Project in a Global Context <abstract> (Roundtable - Moderator: Steve Jones, USA) Presenters: Sandra Braman, USA Andrew Clement, CANADA Stine Gotved, DENMARK Phil Graham, Australia John Horrigan, USA Nick Jankowski, THE NETHERLANDS Robin Mansell, UNITED KINGDOM Uwe Matzat, GERMANY Michel Menou, UNITED KINGDOM Rivki Ribak, ISRAEL Joe Turow, USA 11:45 Break 12:00 Panel session 7 Panel 7A Science and Technology Studies Approaches to Internet Research <abstract> (Roundtable - Moderator: John Monberg, USA) Presenters: Rob Kling, USA Paul Wouters, THE NETHERLANDS Sally Wyatt, THE NETHERLANDS Steve Woolgar, UNITED KINGDOM Wiebe Bijker, THE NETHERLANDS John Monberg, USA Panel 7B E-Health: Project, Research, and Policy Interactions (Moderator: Monica Murero, THE NETHERLANDS)<abstract> Presenters: Jonathan Kay, Oxford Internet Institute, UNITED KINGDOM <abstract> Susannah Fox, Pew Internet & American Life Project, USA Monica Murero, International Institute of Infonomics, THE <abstract> NETHERLANDS Panel 7C Interaction Management in Listservs and Email Managing Face and Conflict in Cyberspace: The Discourse Dynamics of a Discussion Group <abstract> Ibolya Maricic, SWEDEN Politeness Accommodation in Electronic Mail, or: Up to what is Dr. Aitken? <abstract> Ulla Bunz, USA Scott Campbell, USA How Useful Are Online Community Guidelines? - A Case Study of Two Fan Communities <abstract> Elizabeth Longmate, UNITED KINGDOM Chris Baber, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 7D Local and Regional Politics of the Internet Information Society Development in Yugoslavia <abstract> Smiljana Antonijevic, YUGOSLAVIA Political Space, the Internet, and Croatia: The Use of New Media in Anti-hegemonic Politics in Croatia in the 1990s <abstract> Marcus Leaning, UNITED KINGDOM Inga Tomic-Koludrovic, UNITED KINGDOM Mirko Petric, UNITED KINGDOM Internet, Democracy, and Politics In Ghana <abstract> Eric Osiakwan, GHANA Orbiting Orba: Internet & Identity Politics in Indonesia <abstract> Merlyna Lim, INDONESIA Panel 7E Aesthetic Forms of Interactivity Digital Storytelling (CREATIVE PRESENTATION) <abstract> Edward Lenert, USA "Close Encounters of the Nerd Kind:" A Case Study in Interactive Narrative <abstract> Ira Nayman, USA Videoecriture: Interactive Video Vernaculars <abstract> Adrian Miles, NORWAY A Virtual World Aesthetics: Theorising Multi-user Textuality <abstract> Lisbeth Klastrup, DENMARK Panel 7F The Future of Feminist Internet Studies <abstract> (Roundtable - Moderator: Mia Consalvo, USA) Presenters: Mia Consalvo, USA Radhika Gajjala, USA Marj Kibby, AUSTRALIA Susanna Paasonen, FINLAND Karen Riggs, USA Panel 7G Religion Online Religious Identity Online: The Case of the Greek Orthodox Church <abstract> Katerina Diamandaki, GREECE Dionysis Panos, GREECE Nikos Demertzis, GREECE Religion and Meaning in the Digital Age: Field Research on Internet/Web Religion <abstract> Stewart Hoover, USA 13:30 Free time / lunch 14:30 Plenary session III Keynote speaker: Professor Dr. William H. Dutton, Director, Oxford Internet Institute: An Internet Research Bubble? 15:30 Break 15:45 Panel session 8 Panel 8A Economic Structures? and Consequences of the Internet >From "Cyber City" to "Silicon Harbor": the Internet Industry and the Reconfiguration of Urban Spaces <abstract> Gina Neff, USA When The NET Doesn't WORK: The Case of Enron <abstract> Hamid Ekbia, USA Rob Kling, USA Internet Antique Auctions: Antique Dealers and Collectors as Information Specialists <abstract> Daniel D. Meir, ISRAEL Towards a Sociological Understanding of the Motivations for Value Production on the Internet <abstract> Hector Postigo, USA Panel 8B Cultural Variations of Internet Use Social Challenges of Internet to Japanese Society <abstract> Jane Bachnik, JAPAN Learning to use ICTs in a Gulf Arab Context <abstract> David Palfreyman, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES The Cybersword Cuts Both Ways: A Case Study and Theoretical Framework for Looking at Appropriation and Diffusion of Native Technologies through the Internet <abstract> Constance E. Kampf, USA The Internet and National Higher Education Policy in Germany and the United States: Negotiating the Public Good and Global Markets <abstract> Doreen Starke-Meyerring, USA