Literatura académica sobre el tema "Media-Social-Digital ecosystem"

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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Media-Social-Digital ecosystem":

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Castellano, Simona. "Social media literacy in contemporary society and the digital media ecosystem". Sociétés 156, n.º 2 (7 de julio de 2022): 55–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/soc.156.0055.

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Yahya Hussien, Amar. "Review on Social Media and Digital Security". Qubahan Academic Journal 2, n.º 2 (12 de junio de 2022): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.48161/qaj.v2n2a119.

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The emerging social media with inherent capabilities seems to be gaining edge over comprehensiveness, diversity and wisdom, nevertheless its security and trustworthiness issues have also become increasingly serious, which need to be addressed urgently. The available studies mainly aim at both social media content and user security, including model, protocol, mechanism and algorithm. Unfortunately, there is a lack of investigating on effective and efficient evaluations and measurements for security and trustworthiness of various social media tools, platforms and applications, thus has effect on their further improvement and evolution. To address the challenge, this paper firstly made a survey on the state-of-the-art of social media networks security and trustworthiness particularly for the increasingly growing sophistication and variety of attacks as well as related intelligence applications. And then, we highlighted a new direction on evaluating and measuring those fundamental and underlying platforms, meanwhile proposing a hierarchical architecture for crowd evaluations based on signaling theory and crowd computing, which is essential for social media ecosystem. Finally, we conclude our work with several open issues and cutting-edge challenges.
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Yahya Hussien, Amar. "Review on Social Media and Digital Security". Qubahan Academic Journal 2, n.º 2 (12 de julio de 2022): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.48161/qaj.v2n2a137.

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The emerging social media with inherent capabilities seems to be gaining edge over comprehensiveness, diversity and wisdom, nevertheless its security and trustworthiness issues have also become increasingly serious, which need to be addressed urgently. The available studies mainly aim at both social media content and user security, including model, protocol, mechanism and algorithm. Unfortunately, there is a lack of investigating on effective and efficient evaluations and measurements for security and trustworthiness of various social media tools, platforms and applications, thus has effect on their further improvement and evolution. To address the challenge, this paper firstly made a survey on the state-of-the-art of social media networks security and trustworthiness particularly for the increasingly growing sophistication and variety of attacks as well as related intelligence applications. And then, we highlighted a new direction on evaluating and measuring those fundamental and underlying platforms, meanwhile proposing a hierarchical architecture for crowd evaluations based on signaling theory and crowd computing, which is essential for social media ecosystem. Finally, we conclude our work with several open issues and cutting-edge challenges.
4

Beauvais, Taylor. "Hybrid representative sampling of social media". Bulletin of Sociological Methodology/Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique 160, n.º 1 (octubre de 2023): 57–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07591063231196162.

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Social media communities are understudied due to the difficulty of obtaining data with any amount of generalizability. This research proposes a method of hybrid probability sampling of social media ecosystems (collections of communities) using network theory, stratified sampling methods, theoretical saturation, and widely available social media activity statistics. Because of the unique venue of research, these methods create an opt-in sample, where every member of a community is given an equal chance to participate. The proposed methods were then used to obtain a sample representative of a digital political ecosystem with a population size of 8 million. The results illuminate stark polarization resulting from algorithmic opinion aggregation, with implications in online extremism, media literacy, demographic representation in public discourse, and more.
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Nurlatifah, Mufti y Nina Mutmainnah. "Disruption and Collaboration in Digital Journalism: Ambivalence of Social Responsibility and Political Economy Practices of Media Companies". Jurnal Komunikasi: Malaysian Journal of Communication 37, n.º 1 (31 de marzo de 2021): 181–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/jkmjc-2021-3701-10.

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Digitization encourages journalism to transform. Since the development of digital media, communication and media scholars have predicted journalism to develop at two levels. First, journalism evolves along with technological developments and is involved in media disruption. Second, journalism sticks with professionalism and establish technology as a tool to realize social responsibility. Today we are dealing with the transformation in journalism that we get from disrupted contents, disrupted media companies, and collaboration among media institutions. Various digital journalism platforms have emerged as a manifestation of the diversity of content and diversity of media ownership. This was an exploratory study that aimed to explain collaborations among various media in the digital ecosystem. The focus of this study was to map media networks through media data distributed in various official media or regulators. The results of this study showed that in a digital ecosystem that promises many opportunities, digital journalism still has to deal with the dilemma between social responsibility and the political economy of media. On the one hand, digital journalism faces disruption which serves as a significant factor that encourages journalism to transform. On the other hand, digital journalism also deals with a natural selection that forces them to collaborate, i.e. a manifestation of the political economy of media. Keywords: Digital journalism, disruption, collaboration, social responsibility, media companies.
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Dubrova, Oksana A., Julia M. Tsarapkina, Alla A. Oshkina, Julia O. Baikina y Vyacheslav A. Ivanov. "Media space as an element of the digital educational ecosystem". Eduweb 15, n.º 1 (25 de mayo de 2021): 134–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.46502/issn.1856-7576/2021.15.01.12.

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In response to the challenge of informatization of social processes, an information space and a digital educational environment emerge and develop in the field of professional education. Purpose of the article: analysis of the digital educational ecosystem of professional educational institutions. Methodology. The study analyzes the electronic elements used in the modern digital educational ecosystem. Competencies identified by cluster analysis of competency models are presented. Findings. The media space as an electronic environment created by technical means of communication is one of the key elements of the digital educational ecosystem, which allows creating innovative conditions for the development of vocational education
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Kostić, Bojana y Tarlach McGonagle. "How Social are New and Social Media for National Minorities? Perspectives from the FCNM". European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online 16, n.º 1 (1 de abril de 2019): 1–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22116117_01601002.

