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325:questions:week_13_questions_comments-325_17 [2017/04/19 22:24] – [“A Global Graveyard”] keene | 325:questions:week_13_questions_comments-325_17 [2017/04/20 13:09] (current) – [“A Global Graveyard”] lmccuist | ||
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I found the article in Pursell to be interesting for several reasons. For starters, I never would have thought about how a computer virus acts similarly to that of a human virus. On page 327, it talks about how biological cells need a host cell, but computer viruses need a host program. This makes sense to think of how similar the two behave. I also found it interesting that this article spent time talking about the benefits that can come from hacking. Typically, all we ever hear about is how terrible of a thing it is to do. Yet, this article shed light on the fact that the people who hack are the people that are best equipped to handle making the software safer so that it cannot be hacked. Because of hacking, there have been many progressive developments in software research (330). -Emma Baumgardner | I found the article in Pursell to be interesting for several reasons. For starters, I never would have thought about how a computer virus acts similarly to that of a human virus. On page 327, it talks about how biological cells need a host cell, but computer viruses need a host program. This makes sense to think of how similar the two behave. I also found it interesting that this article spent time talking about the benefits that can come from hacking. Typically, all we ever hear about is how terrible of a thing it is to do. Yet, this article shed light on the fact that the people who hack are the people that are best equipped to handle making the software safer so that it cannot be hacked. Because of hacking, there have been many progressive developments in software research (330). -Emma Baumgardner | ||
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+ | I found it so interesting to see how the “hacker ethic” has evolved throughout the 20th and 21st century. When thinking of hackers today a range of thoughts and ideas pop up. From the extreme ones who shut down the internet in North Korea to the computer science major who can get into your computer when you can’t remember your password. In the 80’s the hacker was someone apart of a “romantic countercultural” movement who was celebrated by well renowned journalist. With the continuance of technology and the internet is interesting to see how the culture takes something once seen as romantic and normalizes it. -Anna Brooks | ||
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+ | "Media commentary on the firs scare has run not so much tongue-in-cheek as hand-in glove with the rhetoric of AIDS hysteria - the common uses of terms like //killer virus// and // | ||
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+ | Never had I realized the semiotic “meaning” of computer viruses for the earlier generations; | ||
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+ | The idea of the hacker scene always brings to mind early 80's to late 90's punk style teenagers with tattered clothes, trench coats, grunge style hair and band t shirts riding around on skate boards and using phone booths to hack into secure business websites. While this is a highly romanticized version of hacker culture, it did have some credence to it. With the introduction of computers, it opened up and entirely new social dynamic for people, especially younger crowds. Teens and adults could experiment with computers and do so many things. Naturally this led to more illicit uses, but it was not the intention for many. For some teens, hacking was a challenge, a test to see if you could beat the security of some 40 something salary man who, " | ||
+ | Thomas Lanier | ||
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+ | The chapter by Andrew Ross on the concept of computer hacking has evolved over the years was pretty fascinating to read because he does good job at connecting the AIDs epidemic and a computer virus. In both scenarios, the virus has to latch onto a host and replulicate itself until it is fully in the system "so to speak" | ||
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+ | This article discusses the link between science and technology. Viruses on a computer were often compared to viruses that affect human immune systems. These included the widespread AIDS epidemic, cholera, and other biological diseases. This comparison was used throughout different forms of media including the Saturday Night Live skit Ross quotes, " | ||
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+ | I found Ross’s article interesting because in a lot of ways the way that the term “hack” is used in modern day mainstream culture has changed since he wrote this article in the 1990s. These days, “hacks” exist everywhere. Scroll through your Facebook feed and you’ll find videos of all kinds of “life hacks”: food hacks, college hacks, even relationship hacks. I looked up “hack” on Urban Dictionary (I know, I know, a no-no). The first two definitions were related to computer hacking, but the third was this, “3. To jury-rig or improvise something inelegant but effective, usually as a temporary solution to a problem.” “Hacking, | ||
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The photos in this slide were very powerful. To me, it spoke even more to America’s throw away society. Or the masking of the throw away society through the pretense of donations. As slide 16 says, “the waste arrives as a gift.” How often do we donate items merely because we don’t want them anymore? How often do we actually think, | The photos in this slide were very powerful. To me, it spoke even more to America’s throw away society. Or the masking of the throw away society through the pretense of donations. As slide 16 says, “the waste arrives as a gift.” How often do we donate items merely because we don’t want them anymore? How often do we actually think, | ||
