Indira Gandhi National Tribal University, Amarkantak

Prof. Ram Dayal Munda Central Library

Online Public Access Catalogue

Hyperconnectivity : economical, social and environmental challenges / Dominique Carré, Geneviève Vidal.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Information systems, web and pervasive computing series | Computing and connected society set ; v. 3.Publisher: London : Hoboken, NJ : ISTE Ltd ; John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2018Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781119489238
  • 1119489237
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 004.616 23
LOC classification:
  • QA76.55
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover; Half-Title Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Introduction; 1. The Technological Offer and Globalized Services; 1.1. Importance of the open communication protocol; 1.2. Mediation and industrialization of connection; 1.3. Monopolies and dominance; 2. The Hyperconnected Economy; 2.1. A free mode of access and use; 2.2. Two indirect funding methods: advertising and data marketing; 2.2.1. Advertising revenues; 2.2.2. Data production and sales; 2.3. An activation method: solicitation; 2.4. The government's involvement; 3. Social Appropriation and Digital Culture
3.1. Ambivalence of uses3.2. Industrialization of the uses of interactivity: territories of hyperconnectivity; 3.3. Uses of interactivity; 4. Renunciation and Negotiations; 4.1. Uses at the foundation of renunciation and negotiations; 4.2. Negotiated renunciation; 5. Environmental Issues; 5.1. Absence of environmental dimension; 5.2. Materiality of the immaterial; 5.3. Energy consumption and greenhouse gas production; 5.4. Impacts of software and website design; 5.5. Injunctive, ecological and programmed obsolescence; 5.5.1. Planned obsolescence; 5.5.2. Injunctive obsolescence
5.5.3. Ecological obsolescenceConclusion; References; Index; Other titles from iSTE in Information Systems, Web and Pervasive Computing; EULA
Summary: The use of digital information and communication technologies would be the traces of a social acceptability of the exploitation of all data, in the context of negotiations of uses. This is the reason why the users present themselves actors and contributors of the hyperconnectivity. We would thus witness a new form of dissemination, inviting user experience and social innovations. It is thus the victory of subordination by negotiated renunciation; A new form of serving, no longer that of the 1980s, with the counters and other services, which have become uncontrolled services - excepted when the users are overcome by restrictive ergonomics, revealing too much the subordination device - which joins the prescription apparently without an injunction. The lure is at its height when users and broadcasters come together to produce the services and goods, composing the business model, until the very existence of the companies, in particular the pure players. Crowdsourcing becomes legitimate: consumers create the content, deliver the data, the basis of the service sold (in a painless way because free access most of the time, indirect financing), the providers make available and administer the service, networks , Interfaces (representing considerable costs), also reputation to attract the attention of other consumers or contributors. In these conditions, the environmental stakes are considerable, so we propose another way of considering them, not as they are dealt with - material and pollution - but according to the prism of the relational practices analyzed in this volume.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed October 18, 2018).

Cover; Half-Title Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Introduction; 1. The Technological Offer and Globalized Services; 1.1. Importance of the open communication protocol; 1.2. Mediation and industrialization of connection; 1.3. Monopolies and dominance; 2. The Hyperconnected Economy; 2.1. A free mode of access and use; 2.2. Two indirect funding methods: advertising and data marketing; 2.2.1. Advertising revenues; 2.2.2. Data production and sales; 2.3. An activation method: solicitation; 2.4. The government's involvement; 3. Social Appropriation and Digital Culture

3.1. Ambivalence of uses3.2. Industrialization of the uses of interactivity: territories of hyperconnectivity; 3.3. Uses of interactivity; 4. Renunciation and Negotiations; 4.1. Uses at the foundation of renunciation and negotiations; 4.2. Negotiated renunciation; 5. Environmental Issues; 5.1. Absence of environmental dimension; 5.2. Materiality of the immaterial; 5.3. Energy consumption and greenhouse gas production; 5.4. Impacts of software and website design; 5.5. Injunctive, ecological and programmed obsolescence; 5.5.1. Planned obsolescence; 5.5.2. Injunctive obsolescence

5.5.3. Ecological obsolescenceConclusion; References; Index; Other titles from iSTE in Information Systems, Web and Pervasive Computing; EULA

The use of digital information and communication technologies would be the traces of a social acceptability of the exploitation of all data, in the context of negotiations of uses. This is the reason why the users present themselves actors and contributors of the hyperconnectivity. We would thus witness a new form of dissemination, inviting user experience and social innovations. It is thus the victory of subordination by negotiated renunciation; A new form of serving, no longer that of the 1980s, with the counters and other services, which have become uncontrolled services - excepted when the users are overcome by restrictive ergonomics, revealing too much the subordination device - which joins the prescription apparently without an injunction. The lure is at its height when users and broadcasters come together to produce the services and goods, composing the business model, until the very existence of the companies, in particular the pure players. Crowdsourcing becomes legitimate: consumers create the content, deliver the data, the basis of the service sold (in a painless way because free access most of the time, indirect financing), the providers make available and administer the service, networks , Interfaces (representing considerable costs), also reputation to attract the attention of other consumers or contributors. In these conditions, the environmental stakes are considerable, so we propose another way of considering them, not as they are dealt with - material and pollution - but according to the prism of the relational practices analyzed in this volume.

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