Description |
xiii, 260 pages ; 21 cm |
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text txt rdacontent |
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unmediated n rdamedia |
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volume nc rdacarrier |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents |
Are Online "Communities" Really Communities? -- What Can Online Collaboration Accomplish? -- Should you Believe Wikipedia? -- How Does the Internet Change How We Think? -- How Do People Express Identity Online, and Why is This Important for Online Interaction? -- What is Bad Online Behavior, and What Can We Do About It? -- How Do Business Models Shape Online Communities? -- How Can We Help the Internet to Bring Out the Best in Us All? |
Summary |
"As we interact online we are creating new kinds of knowledge and community. How are these communities formed? How do we know whether to trust them as sources of information? In other words, Should we believe Wikipedia? This book explores what community is, what knowledge is, how the internet facilitates new kinds of community, and how knowledge is shaped through online collaboration and conversation. Along the way the author tackles issues such as how we represent ourselves online and how this shapes how we interact, why there is so much bad behavior online and what we can do about it. And the most important question of all: What can we as internet users and designers do to help the internet to bring out the best in us all?"-- Provided by publisher |
Subject |
Online social networks.
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Internet -- Social aspects.
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Internet -- Psychological aspects.
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Internet users -- Psychology.
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Knowledge, Theory of.
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Internet -- Psychological aspects.
(OCoLC)fst00977198
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Internet -- Social aspects.
(OCoLC)fst01766793
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Knowledge, Theory of. (OCoLC)fst00988194
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Online social networks. (OCoLC)fst01741311
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ISBN |
9781108490320 hardcover |
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1108490328 hardcover |
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9781108748407 paperback |
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1108748406 paperback |
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9781108780704 electronic publication |
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9781108804905 electronic book |
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