Panel 8C Alice in CyberLand and 'Through the Looking Glass': Theory and Research about Online and Offline Realities in Playing, Pairing, and Power <abstract> (Moderator: Andrea J. Baker, USA) How Did They Get 'There'? Perception and Metaphor in the Analysis of Virtual Cues and Construction of Real Bodies <abstract> Frank Schaap, THE NETHERLANDS The Heart Has Its Reasons: A Comparison of the Development of Online and Offline Romantic Relationships <abstract> Robert E. Rosenwein, USA Elisa Wiherin, USA Intimate Bonding Through Online Communities and Email Lists: Just Like Real Life? <abstract> Andrea J. Baker, USA Governance, Elites, and the Online/Offline Divide <abstract> Tim Jordan, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 8D Analyzing Personal WebSites Private Domains in the Public Domain: The Synthetic Institutionalization of Personal Web Space <abstract> John Killoran, USA The Design and Reception of Personal Websites: An Anthropological Perspective <abstract> Valerie Beaudouin, FRANCE Christian Licoppe, FRANCE Panel 8E The Internet & Elections: Cross-National Comparisons <abstract> (Moderator: Randy Kluver, SINGAPORE) Candidate Web Presence and Strategies in the 2002 U.S. Elections <abstract> Steven M. Schneider, USA Kirsten A. Foot, USA Types of Communication on Political Party Websites During the 2002 Dutch National Elections <abstract> Carlo Hagemann, THE NETHERLANDS Nicholas Jankowski, THE NETHERLANDS Political Strategy and ICTs Combined: Japanese National Elections 2000-2001 <abstract> Leslie Tkach, JAPAN Internet Campaign Strategies in the 2001 Singapore General Election: Party Mobilization and Political Discourse in an Authoritarian Democracy <abstract> Randy Kluver, SINGAPORE Panel 8F Categorization and Organization of Electronic Written Interaction <abstract> (Moderator: Julia Velkovska, FRANCE) Categorization and the Cooperative Definition of Activity Types <abstract> Hillary Bays, FRANCE Defining Situations and Types of Relationships on a Mailing List <abstract> Julia Velkovska, FRANCE Categorization as an Argumentative Resource in On-line Political Debate <abstract> Michel Marcoccia, FRANCE Panel 8G The Impact of ICTs on Research Practice The Influence of New Media Technologies on Academic Research Paradigms <abstract> Irene Berkowitz, USA How the Content of Research May Be Affected in the Age of Cyberscience <abstract> Michael Nentwich, AUSTRIA Virtual Scholarly Networks & New Challenges for Knowledge Production <abstract> Christiana Freitas, UNITED KINGDOM Studying Scientific Communication through the Internet: A Theoretical Framework <abstract> Eleftheria Vasileiadou, GREECE Computer Mediated Science <abstract> Gaston Heimerik, THE NETHERLANDS 17:15 Break 17:30 General Assembly of the Association of Internet Researchers 20:00 Conference dinner Wednesday October 16 08:30 Panel session 9 Panel 9A Code and Control: Technical and Social Issues The Internet and Web as Code, Content, and Control <abstract> James R. Beniger, USA Pauline Hope Cheong, USA Internet Policy From Below: Toward Grounded Regulation <abstract> Christian Sandvig, USA Shaping the Development of Information Technologies to Meet Societal Concerns <abstract> Rajiv C. Shah, USA Jay P. Kesan, USA The Impact of 9-11 on Regulation of the Internet <abstract> Sandra Braman, USA Panel 9B Internet in China: Headache for the Government (Moderator: Randy Kluver, SINGAPORE) Controlling Narrative Space: Four Chinese Internet Case Studies <abstract> Kay Hearn, AUSTRALIA Brian Shoesmith, AUSTRALIA Communicating Styles: Balancing Specifity and Diffuseness in Developing China's Internet Regulations <abstract> Ian Gregory Weber, SINGAPORE Panoptic Internet Control in China <abstract> Lokman Tsui, THE NETHERLANDS Chinese Hacktivism <abstract> Jeroen de Kloet, THE NETHERLANDS Panel 9C Evaluating Online Education Social and Technical Constraints on Electronic Courseware <abstract> Pauline Hope Cheong, USA Namkee Park, USA William H. Dutton, UNITED KINGDOM Web Mining in Education: Using Students' Log Files as an Indicator of On-Line Learning and as a Tool for Improving On-Line Teaching <abstract> Gilad Ravid, , ISRAEL Edna Yaffe, ISRAEL Edna Tal, ISRAEL Surveying Target Audiences Makes the Difference: Best