En esta presentacion que hicimos con mi equipo analizmos cuales son los tipos de servideros, en nuestro caso vimos el can, Siento que esto es importante ya que nos explica que no todo el internet es igual, Ademas vemos como funciona para poder utilizarlo mejor..
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/e/2PACX-1vTeT4V40ShDQvPP15cpSu59gdbTmWxCN3fNJnicqCpo9NJ--uaWYWarGveRQKmqg0fs0Nj4Spife2xH/pub?start=true&loop=false&delayms=5000
jueves, 12 de abril de 2018
aprendimos en clase que las redes sociales son mas que un gasto de tiempo, de hecho son un método de comunicación valido que en ejemplos historicos como africa nos trajo beneficios tangibles.
Analyse the role of the internet as an interaction tool in social groups
Instructions:
Everyone should answer the green parts
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If you understand the purple part answer it
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Whenever you understand the magenta part answer it
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Read the following article and answer the questions:
If you don’t get the idea read it again. Sometimes it takes more time to understand some concepts.
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Twitter, Facebook and YouTube’s role in Arab Spring (Middle East uprisings) [UPDATED 7/7/13]
Flickr photo of Tunisian protests by marcovdz
Democracy has finally come to parts of the mid-East and Northern Africa. What has been the role of social media and the Internet in these uprisings?
First the facts and then some discussion of the role of social media:
Background: The “Arab Spring” in Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere in the Mid-East heavily relied on the Internet, social media and technologies like Twitter, TwitPic, Facebook and YouTube in the early stages to accelerate social protest. There are even allegations that the CIA was blindsided about the Egypt uprising by failing to follow developments on Twitter. There is less evidence that social media played a strong a role in places like Yemen or Libya.
Tunisia:
The first domino was Tunisia where the underlying source of the uprising lay in government corruption, inequality, censorship and joblessness (even among the well educated youth). The protests began in December 2010 with a college-educated street vendor’s (Mohamed Bouazizi’s) self-immolation in the coastal town of Sidi Bouzid in despair at the corruption and joblessness. He died from the burns, but his protest, despite Tunisia’s strict web censorship laws, was rapidly fanned by online Internet tools.
ADD ANY DETAIL THAT YOU CAN TO THE TABLE BELOW:
READ THE PARAGRAPH AGAIN IF YOU FIND DIFFICULT TO ANSWER THE QUESTIONS.
2. Egypt:
Emboldened by the overthrow of Tunisia’s Ben Ali, the protests spread to Egypt on January 25, 2011 where opposition leaders declared it a “Day of Rage” on which protesters would take to the street against President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. The protesters included secularists, Islamists and Communists/ultra-left-wingers–a veritable who’s who of the Egyptian opposition.
While exact numbers of protesters could not be estimated, a flood of internet photographs and videos showed a massive presence in Cairo, Alexandria, and other Egyptian cities. These protests lasted 18 days and Internet-savvy protesters used Twitpic, Facebook and YouTube to disseminate videos and photographs and called on Egyptians to protest. Protesters provided minute-by-minute tweets concerning where to assemble in an effort to outwit police.
ADD ANY DETAIL THAT YOU CAN TO THE TABLE BELOW:
READ THE PARAGRAPH AGAIN IF YOU FIND DIFFICULT TO ANSWER THE QUESTIONS.
3. “More than 90,000 people signed up on a Facebook page for the Tuesday [Jan. 25] protests, framed by the organizers as a stand against torture, poverty, corruption and unemployment. But the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.
The Egyptian government originally engaged in episodic censorship. One video posted to YouTube and then shared on Facebook claimed to show Egyptian riot police being assaulted and seriously injured by protesters. However, the video was taken offline for a Terms of Service violation. There were also reports of YouTube censorship of protest videos. “[D]uring protests on Tuesday [Jan. 25, 2011] and again on Wednesday [Jan. 26], many reported trouble accessing Facebook and Twitter, the social networking sites that helped organize and spread news of the protests.” [NY Times]
The Internet crackdown began in earnest on January 28 when the government, amidst extremely large-scale demonstrations moved to fully restrict the Internet and cellular forms of mobilizing demonstrators. “Internet and cellphone connections had been disrupted or restricted in Cairo, Alexandria and other places, cutting off social-media Web sites that had been used to organize protests and complicating efforts by news media to report on events on the ground. Some reports said journalists had been singled out by police who used batons to beat and charge protesters. One cell phone operator, Vodafone, said on Friday that Egypt had told all mobile operators to suspend services in selected areas of the country The British company said it would comply with the order, Reuters reported.” [New York Times, “Clashes in Cairo Extend Arab World’s Days of Unrest“, 1/28/2011]
Tahrir Square protest in Egypt, posted on Facebook page
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Libya:
In Libya, while the revolution was ultimately successful in ousting Muammar Gaddafi, social media played a minor role. Libya’s government maintained strong control of the Internet infrastructure, and Gaddafi as an ego-maniacal autocrat responded only to insurgent militia, once they were aided by NATO.
ADD ANY DETAIL THAT YOU CAN TO THE TABLE BELOW:
READ THE PARAGRAPH AGAIN IF YOU FIND DIFFICULT TO ANSWER THE QUESTIONS.
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4.Syria/Jordan/Yemen/others:
Other middle-Eastern nations fear the shadow of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya and fear that youth uprisings spurred by social networking mobilization or more traditional mobilization are taking hold.
Although the role of social media is much lower in Syria’s protest actions than countries like Tunisia or Egypt, individuals have risked their lives to use cell phones and small cameras to film atrocities of President Bashar Al-Assad’s crackdown on the protesters and upload these images to Facebook or YouTube, fanning international pressure on Assad to back down. Assad has also used propagandistic websites like Bashar al-Assad and used social media to assert that protest videos are fake and that he has hundreds of thousands of loyal supporters. Although only 15% of Syrians are online, activist Le Shaque claims that without social media, the Syrian revolution would have been successfully repressed at an earlier stage, and notes that the government complains more about the media than the protests.
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Todos
What was the role of social media?
Social media must work hand-in-hand with an ability to mobilize citizens. It is far too easy to simply “Friend” or “Like” a movement on Facebook and a retweet is never enough. The challenge is to put boots on the street, as protesters in Tunisia, Egypt or Libya know only too well.
How do you think this was accomplished: to put “boots” on the street?
How can social media be helpful in social activism?
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Presentación
How is the title of the class related to the article you just read?
Can you identify the different technologies that took place in the arab spring?
Which motives could a country’s government have to ban some internet services?
What evidence can you identify that supports the idea that lack of internet penetration in a country can be helpful in situations like the Arab Spring?
How far politically speaking can a society go by using social media properly?
Do we mexicans take foracebook granted ?
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ADD A MAP WHERE YOU CAN SHOW THE COUNTRIES THAT TOOK PART ON THE ARAB SPRING AND SOME IMAGES OF THE MOVEMENTS, TRY TO SPECIFY THE COUNTRY.
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