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Understanding the transformation of digital communication gives important insights into how new media, including social media, affect the ability of persons belonging to national minorities to exercise their rights to freedom of expression and participation in society. Thus, the new media ecosystem calls for greater attention for minority-related issues. The Advisory Committee on the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (ACFC) has already observed that the media ecosystem is increasingly used for the expression of intolerance and hostility towards minorities, but that it also provides them with valuable expressive opportunities. This article starts with an analysis of how the advent and growing dominance of social media are causing farreaching changes in how we communicate in the new media ecosystem. The potential and drawbacks of new and social media for national minorities is the next focus. The article then analyses the ACFC’s monitoring work regarding new and social media. The article’s conclusions are supplemented by a set of recommendations that may guide the ACFC’s future monitoring work on relevant issues.
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Urazova, Svetlana L. "Media ecosystem in the projection of technological innovations". RUDN Journal of Studies in Literature and Journalism 24, n.º 3 (15 de diciembre de 2019): 477–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-9220-2019-24-3-477-485.

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Accelerated adoption of technological innovations and the transition to a digital economy raise many debatable issues, and they affect the media industry. At the same time, the national media industry in the era of technological, sociocultural and economic transformations has the role of an information integrator of innovations. Transformations in the media sphere, the reform stage, raise a number of issues requiring substantiation. The article is aimed at posing a multidimensional problem, namely, the problem of the media component of digital reforms. This aspect of the study allows us to reveal both the positive factors of improving the media sphere during its transition to a new level, and to reveal the gaps of the media system developing in the digital paradigm. The article offers an analysis of the modern concept of the media industry. In the 21st century, media appear as a multifunctional system, where priority is given to the interdisciplinarity of knowledge, competencies and skills, this also updates the criteria for media education. The justification of the term “ecosystem” in this article as applied to media helps to trace the relationship between the fundamental vectors of development of this most important social institution - it is these vectors that underpin the media structure as a market entity.
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Fontaine, Guillaume, Marc-André Maheu-Cadotte, Andréane Lavallée, Tanya Mailhot, Geneviève Rouleau, Julien Bouix-Picasso y Anne Bourbonnais. "Communicating Science in the Digital and Social Media Ecosystem: Scoping Review and Typology of Strategies Used by Health Scientists". JMIR Public Health and Surveillance 5, n.º 3 (3 de septiembre de 2019): e14447. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/14447.

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Background The public’s understanding of science can be influential in a wide range of areas related to public health, including policy making and self-care. Through the digital and social media ecosystem, health scientists play a growing role in public science communication (SC). Objective This review aimed to (1) synthesize the literature on SC initiated by health scientists targeting the public in the digital and social media ecosystem and (2) describe the SC strategies and communication channels used. Methods This scoping review was based on the Joanna Briggs Institute Methodological Framework. A systematic search was performed in 6 databases (January 2000 to April 2018). Title and abstract screening, full-text review, data charting, and critical appraisal were performed independently by two review authors. Data regarding included studies and communication channels were synthesized descriptively. A typology of SC strategies was developed using a qualitative and inductive method of data synthesis. Results Among 960 unique publications identified, 18 met inclusion criteria. A third of publications scored good quality (6/18, 33%), half scored moderate quality (9/18, 50%), and less than a fifth scored low quality (3/18, 16%). Overall, 75 SC strategies used by health scientists were identified. These were grouped into 9 types: content, credibility, engagement, intention, linguistics, planification, presentation, social exchange, and statistics. A total of 5 types of communication channels were identified: social networking platforms (eg, Twitter), content-sharing platforms (eg, YouTube), digital research communities (eg, ResearchGate), personal blogs and websites (eg, WordPress), and social news aggregation and discussion platforms (eg, Reddit). Conclusions Evidence suggests that multiple types of SC strategies and communication channels are used by health scientists concurrently. Few empirical studies have been conducted on SC by health scientists in the digital and social media ecosystem. Future studies should examine the appropriateness and effectiveness of SC strategies for improving public health–related outcomes and identify the barriers, facilitators, and ethical considerations inherent to the involvement of health scientists in the digital and social media ecosystem.
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Singh, Shiwangi, Akshay Chauhan y Sanjay Dhir. "Analyzing the startup ecosystem of India: a Twitter analytics perspective". Journal of Advances in Management Research 17, n.º 2 (18 de noviembre de 2019): 262–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jamr-08-2019-0164.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to use Twitter analytics for analyzing the startup ecosystem of India. Design/methodology/approach The paper uses descriptive analysis and content analytics techniques of social media analytics to examine 53,115 tweets from 15 Indian startups across different industries. The study also employs techniques such as Naïve Bayes Algorithm for sentiment analysis and Latent Dirichlet allocation algorithm for topic modeling of Twitter feeds to generate insights for the startup ecosystem in India. Findings The Indian startup ecosystem is inclined toward digital technologies, concerned with people, planet and profit, with resource availability and information as the key to success. The study categorizes the emotions of tweets as positive, neutral and negative. It was found that the Indian startup ecosystem has more positive sentiments than negative sentiments. Topic modeling enables the categorization of the identified keywords into clusters. Also, the study concludes on the note that the future of the Indian startup ecosystem is Digital India. Research limitations/implications The analysis provides a methodology that future researchers can use to extract relevant information from Twitter to investigate any issue. Originality/value Any attempt to analyze the startup ecosystem of India through social media analysis is limited. This research aims to bridge such a gap and tries to analyze the startup ecosystem of India from the lens of social media platforms like Twitter.

Tesis sobre el tema "Media-Social-Digital ecosystem":

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Lindholm, Sofie. "IBM Svenska ABs digitala närvaro : En kartläggning, nordisk omvärldsbevakning och skiss på digitalt ekosystem". Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för naturvetenskap, miljö och teknik, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-30457.

