Innovation Communities - Neue Spielregeln des IdeenmanagementsVolker Bilgram
Innovation Communities sind die zentralen Instrumente für die Umsetzung von Open Innovation Vorhaben. Sie sind sowohl eine bewährte Lösung für das abteilungsüber-greifende unternehmensinterne Ideenmanagement als auch für die Integration von Konsumenten in den Innovationsprozess. Aus der Erfahrung mit Innovation Commu-nities für Kunden wie Siemens Osram oder Swarovski wird erläutert, wie durch die Kombination von Co-Creation Modulen und Evaluierungstools auf einer Online Plattform mit Community-Funktionalitäten die Innovationskraft von Unternehmen gestei-gert werden kann.
Die Präsentation wurde auf der Tagung "Konsum: weniger, anders, besser?" in der Ev. Akademie Bad Boll gehalten, die ua mit der Wirtschaftsgilde zusammen organisiert wurde.
Er solle eine Zukunftsvision darstellen, in welche Richtung sich der kritische Konsum entwickeln könnte.
Wochenendseminar "Von Blog bis Twitter - Öffentlichkeitsarbeit in Zeiten von Social Media" im Institut für Weiterbildung e.V der Fakultät Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften der Universität Hamburg (28. bis 30.05.2010)
Innovation Communities - Neue Spielregeln des IdeenmanagementsVolker Bilgram
Innovation Communities sind die zentralen Instrumente für die Umsetzung von Open Innovation Vorhaben. Sie sind sowohl eine bewährte Lösung für das abteilungsüber-greifende unternehmensinterne Ideenmanagement als auch für die Integration von Konsumenten in den Innovationsprozess. Aus der Erfahrung mit Innovation Commu-nities für Kunden wie Siemens Osram oder Swarovski wird erläutert, wie durch die Kombination von Co-Creation Modulen und Evaluierungstools auf einer Online Plattform mit Community-Funktionalitäten die Innovationskraft von Unternehmen gestei-gert werden kann.
Die Präsentation wurde auf der Tagung "Konsum: weniger, anders, besser?" in der Ev. Akademie Bad Boll gehalten, die ua mit der Wirtschaftsgilde zusammen organisiert wurde.
Er solle eine Zukunftsvision darstellen, in welche Richtung sich der kritische Konsum entwickeln könnte.
Wochenendseminar "Von Blog bis Twitter - Öffentlichkeitsarbeit in Zeiten von Social Media" im Institut für Weiterbildung e.V der Fakultät Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften der Universität Hamburg (28. bis 30.05.2010)
Blogs - öffentliches Nachrichtenforum oder Startpunkt für neue politische Bew...Axel Bruns
Keynote presented at the conference "Das Internet zwischen egalitärer Teilhabe und ökonomischer Vermachtung", Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, 24 Oct. 2008.
Types of Polarisation and Their Operationalisation in Digital and Social Medi...Axel Bruns
Paper by Axel Bruns, Tariq Choucair, Katharina Esau, Sebastian Svegaard, and Samantha Vilkins, presented at the Association of Internet Researchers conference, Philadelphia, 18 Oct. 2023.
Determining the Drivers and Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Onli...Axel Bruns
Paper by Axel Bruns, Katharina Esau, Tariq Choucair, Sebastian Svegaard, and Samantha Vilkins, presented at the ECREA Political Communication conference in Berlin, 1 Sep. 2023.
Towards a New Empiricism: Polarisation across Four DimensionsAxel Bruns
Paper by Axel Bruns, Tariq Choucair, Katharina Esau, Sebastian Svegaard, and Samantha Vilkins, presented at the IAMCR 2023 conference, Lyon, 9-13 July 2023.
The Anatomy of Virality: How COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories Spread across Socia...Axel Bruns
Keynote by Axel Bruns, with Edward Hurcombe and Stephen Harrington, presented at the International Center for Journalists' Empowering the Truth Summit, 23 Feb. 2023.
A Platform Policy Implementation Audit of Actions against Russia’s State-Cont...Axel Bruns
Paper by Sofya Glazunova, Anna Ryzhova, Axel Bruns, Silvia Ximena Montaña-Niño, Arista Beseler, and Ehsan Dehghan, presented at the International Communication Association conference, Toronto, 29 May 2023.
The Filter in Our (?) Heads: Digital Media and PolarisationAxel Bruns
Invited presentation in a seminar series organised by the Centre for Deliberative Democracy & Global Governance at the University of Canberra, the QUT Digital Media Research Centre, and the News and Media Research Centre at the University of Canberra.
Gatewatching 5: Weaponising Newssharing: ‘Fake News’ and Other MalinformationAxel Bruns
Lecture 5 in the course From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: News and Journalism in the Digital Age.
This lecture series addresses the continuing transformation of the production and consumption of journalism in the contemporary media environment. It provides a brief history of the impact of participatory online news production and engagement practices – from the first wave of citizen journalism to the social media platforms of today – on how news content is disseminated and experienced; examines reactive and proactive responses to these changes by news organisations and journalists; and explores the longer-term impact of these developments on the public sphere, touching on the power of social media platforms and their role in shaping their users’ information diets.
Readings are largely drawn from Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere (Bruns, 2018), with additional readings recommended for selected lectures.
Reading for this lecture:
Bruns, A., Harrington, S., & Hurcombe, E. (2021). Coronavirus Conspiracy Theories: Tracing Misinformation Trajectories from the Fringes to the Mainstream. In M. Lewis, E. Govender, & K. Holland (Eds.), Communicating COVID-19: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (pp. 229–249). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79735-5_12
Gatewatching 10: New(s) Publics in the Public SphereAxel Bruns
Lecture 10 in the course From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: News and Journalism in the Digital Age.
