Digital Culture
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How do information and information sharing impact the digital culture of today’s world?
This question can best be answered by understanding the ways in which today’s digital culture uses information. Grassegger and Krogerus note that Big Data is the big elephant in the digital room: this is the collection of information on every Internet user on the planet, stored and provided so that today’s advertisers can market their organization’s products exclusively to Internet browsers. Those ads that pop up everywhere you go, no matter what type of site you’re on, that seem to know exactly what type of product you’re currently interested in? They know what you’re interested in because your personal browsing habits are being watched are recorded: that’s what Big Data is. And it’s also more than that—because today even your Amazon Fire is watching and listening: your phone is taking note of where you go when your travel. Google is recording your every movement. As Grassegger and Kregerus state, “Big Data means, in essence, that everything we do, both on and offline, leaves digital traces” (3). Those traces are monetized—and they are also used to pry into the private lives of individuals.
Thus, the world has gone from allowing privacy in many cases where individuals can be relatively certain of being unobserved...
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