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This bachelor thesis is based on a internship on IBM Sweden within Södertörn University’s bachelor program ’IT, Media and Design’ during the spring semester of 2016, majoring Media technology. The thesis is based on a practical work, which treats the company’s digital presence where I, as a student, stepped in and helped the marketing and communication department. I’ve done a survey of their Swedish digital channels, and business intelligence where I’ve collected details about the Nordic IBM companies digital channel structure and linking between accounts. Maintenance of the Swedish IBMs social media accounts have also been included such as development of an suggestion of an digital ecosystem for future work with the company's digital presence. The information in this thesis is classified as open.
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Casadevall, Dario. "Skunkworks Finder: A Design Study into the Diverse Ecosystem of Creativity and Innovation Spaces". Thesis, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat München, 2018. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/122139/1/Masterthesis_DarioCasadevall%20Kopie.pdf.

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Creative people, entrepreneurs and start-up founders using innovation spaces and hubs often find themselves inside a filter bubble or echo chamber, where like-minded people tend to come up with similar ideas and recommend similar approaches to innovation. This trend towards homophily and a polarisation of like-mindedness is aggravated by algorithmic filtering and recommender systems embedded in current technology and social media platforms. Yet, genuine innovation thrives on social inclusion fostering a diversity of ideas. To provide the opportunity to escape these echo chambers, Skunkworks Finder was designed and tested – an exploratory tool that employs social network analysis to help users discover spaces of difference and otherness in their local urban innovation ecosystem. A design inclusive research approach was adapted focusing on user-centred design choices in order to verify and validate the prototype and its according premise. Results show, that an introduction of Skunkworks Finder or similar functionality is anticipated by study participants, as participants indicated individual experiences of forming filter bubbles in innovation spaces. However, changes in design would improve comprehensibility issues addressed during the user study. Additionally, an integration of such a system into an established online tool would ensure a distribution to a wider audience, than focusing only on potential users who are already affiliated with an innovation environment.
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Lukasik, Stéphanie. "La reformulation de la figure du leader d'opinion au prisme de la réception de l'information des jeunes adultes via les réseaux socionumériques". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Aix-Marseille, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021AIXM0124.

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Les réseaux socionumériques ont partie liée avec l’activité de l’usager-récepteur théorisée par l’école de Columbia. Le lien entre système médiatique et système social qu’avait anticipé l’école de Columbia semble d’autant plus d’actualité avec la prise d’informations via les réseaux socionumériques. Désormais, les médias doivent compter avec les réseaux socionumériques et par conséquent avec les usagers-récepteurs. Par son partage d’information, chaque usager-récepteur peut devenir leader d’opinion à court terme. L’acte ponctuel de partage concrétise ce nouveau filtrage qui symbolise le passage au deuxième étage de la communication. Le partage est ainsi la réification conjoncturelle de l’influence personnelle qui transforme l’usager-récepteur en leader d’opinion. Dans ce modèle de l’usager-récepteur 2.0 du nouvel écosystème médiatico-socionumérique, les leaders d’opinion 2.0 sont assimilables à des partageurs d’opinion. Nous souhaitons montrer la pertinence d’un cadre théorique canonique pour l’analyse des usages et pratiques des réseaux socionumériques. Nous nous intéressons à ce que les « vrais gens de la vie quotidienne » choisissent et font des médias sur les réseaux socionumériques, à l’instar de l’école de Columbia qui s’intéressait au choix des gens et notamment à ce que les gens faisaient des médias traditionnels. L’objectif de cette recherche est de transposer ce modèle de Columbia au contexte des réseaux socionumériques afin de l’actualiser et de redéfinir, en son sein, la notion de leader d’opinion dont l’acception a été altérée. Notre apport est donc celui d’une analyse sociale de la communication humaine de l’information via les réseaux socionumériques
Social-digital networks are linked to the user-receiver activity theorized by the Columbia school. The link between the media system and the social system that the Columbia school anticipated seems all the more relevant with the collect of information via social networks. Henceforth, the media must reckon with social networks and consequently with users-receivers. By sharing information, each user-receiver can become a short-term opinion leader. The one-off act of sharing materializes this new filter which symbolizes the passage to the second step flow of communication. Sharing is therefore the circumstantial reification of personal influence which transforms the user-receiver into an opinion leader. In this 2.0 user-receiver model of the new media digital-social networks ecosystem, 2.0 opinion leaders can be compared to opinion sharers. In order to understand the situations of opinion influence at work in circulation and reception activities, the information filter processes will be studied by taking up the structural elements of the model proposed by the Columbia school. We are interested in what "real people of everyday life" choose and do with media on social-digital networks, like the Columbia school which was interested in the people's choice and in particular in the part played by people in the flow of mass communications. The objective of this research is thus to transpose this Columbia model to the context of social-digital networks in order to update it and redefine, within it, the notion of opinion leader whose acceptance has been altered.Our contribution is therefore that of a social analysis of human communication of information via social-digital networks

Libros sobre el tema "Media-Social-Digital ecosystem":

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Abruzzese, Alberto, Jane Vincent, Nello Barile y Julian Gebhardt. New Television Ecosystem. Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Peter, 2012.

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Abruzzese, Alberto, Jane Vincent, Nello Barile y Julian Gebhardt. New Television Ecosystem. Lang Publishing, Incorporated, Peter, 2012.

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Abruzzese, Alberto, Jane Vincent, Nello Barile y Julian Gebhardt. New Television Ecosystem. Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Peter, 2012.

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Forest, James J. F. Digital Influence Warfare in the Age of Social Media. ABC-CLIO, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400640643.

