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Fixing Social Media

04 Mar
Thursday, 03/04/2021 4:00pm
Virtual via Zoom
Special Event
Speaker: Ethan Zuckerman

This event is part two of the two-part series presented by Ethan Zuckerman, How to Fix Social Media... and Civic Life, and Everything Else, co-sponsored by the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences and the College of Information and Computer Sciences.

Abstract: Social networks like Facebook are institutions that have lost public trust over the past decade as their importance and influence has become increasingly clear. This loss of confidence presents an opportunity: instead of aspiring to fix social networks, we can imagine and build new tools that support our ability to be good neighbors and good citizens. What could social networks look like if their goal was not maximizing shareholder profit, but seek to strengthen our democracies? This talk explores the idea of software designed around civic values and seeks to make social change through creating publicly-funded social media. 

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Bio: Ethan Zuckerman is associate professor of public policy, information, and communication at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and director of the Institute for Digital Public Infrastructure. His research focuses on the use of media as a tool for social change, the use of new media technologies by activists, and alternative business and governance models for the internet. He is the author of Mistrust: How Losing Trust in Institutions Provides Tools to Transform Them (2020) and Rewire: Digital Cosmopolitans in the Age of Connection (2013). With Rebecca MacKinnon, Zuckerman co-founded the international blogging community Global Voices. It showcases news and opinions from citizen media in more than 150 nations and 30 languages, publishing editions in 20 languages. Previously, Zuckerman directed the Center for Civic Media at MIT and taught at the MIT Media Lab. In 2000, Zuckerman founded Geekcorps, a technology volunteer organization that sends IT specialists to work on projects in developing nations, with a focus on West Africa. Previously, he helped found Tripod.com, one of the web's first "personal publishing" sites. He and his family live in Berkshire County in western Massachusetts.