Practices in Designing Internet Based Continuing Medical Education Programs in Underserved Areas <abstract> Christine L. Pistella, USA Senol Duman, USA Adrian S. Petrescu, USA Pinar Ipek, USA Edward Born, USA Linda J. Kanzleiter, USA How University Students View Online Study: A PCP Perspective <abstract> Wei Wang, AUSTRALIA Panel 9D Magic, Ritual, Performance: Work, Play, Religious Praxis, and Digital Technologies <abstract> (Moderator: Brenda Danet, USA / ISRAEL) Mastering the Digital Image: New Technologies, Professional Performance, Magical Instruments <abstract> Paul Frosh, ISRAEL Play, Art, and Ritual on IRC <abstract> Brenda Danet, USA / ISRAEL Mundane Religion, Sublime Technology: Performativity of the Digitally Communicated Word in Jewish Law <abstract> Menahem Blondheim, ISRAEL Panel 9E Online Health Information: Availability, Accessibility, and Use Retrieving and Evaluating Health Information on the Internet <abstract> Janet Morahan-Martin, USA Colleen D. Anderson, USA Online Health Information-seeking Behavior among Low-income Internet Users <abstract> David Laflamme, USA Attempting To Bridge The Digital Divide For Breast Cancer Patients <abstract> Suzanne Pingree, USA Robert Hawkins, USA David H. Gustafson, USA Karen Julesberg, USA Fiona McTavish, USA William Stengle, USA Panel 9F Meet the Editors: A Roundtable (Moderator: Ulla Bunz, Rutgers University, USA) Presenters: Michel Menou, City University of London: International Journal of Information Management (editorial board) Ron Rice, Rutgers University: Management Communication Quarterly (editorial board) Leslie Shade, University of Ottawa: Computers & Society (Editor) Rob Kling, Indiana University: Information Society (Editor-in-Chief) Miriam Lips, Tilburg University Information Policy (editorial board) 10:00 Break 10:15 Panel session 10 Panel 10A Contesting the Future of the Internet Privatization of the Internet's Backbone Network <abstract> Rajiv C. Shah, USA Jay P. Kesan, USA Network Enclosure and the Re-embedding of Empire: Regional Integration, The Internet, and Communication Technologies <abstract> Christopher Bodnar, CANADA Bordering on Insanity? The Challenge of National Borders for Global Network Policy <abstract> Matthew Allen, AUSTRALIA Bordering the Net: The State's Interventions in Cyberia <abstract> Tim Luke, USA Digital Skins: Consuming and Producing Internet Bodies <abstract> Donald Snyder, USA Panel 10B Digital Divides in China Internet and Digital Divide in China <abstract> Karsten Giese, GERMANY The Digital Divide of Internet Use in China <abstract> Eric Harwit, USA Rethinking Linguistic Relativism and Cultural Imperialism: A Study of the Impacts of the Use of English on Chinese Websites <abstract> Yan Tian, USA Digital Divide and China's Possible Solution <abstract> Junhua Zhang, GERMANY Panel 10C Perceptions and Practices of Internet Privacy Attitudes Toward Internet Privacy: Slovenian Internet Users' View <abstract> Matej Kovacic, SLOVENIOA Vasja Vehovar, SLOVENIA Shifting Articulations of Internet Privacy in the United States <abstract> Karen Gustafson, USA Restricted Privacy: Information Privacy as a Culture-specific Construct <abstract> Rivka Ribak, ISRAEL Internet Code of Ethics in Norway <abstract> Elisabeth Staksrud, NORWAY Privacy Perceptions and Online Practices <abstract> Ana Viseu, CANADA Andrew Clement, CANADA Jane Aspinall, CANADA Panel 10D Texts in Digital Contexts Text in the Fast Lane <abstract> Naomi Baron, USA Mobile Text Messaging and Home Flexibilis <abstract> Ylva HÂrd af Segerstad, SWEDEN "It's Just Easier to Text. Really": Young People and New Communication in the UK and the US <abstract> Nina Wakeford, UNITED KINGDOM Nalini Kotamraju, USA Panel 10E Reconceptualizing Patients and Therapists on the Internet Internet as an Intermediary in the Transformation of the Patient Role <abstract> Ulrika Josefsson, SWEDEN Patient Organizations as Users and Designers of the World Wide Web <abstract> Nelly Oudshoorn, THE NETHERLANDS Andre Somers, THE NETHERLANDS Internet Visions and Realities: The Case of Consumer Health Information <abstract> Flis Henwood, UNITED KINGDOM Sally Wyatt, THE NETHERLANDS Angie Hart, UNITED KINGDOM Julie Smith, UNITED KINGDOM Qualtitative Interviewing with