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This book brings together three important dimensions of our everyday lives. First is digital?the online ecosystem of information providers and tools, from websites, blogs, discussion forums, and targeted email campaigns to social media, video streaming, and virtual reality. Second, influence?the most effective ways people can be persuaded, in order to shape their beliefs in ways that lead them to embrace one set of beliefs and reject others. And finally, warfare?wars won by the information and disinformation providers who are able to influence behavior in ways they find beneficial to their political, social, and other goals. The book provides a wide range of specific examples that illustrate the ways people are being targeted by digital influencers. There is much more to digital influence warfare than terrorist propaganda, "fake news," or Russian efforts to manipulate elections: chapters examine post-truth narratives, fabricated "alternate facts," and brainwashing and disinformation within the context of various political, scientific, security, and societal debates. The final chapters examine how new technical tools, critical thinking, and resilience can help thwart digital influence warfare efforts.
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Karpf, David. The Many Faces of Resistance Media. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190886172.003.0008.

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There is no understanding Donald Trump without reference to the contemporary hybrid media system. His improbable victories in the Republican primary and 2016 general election were premised on radical departures from how electoral campaigns use communications media to engage journalists, supporters, and opponents. Once in office, Trump has continued to employ new approaches to presidential communications. For the Resistance, countering Trump required tactical and strategic innovations in the media realm. This chapter discusses how both Trump and the Resistance are deploying innovative new media strategies. It explores how Resistance groups are leveraging digital media to expand the reach of their protest tactics, using social media to undermine funding of partisan conservative media organizations, and building their own new media institutions to compete against the conservative media ecosystem.
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Jirsa, Tomáš y Mathias Bonde Korsgaard, eds. Traveling Music Videos. Bloomsbury Publishing Inc, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781501398025.

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Traveling Music Videos offers a new interdisciplinary perspective on how contemporary music videos travel across, shape, and transform various media, online platforms, art institutions, and cultural industries worldwide. With the onset of digital technologies and the proliferation of global video-sharing websites at the beginning of the 21st century, music video migrated from TV screens to turn instead to the internet, galleries, concert stages, and social media. As a result, its aesthetics, technological groundings, and politics have been radically transformed. From the kinaesthetic experience of TikTok to the recent reimaginations of maps and navigation tools through music video cartographies, from the ecofeminist voices mediated by live-stream concerts to the transmedia logic of video games and VR, from the videos’ role in contemporary art galleries to their political interventions —the chapters map the ways music video is continually reconfiguring itself. The volume tracks music video’s audiovisual itineraries across different geographies, maps its transmedia routes, and tackles the cultural impact that it has on our current media ecosystem.
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Friedrichsen, Mike, Zvezdan Vukanovic y Milivoje Pavlovic. Digital Value Migration in Media, ICT and Cultural Industries: From Business and Economic Models/Strategies to Networked Ecosystems. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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Friedrichsen, Mike, Zvezdan Vukanovic y Milivoje Pavlovic. Digital Value Migration in Media, ICT and Cultural Industries: From Business and Economic Models/Strategies to Networked Ecosystems. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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Cunha, Manuel Antunes da, ed. Repensar a Imprensa no Ecossistema Digital. Axioma - Publicações da Faculdade de Filosofia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17990/axi/2020_9789726973287.

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Os discursos sobre a crise do jornalismo não datam de ontem, nem irromperam na era digital. Não deixa de ser significativo que a crítica acima reproduzida tenha sido formulada há mais de 130 anos pelo jornalista e romancista Emile Zola, que viria a assinar “J’accuse” (L’Aurore, 13 de janeiro de 1898), um dos mais célebres textos da história do periodismo. Nos finais do séc. XIX e inícios do séc. XX, a imprensa escrita francesa vai de vento em popa, contabilizando cerca de 600 diários, dos quais nove dezenas sediados em Paris (Kalifa, 2011). Já há algumas décadas que o jornalismo se tornara um negócio lucrativo. Artigos de opinião e debates de cariz político cedem progressivamente lugar a conteúdos suscetíveis de atraírem um maior número de leitores, incluindo os menos escolarizados, potenciando um aumento de receitas publicitárias. Por seu turno, nos Estados Unidos, o periodismo de informação impusera-se como paradigma dominante a partir dos anos 1880-1910, através da dissociação entre os factos e a interpretação dos mesmos (Brin et al., 2004). De um lado, uma ética da objetividade, consolidada por meio de géneros como a entrevista e a reportagem. Do outro, a busca do lucro por intermédio de virulentas controvérsias, alimentadas por “um fluxo vertiginoso de informação superabundante”, segundo a expressão de Zola. Entre muitas outras mudanças, o último século foi marcado por dois conflitos mundiais, a segmentação do globo em campos ideológicos e reconfigurações identitárias, o recurso à propaganda e à desinformação em doses massivas, a transformação dos media (jornal, radio, cinema, televisão, internet) em indústrias culturais intrinsecamente vinculadas à cultura de massas ou ainda a afirmação de uma “mitologia da felicidade individual” (Morin, 1962), num mundo cada vez mais desinstitucionalizado e dessocializado (Dubet & Martuccelli, 1998). Desde então, a produção académica tem vindo a debruçar-se – a partir de abordagens concetuais diferenciadas – sobre a influência dos discursos mediáticos na “construção social da realidade” (Berger & Luckmann, 1966) ou na consolidação dos “imaginários” (Castoriadis, 1975), no âmbito das esferas pública e privada, mas também sobre os contextos socioculturais em que esses mesmos discursos emergem (Hall, 1973; Goffman, 1974) e os eventuais efeitos suscitados junto de audiências e/ou públicos mais ou menos (in)conscientes e (in)ativos (Lazarsfeld & Katz, 1955; Klapper, 1960; Adorno, 1963; Morley, 1980). Como aconteceu com os seus predecessores, o recurso cada vez mais generalizado a um novo media – a partir da última década do século XX – deu origem a um conjunto de profecias apocalíticas e outras tantas utopias comunicacionais. Destarte, coloca-se a seguinte questão: “de que modo a Internet afeta o jeito de nos relacionarmos uns com os outros, de debatermos, trabalharmos, nos movermos, nos cultivarmos, sermos militantes, consumirmos, cuidarmos de nós, nos divertirmos, etc.?” (Beuscart et al, 2019: 8). As mudanças experienciadas nos derradeiros vinte anos replicam alguns dos desafios que, invariavelmente, caraterizaram os tempos áureos da imprensa, do cinema, da rádio e da televisão – embora hoje com uma intensidade inédita –, não deixando ainda de suscitar novos questionamentos. Em virtude da eclosão de um singular ecossistema mediático, o modelo tradicional de produção, difusão e receção do jornalismo impresso tem vindo a experimentar um complexo processo de reconfiguração de contornos ainda imprecisos, do ponto de vista profissional, sociopolítico, cultural, económico, técnico, ético e jurídico. Da reflexão sobre estas temáticas, levada a cabo no Centro de Estudos Filosófico-Humanísticos (UCP) e junto dos estudantes de Licenciatura em Ciências da Comunicação e do Mestrado em Comunicação Digital, nasceu o congresso internacional Repensar a imprensa no ecossistema digital, que teve lugar na Faculdade de Filosofia e Ciências Sociais (UCP), em Braga, de 3 a 5 de Julho de 2019, com a participação de meia centena de académicos oriundos da Europa, América e Ásia. O título inspira-se do relatório Presse et numérique. L’invention d’un nouvel ecosystème, encomendado pelo Ministério francês da Cultura e da Comunicação ao investigador Jean-Marie Charon. A noção de ecossistema aponta para uma configuração de cariz horizontal, para um sistema de atores – plurais na sua história e organização, nos conteúdos das suas atividades e da sua produção – e a sua relação (in)direta com o(s) público(s). Alude ainda à complexidade das interações em jogo, num contexto tantas vezes de competição, outras de solidariedade, e de tempos e espaços colaborativos. Há muito que um tal ecossistema deixou de ser de âmbito meramente nacional, fomentando desafios de natureza transnacional, transdisciplinar e transmediática (Charon, 2015).

