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Information 2.0
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29 September 2017

'...an informative and thorough title that makes sense of how changes in technology are impacting all aspects of society; economics, education and more. It is even-handed throughout; there are arguments made about the democratizing influence of the Internet and how barriers that might have constrained our access to information have been reduced. Yet there are still cautionary tales. The likes of Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook, which aimed to make information via the Internet accessible to us all, are the now the new monopolies and there are significant issues about how they use our information. Although we live in an era of information overload and that information seems difficult to control or keep on top of, de Saulles reiterates the need of the information professional and that its role is equally vital in the ‘Wild West’ free-for-all new information landscape. This is a title that is very readable and clear. De Saulles uses case studies to outline his points and does not veer into jargon that might leave the casual reader to engage in head-scratching. Information 2.0 is just as valuable for the casual reader as for the information professional and it clarifies what otherwise is a very confusing picture.'
— Ariadne
"Martin De Saulles provides a concise, yet relatively wide-ranging, overview of the enduring issues and current crises in information and communication technologies (ICT) in Information 2.0: New Models of Information Production, Distribution and Consumption. Keenly aware of the rapidly shifting landscape of ICT, his book examines the diverse types of information created and consumed today; the role of data in society, from personal uses to mass governmental and business initiatives; the history of information technology over the past half century; and the exponentially expanding networks of corporate and governmental actors that control the access and management of ICT."
— Digital Scholarship in the Humanities
...an informative and thorough title that makes sense of how changes in technology are impacting all aspects of society; economics, education and more. It is even-handed throughout; there are arguments made about the democratizing influence of the Internet and how barriers that might have constrained our access to information have been reduced. Yet there are still cautionary tales. The likes of Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook, which aimed to make information via the Internet accessible to us all, are the now the new monopolies and there are significant issues about how they use our information. Although we live in an era of information overload and that information seems difficult to control or keep on top of, de Saulles reiterates the need of the information professional and that its role is equally vital in the ‘Wild West’ free-for-all new information landscape. This is a title that is very readable and clear. De Saulles uses case studies to outline his points and does not veer into jargon that might leave the casual reader to engage in head-scratching. Information 2.0 is just as valuable for the casual reader as for the information professional and it clarifies what otherwise is a very confusing picture.
Dr Martin De Saulles is a Principal Lecturer in digital marketing at the University of Brighton. He has worked in the information and technology sectors for 20 years as a researcher, analyst, entrepreneur, writer and academic.
1. Introduction
- What is information?
- The foundations of the information society
- The internet as a driver of change
- The big challenges of big data
- What about the information providers?
- New ways of creating information
- Where do we put all this information?
- Why information matters
2. New models of information production
- Introduction
- Blogs: the state of the blogosphere
- Blogging 2.0
- Who can you trust?
- Blogs and social media as agents of change
- Blogging for money
- The economics of print media
- The transition to digital news
- Digital-Only News Publishers
- The new generation of news consumers
- Case Study – BuzzFeed
- Business publishing
- Case Study – Gigaom
- Wikis and collaborative publishing
- Search engines and what they know
- Gaming Google
- Does Google know too much?
- Our social graphs
- What are we worth?
- Case Study – Klout
- The challenge of big data
- Data types
- When everything is connected
- Data as the new currency
- Concluding comments
3. New models of information storage
- Introduction
- Preserving the internet
- How organizations store information
- Academia
- Case study – DSpace institutional repository software
- Legal requirements
- Data mining
- Case study – Tesco Clubcard
- Collection digitization
- Keeping it all safe
- Storage at the personal level
- Putting it in the cloud
- Our digital footprints
- The future of storage
- Concluding comments
4. New models of information distribution
- Introduction
- The architecture of the internet
- Distribution and disintermediation
- Case Study – DataSift
- The new intermediaries
- Intermediaries in the shadows
- Copyright-friendly intermediaries
- Online video – we’re all celebrities now
- Case Study – Netflix
- The Video Classroom
- Case Study – The Khan Academy
- Open government and the internet
- Proactive government
- Defensive government
- Offensive Government
- Helping the information flow both ways
- Making money from public information
- Threats to the open web
- Concluding comments
5. New models of information consumption
- Introduction
- Information consumption devices
- Mobile consumption devices
- Looking beyond the artefact
- It’s all about the apps
- Case Study – Amazon
- Information ecosystems: gilded cages or innovation hotbeds?
- Fair dealing
- Resale
- Lending
- Returning to an open web
- HTML5 – an antidote to appification?
- The experiential web
- Case Study – Oculus Rift
- Rent or buy?
- Case Study – Spotify
- Making sense of it all
- Information literacy
- Information overload
- Implications for information professionals
- Concluding comments
6. Conclusion
- Introduction
- The struggle for control in a networked world
- Implications for information professionals
- The knowledge management opportunity
- The future of search
- Ninja librarians
- Implications for publishers
- The copyright challenge
- Hooked on tablets
- Implications for society
- Internet everywhere
- Nowhere to hide
- Concluding comments