This lecture series addresses the continuing transformation of the production and consumption of journalism in the contemporary media environment. It provides a brief history of the impact of participatory online news production and engagement practices – from the first wave of citizen journalism to the social media platforms of today – on how news content is disseminated and experienced; examines reactive and proactive responses to these changes by news organisations and journalists; and explores the longer-term impact of these developments on the public sphere, touching on the power of social media platforms and their role in shaping their users’ information diets.
Readings are largely drawn from Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere (Bruns, 2018), with additional readings recommended for selected lectures.
Reading for this lecture:
Bruns, A. (2018). New(s) Publics in the Public Sphere. Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere. Ch. 8. Peter Lang.
Gatewatching 4: Random Acts of Gatewatching: Everyday Newssharing PracticesAxel Bruns
Lecture 4 in the course From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: News and Journalism in the Digital Age.
This lecture series addresses the continuing transformation of the production and consumption of journalism in the contemporary media environment. It provides a brief history of the impact of participatory online news production and engagement practices – from the first wave of citizen journalism to the social media platforms of today – on how news content is disseminated and experienced; examines reactive and proactive responses to these changes by news organisations and journalists; and explores the longer-term impact of these developments on the public sphere, touching on the power of social media platforms and their role in shaping their users’ information diets.
Readings are largely drawn from Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere (Bruns, 2018), with additional readings recommended for selected lectures.
Reading for this lecture:
Bruns, A. (2018). Random Acts of Gatewatching: Everyday Newssharing Practices. Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere. Ch. 4. Peter Lang.
Gatewatching 11: Echo Chambers? Filter Bubbles? Reviewing the EvidenceAxel Bruns
Lecture 11 in the course From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: News and Journalism in the Digital Age.
This lecture series addresses the continuing transformation of the production and consumption of journalism in the contemporary media environment. It provides a brief history of the impact of participatory online news production and engagement practices – from the first wave of citizen journalism to the social media platforms of today – on how news content is disseminated and experienced; examines reactive and proactive responses to these changes by news organisations and journalists; and explores the longer-term impact of these developments on the public sphere, touching on the power of social media platforms and their role in shaping their users’ information diets.
Readings are largely drawn from Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere (Bruns, 2018), with additional readings recommended for selected lectures.
Reading for this lecture:
Bruns, A. (2022). Echo Chambers? Filter Bubbles? The Misleading Metaphors That Obscure the Real Problem. In M. Pérez-Escolar & J. M. Noguera-Vivo (Eds.), Hate Speech and Polarization in Participatory Society (pp. 33–48). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003109891-4
Gatewatching 1: Introduction: What’s So Different about Journalism Today?Axel Bruns
Lecture 1 in the course From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: News and Journalism in the Digital Age.
This lecture series addresses the continuing transformation of the production and consumption of journalism in the contemporary media environment. It provides a brief history of the impact of participatory online news production and engagement practices – from the first wave of citizen journalism to the social media platforms of today – on how news content is disseminated and experienced; examines reactive and proactive responses to these changes by news organisations and journalists; and explores the longer-term impact of these developments on the public sphere, touching on the power of social media platforms and their role in shaping their users’ information diets.
Readings are largely drawn from Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere (Bruns, 2018), with additional readings recommended for selected lectures.
Reading for this lecture:
Bruns, A. (2018). Introduction. Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere. Ch. 1. Peter Lang.
Lecture 8 in the course From Gatekeeping to Gatewatching: News and Journalism in the Digital Age.
This lecture series addresses the continuing transformation of the production and consumption of journalism in the contemporary media environment. It provides a brief history of the impact of participatory online news production and engagement practices – from the first wave of citizen journalism to the social media platforms of today – on how news content is disseminated and experienced; examines reactive and proactive responses to these changes by news organisations and journalists; and explores the longer-term impact of these developments on the public sphere, touching on the power of social media platforms and their role in shaping their users’ information diets.
Readings are largely drawn from Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere (Bruns, 2018), with additional readings recommended for selected lectures.
Reading for this lecture:
Bruns, A. (2018). Hybrid News Coverage: Liveblogs. Gatewatching and News Curation: Journalism, Social Media, and the Public Sphere. Ch. 7. Peter Lang.
'Anyone Can Edit': Vom Nutzer zum Produtzer (2009, Münster Version)
1. ‘ Anyone Can Edit’: Vom Nutzer zum Produtzer Dr Axel Bruns Creative Industries Faculty Queensland University of Technology Brisbane, Australien a.bruns@qut.edu.au – http://snurb.info/ – http://produsage.org/
16. Eine neue Logik Online-Projektstandort durch Gemeinschaft oder Firma erstellt, als Heimat für das Produtzungsprojekt (z.B. Wikimedia Foundation; Google; SourceForge) kommerzielle / Non-Profit-Abernte von nutzererstellten Inhalten (z.B. The Sims , Wikipedia auf CD-ROM) kommerzielle / Non-Profit-Services zur Unterstützung der Produtzung (z.B. Red Hat, SourceForge) kommerzielle Aktivitäten durch Nutzer selbst, auf Produtzung aufbauend (z.B. Support-Services, Konsultationen, Inhaltsangebote) anfängliche Kontributionen von geistigem Eigentum durch Teilnehmer, aus freien Quellen, oder durch kommerzielle Unterstützer kollaborative, iterative, evolutionäre, palimpsestische benutzergelenkte Inhaltserstellung nützliche Inhalte, oft von professioneller Qualität, werden erstellt Produtzungsprojekt (von Produtzern betrieben)
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