Capítulos de libros sobre el tema "Media-Social-Digital ecosystem":

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Dossena, Claudia y Francesca Mochi. "Organizational Capabilities for Social Media Management: How Restaurant Managers Approach to the Digital Ecosystem". En Digital Business Transformation, 269–84. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47355-6_18.

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Taibi, Davide, Johanna Börsting, Ulrich Hoppe, Dimitri Ognibene, Davinia Hernández-Leo, Sabrina C. Eimler y Udo Kruschwitz. "The Role of Educational Interventions in Facing Social Media Threats: Overarching Principles of the COURAGE Project". En Higher Education Learning Methodologies and Technologies Online, 315–29. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-29800-4_25.

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AbstractSocial media are offering new opportunities for communication and interaction way beyond what was possible only a few years ago. However, social media are also virtual spaces where young people are exposed to a variety of threats. Digital addiction, discrimination, hate speech, misinformation, polarization as well as manipulative influences of algorithms, body stereotyping, and cyberbullying are examples of challenges that find fertile ground on social media. Educators and students are not adequately prepared to face these challenges. To this aim, the COURAGE project, presented in this paper, introduces new tools and learning methodologies that can be adopted within higher education learning paths to train educators to deal with social media threats. The overarching principles of the COURAGE project leverage the most recent advances in the fields of artificial intelligence and in the educational domain paired with social and media psychological insights to support the development of the COURAGE ecosystem. The results of the experiments currently implemented with teachers and students of secondary schools as well as the impact of the COURAGE project on societal changes and ethical questions are presented and discussed.
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Verma, Rajesh. "Crowdsourcing through a Digital Ecosystem". En Social Media and Crowdsourcing, 32–48. Boca Raton: Auerbach Publications, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003346326-2.

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Beier, Michael y Sebastian Früh. "Social Media Teams of Hospitals as Mediators in Digital Health Ecosystems". En Studies on Entrepreneurship, Structural Change and Industrial Dynamics, 115–24. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17238-1_6.

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Tiidenberg, Katrin, Athina Karatzogianni, Dimitris Parsanoglou, Jacob Matthews, Kamilla Selina Lepik, Madli Raig y Marta Liisab Suitslepp. "Social Media as a Shaper, Enabler, and Hurdle in Youth Political Participation". En Understanding The Everyday Digital Lives of Children and Young People, 351–77. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-46929-9_12.

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AbstractThis chapter explores young people’s political participation on and with social media from an ecosystemic perspective. Drawing from an analysis of interviews, ethnographic social media observations, and digital storytelling workshops conducted in Estonia, Greece, and the United Kingdom, we highlight the entanglement of young people’s participatory repertoires with social media, but also with their leisure and school lives and family relationships. We explore how young people invested in issues of racial justice, gender and LGBTQ justice, and climate justice, incorporate or push back against digital technologies, and how that is mediated by their perceptions of social media affordances, imaginary audiences, their sense of self-efficacy, political agency, and digital literacies. The findings shed light on the complex interplay between personal, structural, and environmental factors that shape young people’s political participation, and highlight the situational nature of how activism and politics are defined and the role that social media is attributed within both.
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Govindaraj, Manoj y M. S. R. Mariyappan. "Role of Government Participation in Social Media Usage and the Impact of e-Government Ecosystem". En Revolutionizing the AI-Digital Landscape, 48–68. New York: Productivity Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781032688305-4.