International Mental Health Practitioners via the Internet <abstract> Kate Anthony, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 10F Reflecting on the Field: The State of Internet Research and Dialogue Decolonizing Internet Research: Exploring International Approaches to Cyberculture <abstract> Maria Garrido, USA David Silver, USA AoIR in Context: An Analysis of Usenet Reaction to the Association of Internet Researchers <abstract> Jeremy Hunsinger, USA Reflexivity in Internet Discussions <abstract> Alexandra Petrova, ROMANIA 11:45 Break 12:00 Panel session 11 Panel 11A Designing Interactive Technologies >From Architecture to Interacture: Virtual World Design Based on Social Interaction Studies <abstract> Mikael Jakobsson, SWEDEN The Metastructural Dynamics of Interactive Electronic Design <abstract> Patricia Search, USA Knowledge Practice, Software Engineering, and Hacker Culture <abstract> Yuwei Lin, UNITED KINGDOM Panel 11B Improvising the Internet <abstract> (Moderator: Øyvind Thomassen, NORWAY) Constructors and Reconstructors of the History of Internet <abstract> Øyvind Thomassen, NORWAY Reality vs. Linearity in Creating the Norwegian Internet <abstract> Unn Kristin Daling, NORWAY The Epistemic Cultures of Hackers, Snowboarders and Jazz Performers <abstract> Trond Arne Undheim, NORWAY Panel 11C Virtual Identity Workshops: Constructing Multiple Identities via CMC in China (Moderator: Karsten Giese, GERMANY) Who Provides What for Whom? <abstract> Britta Uihlein, GERMANY Conceptualizing Methodology and Data Analysis on Observing BBS in Chinese Internet <abstract> Ching-Ching Pan, GERMANY Virtual Identities in Chinese BBS <abstract> Karsten Giese, GERMANY Communicating the Uncommunicatable <abstract> Ming Shi, GERMANY Panel 11D The Aesthetics of Digital Space and Physical Space Physical Web Interfaces (CREATIVE PRESENTATION) <abstract> Jonah Brucker-Cohen, IRELAND The Cyber-Geographic Image: Pictorial Representation in the Visualization of Landscape and Urban Space in Web-Served Computer-Mediated Communications <abstract> Troels Degn Johansson, DENMARK Mutual Assured Deconstruction - An Exploration of the Nature and Quality of Computer-Mediated Telepresence <abstract> Michael Arnold-Mages, USA Mediacy - Exploring Hypertextuality <abstract> Johan Elmfeldt, SWEDEN Panel 11E Everyday Meanings of the Internet The Internet and the Lifeworld: Competing Meanings of a New Medium <abstract> Maria Bakardjieva, CANADA Everyday Internet Experiences: A 'Neighbourhood Ethnography' of Public versus Domestic Access to On-line Services <abstract> Andrew Clement, CANADA Jane Aspinall, CANADA Ana Viseu, CANADA Leslie Shade, CANADA Digital Overflow: Negotiating the Demands of the Workplace Using the Internet at Home <abstract> Sue Cranmer, UNITED KINGDOM Blogs and the 'Social Weather' <abstract> Alexander Halavais, USA Panel 11F Research Gaps in the Field: Imagining Future Directions <abstract> (Roundtable - Moderator: David Silver, USA) Presenters: Brenda Danet, ISRAEL Steve Jones, USA Tim Jordan, UK Rajiv Shah, USA David Silver, USA Michele White, USA Nils Zurawski, GERMANY Panel 11G Ethical Decision-making and Internet Research: The AoIR Ethics Working Committee's Recommendations <abstract> (Roundtable - Moderator: Charles Ess, USA) 13:30 Free time / lunch 14:45 Plenary session IV Keynote speaker: Professor Dr. Cees J. Hamelink, University of Amsterdam Closing 16:00 End of conference ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 1 Sep 2002 22:04:21 +0200 (CEST) From: w3@w3art.es Subject: w3art - la comunidad artistica en internet Invitation ::::::::: w3art . la comunidad artística en internet ::::::::: Estimad@ amig@: Nos ponemos en contacto con usted tras una exhaustiva selección de direcciones pertenecientes a personas y entidades relacionadas con el arte contemporáneo, para invitarle a recibir :::gratuitamente::: nuestra lista ::w3art::. Con más de 8.500 suscriptores, ::w3art:: es sin duda el mejor instrumento para mantenerse informado de las novedades del mundo especializado de arte contemporáneo, siendo el canal que utilizan para difundir su información las Galerías, Revistas e Instituciones más importantes del panorama actual. 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