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+ | I agree that this image slideshow speaks to the wasteful nature of the American culture, where we all too often think “this is taking up too much space, I need to get rid of it,” instead of “this will help someone else, so I’ll donate it.” The idea that is so pointedly stated in the last slide, that the waste in these poor countries is arriving masked instead as a gift is disturbing in that it highlights the very self-centered nature of the more “modern” countries that are sending these “gifts.” I also thought these pictures were powerful in showing the vast difference between perceptions of technologies by different cultures. Where the American culture clearly sees computers and other electronic technology as something that is essential enough to send over to another, poorer country in an attempt to make life better, the culture they send those things to simply use the artifacts as furniture, and for scrap parts. It seems like instead of sending computers, sending teachers and infrastructure aid would be more useful. But then, that would involve more effort than simply driving an old desktop computer to the nearest donation site. | ||
+ | - Megan P. | ||
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+ | The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal was passed in 1989, but there are still violations of the spirit of the Convention. Even if these " | ||
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+ | These photos are filled with young children sent by their families to scavenge. The third photo, of Abdulai Yahaya age 14, strikes me because he is the only thing in focus; all you can see are blurry flames behind him that could be from anything. Computers are the last thing you would think that filled that graveyard. But the fact that we send our old computers thinking that they are of the same value in their culture as they are in ours highlights the digital divide these photos illustrate. -Madison White | ||
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+ | Scrolling through these photos opened my eyes to the fact that when charities donate technologies and innovative products to third world countries, the appreciation is there, but the need for necessities is ever-present. We in America have overall access to the necessities, | ||
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+ | In the United States, we have such a throw it away mentality that we don’t seem to find so much importance in what we call scraps as others do. This slideshow from The New York Times has 16 photos of people living in Ghana looking through trash for valuables left behind in a “Global Graveyard for Dead Computers in Ghana”. Boys at young ages have to go to these dumps to scavenge through everything to try and find valuables. These photos on each slide give such us a small glimpse into what is their everyday job. Something we would never see here in the US. One of the photos is of an 11-year-old girl, it is so striking seeing her with a bowl on her head (often [to] carry ice to put out fires) wearing a white dress, flip flops, a blue wrap on her head, and a pink belt. The flip-flops against the ground are so strange to see. We would expect to see someone wearing protective shoes in an area with glass and smoke and trash all over but she doesn’t have that luxury. All of these photos are very important and bring light to the situation we have where when we are done with technology it ends up in these kinds of places. -Megan Liberty | ||
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+ | In my Small Group Communication course, we talked about the digital divide and how pervasive it is. One of the reasons for the digital divide is the fact that tech companies are ultimately in competition with one another to make money. However, in certain areas of the world, there simply is no market for the technology because consumers cannot afford the technology or have not been taught how to use it. Because of this, these companies never bring their products to market in these areas because they won't sell. Unfortunately, | ||
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+ | When looking through the photos its rather clear that this group of people see this technology as something that can be sold for the scrap metal in order to get the needs they really need like food and water. You can't eat a computer, nor have these people grown up in an environment that fosters use of computers in advances in technology. It's sort of ironic that they can give people this hazardous waste simply by calling it a gift rather than waste, but they are using this gift to improve their lives just not in the way the donors intended. - Laura B. Downs | ||
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+ | One image that really struck me was the photo with the burning computer with the caption explaining that this the burning of technology is often done so its metals can be sold for profit. To me, this showed the differences between the wealthiest countries and the poorest ones. In wealthy nations, access to information via computers and the internet is vital. One can't really operate from day-to-day without it - and their life wold be incredibly difficult (by their standards). However, poor countries don't have the ability to use the technology for information purposes but instead are forced to use the physical materials to help provide incomes, despite the negative consequences for the environment. This lack of information will keep allowing the wealthy countries to pull increasing farther ahead of the poorer countries. - Helen Salita | ||
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+ | My Intro to Digital Studies class has gone over the wasting of toxic electronics, |
325/questions/week_13_questions_comments-325_17.1492640684.txt.gz · Last modified: 2017/04/19 22:24 by keene