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Alves da Veiga, Pedro, Mirian Tavares y Heitor Alvelos. "Toward a B-Society Model". En User Innovation and the Entrepreneurship Phenomenon in the Digital Economy, 194–216. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2826-5.ch010.

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This chapter seeks to legitimize the biological ecosystem concept as an expanded analogy for representing relationships between agents of the social, cultural and artistic systems involved in the creation, research, exhibition, enjoyment, experimentation and education of digital media art, including organisational, participatory and socio-economic integration aspects. It also aims at demonstrating the virtual/material dichotomy anachronism, proposing as an alternative the blended reality concept. By exploring the mechanisms of individual artistic and intellectual emancipation of the digital media art universe, it seeks to demonstrate how the relationships between the various ecosystem agents are becoming increasingly blended, leading to the creation of b-ecosystems, in short, a b-society.
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C. Kwayu, Shirumisha. "Social Media Ecosystem and Its Influence on Small Business Strategic Practices". En E-Service [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.95058.

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The plethora of social media applications creates an ecosystem that can assist strategies for small business. However, the abundance of social media applications is attributed as a cause for confusion to business owners and executives making it difficult to conceive strategies for engaging effectively with social media. Following a practice theory, this paper uses an autoethnographic methodology to study how the social media ecosystem influences strategic practices of a small business. The study found that the social media ecosystem is crucial for enacting a strategy of a small business and that changes within the ecosystem influence the whole strategy. In addition, the study shows how context is interwoven with the social media ecosystem to affect the strategy of a small business. The study underscores the importance of strategizing practices for small business to develop agility that is necessary for developing and embedding digital transformation. Practically, the study highlights the significance and the need for developing countries to synchronize their soft infrastructure in order to help small businesses exploit the benefits of globalization during this era of social media.
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Aguado, Juan Miguel y Inmaculada J. Martinez. "Driving Media Transformations". En Digital Multimedia, 1581–97. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-3822-6.ch076.

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The consolidation of the mobile ecosystem is deeply influencing the adaptation of traditional media industries to the digital transformations of business, consumption and audiences. Legacy media digitization comes along with a perfect storm where different kinds of crisis converge. This is also the ground where an eventual response to uncertainties about future may appear in the form of new opportunities and possibilities. Simultaneously, mobile content evolution brings forth a new habitus of consumption, an increasingly complex set of social rituals, content format syntax and technical requirements that constitute new consumption scenarios. This chapter aims at discussing a conceptual framework on how the techno-economic drift of the mobile ecosystem matches the evolution of content industries dynamics and content consumption scenarios in terms of dysfunctions and challenges. The theoretical ground is built upon the works from a three-year research project on the evolution of mobile content and the economic and sociocultural relevance of personal information management.
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Rosário, Albérico Travassos, Paula Rosa Lopes y Filipe Sales Rosário. "Influencer Marketing in the Digital Ecosystem". En Influencer Marketing Applications Within the Metaverse, 132–66. IGI Global, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-8898-0.ch009.

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Influencer marketing is a marketing strategy used in the digital ecosystem to promote products or services through influencers or influential people in the digital environment. These influencers can be celebrities, experts on a particular subject, or simply people with a large follower base on social media. Thus, influencing followers can help promote a brand or product more effectively than traditional marketing. Although influencer marketing is a central concept in current trends in marketing strategies, most marketing managers have yet to incorporate it into their agenda. As a result, more research is needed to provide reliable and accurate data on influencer marketing to empower marketing managers and their teams with the necessary knowledge. Based on this research gap, a systematic bibliometric literature review was conducted. This research essay aims to assess the challenges and opportunities, thus building a reference framework for influencer marketing in the digital ecosystem.

Actas de conferencias sobre el tema "Media-Social-Digital ecosystem":

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Velinova, Neli y Lora Metanova. "Evolutionary dynamics of the Bulgarian media ecosystem (2000 – 2020)". En COMMUNICATION AND MEDIA OF THE 21ST CENTURY: EDUCATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL CHALLENGES. Faculty of Journalism and Mass Communication, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.60060/uova5671.

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The study aims to trace the dynamics in the modern media ecosystem based on collected and classified databases and research for the period 2000 – 2020 regarding media consumption in Bulgaria, media and digital literacy and public trust in the media. The task is to highlight the trends in the development of the Bulgarian media environment. The findings are included in the comparative analysis of the MEDIADELCOM research project of the Horizon 2020 Program, in which 15 EU member states participate. The tendency of the audience to look for short, easily digestible audiovisual information is highlighted. More and more people are relying on social networks to stay informed, and the smartphone is becoming the primary device for accessing and sharing news. The difference in terms of media consumption depending on age is clear – stagnant people prefer traditional media, while young people look for alternative sources of information. These and other processes are driving the evolution of media into “multimedia” and contribute to contribute to the promotion of the media convergence.
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Nastasi, Cristina y Sebastiano Battiato. "Defamation 2.0: New Threats in Digital Media Era - An Overview on Forensics Approaches in the Social Network Ecosystem". En International Conference on Image Processing and Vision Engineering. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0010463601210127.

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Bollini, Letizia. "Fixed, liquid, fluid. Rethinking the digital design process through the ecosystem model". En Systems & Design: Beyond Processes and Thinking. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/ifdp.2016.3013.

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According to the visions and conceptualizations from philosophers to design thinkers such as Habermas, Maturana & Varela or Levin, the design applied to digital artifacts, products and services —due to the convergence of media, communication, deceives and technologies— is becoming even more a a bio-sphere —or better to say with the words of Vernadskij— a Noosphere. The cultural shifting is represented both in the process side and in the approach to the whole design materials and outcomes. On one hand, the organizational structure is moving from an “industrial” approach characterized by a waterfall-process —organized in subsequent of well-structured phases— to an iterative activity —that cycle among ideation, prototyping, testing assessing and redesign phases before to implement and release a project— to the agile and lean approach of the information-era in which the project itself persist constantly in a work-in-progress status —where upgrades and updates have replaced new releases. On the other hand, the object of the project itself is deeply changing according to a vision of a digital ecosystem and consequently to the design approach that is moving from a fixed —a two-dimensional page borrowed-model— to a liquid, then fluid solutions beside the divergences of media and devices and the convergence of user context and experience. Paraphrasing Maldonando we’re moving from virtual to real, from intangible to tangible, from the web to intelligent environment, both digital and physical. In this hybrid space the design process gambles his challenge to change process and purpose embracing both a traversal and a deep vertical approach to single elements of the eco-system and the eco-system in its wide complexity. Nevertheless this transition implies design to face with the challenges of emerging and upcoming phenomena: the designer education —skills, competences, methods— in an hybrid context, the anthropological mutation brought up by the new generation of digital natives and finally the social impact and emotional implication of the confluence of virtual and real experience —mediated by technologies— that people live in their daily life.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/IFDP.2016.3013
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Reis, Julio C. S. y Fabrício Benevenuto. "Towards Automatic Fake News Detection in Digital Platforms: Properties, Limitations, and Applications". En Concurso de Teses e Dissertações da SBC. Sociedade Brasileira de Computação, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5753/ctd.2021.15754.

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Digital platforms, including social media systems and messaging applications, have become a place for campaigns of misinformation that affect the credibility of the entire news ecosystem. The emergence of fake news in these environments has quickly evolved into a worldwide phenomenon, where the lack of scalable fact-checking strategies is especially worrisome. In this context, this thesis aim at investigating practical approaches for the automatic detection of fake news disseminated in digital platforms. Particularly, we explore new datasets and features for fake news detection to assess the prediction performance of current supervised machine learning approaches. We also propose an unbiased framework for quantifying the informativeness of features for fake news detection, and present an explanation of factors contributing to model decisions considering data from different scenarios. Finally, we propose and implement a new mechanism that accounts for the potential occurrence of fake news within the data, significantly reducing the number of content pieces journalists and fact-checkers have to go through before finding a fake story.
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Angeli, Patrick De y Julio C. S. Reis. "Analyzing the Potential of Feature Groups for Misinformation Detection in WhatsApp". En Simpósio Brasileiro de Sistemas Multimídia e Web. Sociedade Brasileira de Computação - SBC, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5753/webmedia_estendido.2022.227031.

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The new mass media (e.g., social networks, and instant messaging applications) have drastically changed how users generate, propagate, and consume information. Given this scenario, an emerging problem is the abuse of these platforms for the propagation of disinformation that, consequently, affects the credibility of the news ecosystem in these environments. The dissemination of misinformation on these platforms has become a worldwide phenomenon, and scalable strategies to contain or mitigate the problem are scarce. Thus, using automated approaches to detect disinformation on digital media can help journalists and fact-check teams identify content that needs to be verified. In this context, in this work, we investigate the potential of feature groups for automatic misinformation detection shared on digital platforms. Our results reveal that using a set of features from some groups, can be useful to build models with satisfactory performance, which can make the application of the model viable in a practical scenario.
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Ihsanudin, Ihsanudin y Amy Y. S. Rahayu. "Collaborative Innovation in Digital Ecosystem". En International Conference on Emerging Media, and Social Science. EAI, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.7-12-2018.2281772.

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CÂmara, NaiÁ. "Transmedia literacy in professional training practices: a case study". En LINK 2021. Tuwhera Open Access, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/link2021.v2i1.108.

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The changes the digital age brought in communicative practices produced under transmedia logic allow the structure of increasingly complex texts, produced by open, polyphonic, simultaneous, accelerated, and hybrid archenunciations, which expand into different genres, formats, languages , and media, determining new forms of production, reception, and circulation of content. New ethics and aesthetics shape cultural productions in all spheres, especially in the area of entertainment and the arts. Virtual reality, metaverses, among other modifications, demand new communicative skills and abilities – that is to say, a new literacy to the persons. In addition, the COVID-19 era inserted the processes and practices of professional training in the Internet's digital ecosystem, also demanding from its actors new interaction regimes with the educational practices that arise in this context. Digital platforms start to mediate the relationships of these actors with knowledge, configuring new ways of life for the learner. To identify the characteristics of the profile of these students and how they are relating to these emerging educational practices, we are developing a project entitled “Transmedia literacy in the era of education platform”, whose objective is to identify and analyze the produced and circulated transmedia literacy by students enrolled in professional training courses and inserted in educational practices mediated by digital technologies. We understand Transmedia Literacy as a communicative competence carried out in the universe of cultural and media convergence of the digital age, and as a theoretical-methodological proposal for research, teaching, and learning of transmedia communicative practices of reading, interpreting, producing, and disseminating texts. This proposal is based on transdisciplinary relationships from cross-relationships between the assumptions of the area of Social Communication, Linguistics, and discursive Semiotics. It is part of a context of cultural and transmedia convergence to which subjects migrate their social practices in an ever-accelerating manner. Assuming that literacy problems directly impact the teaching and learning processes of students in professional training processes, we propose to carry out a comparative study between the literacy skills of students in educational practices mediated by the digital platforms of formal education and their literacy daily life produced in the digital spaces through which they transit. We aim to identify the interaction regimes, types, and degrees of literacy and, therefore, the relationship of students with the knowledge offered by institutions. With Castells (2007), we consider that there is a great cultural and technological gap between today's youth and a school system that did not evolve along with society and the digital environment. Thus, it is intended that the results of this research have a direct impact on formal educational practices, offering data and a methodological proposal that allows institutions and professors to adapt their practices to the profile of their students, improving their relationship with the processes and practices of teaching and learning, thus ensuring excellence in the processes and practices of professional training in the areas of Art and Design.
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Garnett, Fred y Drew Whitworth. "AMBIENT LEARNING CITY". En eLSE 2015. Carol I National Defence University Publishing House, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.12753/2066-026x-15-002.

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Having developed the Emergent Learning Model as a conceptual "development framework" to best capture how learning might be designed, developed and deployed if it is learner-centric, we needed to test that model and learn how we might evolve new informal learning ecosystems in contexts beyond the classroom. In the EU call for the "future of learning" in IST 7 it offered 2 strands, one concerning the "classroom of the future" and one concerning "community content." Through links with the City of Manchester and Manchester University we developed the Ambient Learning City project (MOSI-ALONG), which became a JISC-funded project concerned with testing what new practical issues needed to be addressed in creating new learning eco-systems based on "learner-generated digital libraries". We found 3 major issues. Firstly creating new public partnerships, with local authorities and various public bodies not normally concerned with designing learning eco-systems. Secondly in creating learning contexts 'beyond the classroom" we lose many of the hidden values of classroom-based learning and have to create new ones, what we call new metaphors for learning; in MOSI-ALONG this was 'Digital Cabinets of Curiosity.' Thirdly new learning processes need to be created which reflect the context & tools (in our case social media) being used. We developed the "Aggregate then Curate" model, focussing on content curation more than content curation. In this paper we will discuss the practical problems we faced in developing an ambient learning city and how we developed new solutions for partnerships, metaphors and processes for new learning ecosystems.
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Soņeca, Viktorija. "Tehnoloģiju milžu ietekme uz suverēnu". En The 8th International Scientific Conference of the Faculty of Law of the University of Latvia. University of Latvia Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/iscflul.8.1.18.

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In the last two decades, we have seen the rise of companies providing digital services. Big Tech firms have become all-pervasive, playing critical roles in our social interactions, in the way we access information, and in the way we consume. These firms not only strive to be dominant players in one market, but with their giant monopoly power and domination of online ecosystems, they want to become the market itself. They are gaining not just economic, but also political power. This can be illustrated by Donald Trump’s campaigns, in which he attempted to influence the sovereign will, as the sovereign power is vested in the people. The Trump campaigns' use of Facebook's advertising tools contributed to Trump's win at the 2016 presidential election. After criticism of that election, Facebook stated that it would implement a series of measures to prevent future abuse. For example, no political ads will be accepted in the week before an election. Another example of how Big Tech firms can effect the sovereign is by national legislator. For example, Australia had a dispute with digital platforms such as Facebook and Google. That was because Australia began to develop a News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Code. To persuade the Australian legislature to abandon the idea of this code, Facebook prevented Australian press publishers, news media and users from sharing/viewing Australian as well as international news content, including blocking information from government agencies. Such action demonstrated how large digital platforms can affect the flow of information to encourage the state and its legislature to change their position. Because of such pressure, Australia eventually made adjustments to the code in order to find a compromise with the digital platform. Also, when we are referring to political power, it should include lobbying and the European Union legislator. Tech giants are lobbying their interests to influence the European Union’s digital policy, which has the most direct effect on member states, given that the member states are bound by European Union law.
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Marrone, Teresa y Pierpaolo Testa. "Brand algorithms and social engagement in digital era". En 13th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2022). AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002562.

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The world we live in today is pervaded by digital, the net is increasingly present and mixes the dimensions of the physical and the virtual, changing the way we understand, decide and evaluate things and also the way we do business. Artificial intelligence (AI) and related technologies are transforming the way we think and do marketing and the way companies relate to consumers and society.Internet has assumed a key role in nurturing innovation within business ecosystems. AI, big data and Internet of things (IoT) are key drivers of the current revolution in the way of communicating and relating among both individuals and products. This change is mainly due to the impact of algorithms’ mediations on the creation of value and customer engagement.Recent years, growing attention has been devoted to consumer brand engagement through emerging technological platforms (e.g., social media/artificial intelligence-based). However, despite important knowledge advancement, much remains unknown regarding the effect of Consumers’ Technology-Facilitated Brand Engagement (CTFBE) on individuals’ wellbeing, thus determining an important research gap (Hollebeek and Belk, 2021). CTFBE comprises a vital social facet. Hollebeek and Belk (2021) define CTFBE as a consumer’s bloodedly volitional resource investment in technology-mediated brand interactions (Kumar et al., 2019; Hollebeek et al, 2020). Online behavioral customer engagement occurs because of the rise of the new media and the advancement of technology, which have changed the way customers connect and interact with firms (Jahn and Kunz, 2012). One of the most active channels for such an aim are social media (Gummerus et al, 2012) where customers share their own experiences, information, review brands and manifest enthusiasm, delight, or disgust about a brand with others (Hollebeek and Chen, 2014).Digital transformation has totally transformed the value creation process (Reinartz et al., 2019) revolutionizing the way of doing business using the large mass of available data and information, through sophisticated service platforms that increase both effectiveness and efficiency in the value creation processes. AI has been a key component of digital transformation, substantially affecting consumer decision-making (Duan et al., 2021).AI, big data and the IoT are supporting and / or automating many decision-making processes: product, price, channel, supply chain, communication, etc. The customer experience is also redesigned starting from new value creation objectives and can become a stimulus for the creation of new business models. This, in turn, can provide a customized experience that is highly valued by consumers (Lemon and Verhoef, 2016). While new technologies have brought more ways for customers to interact with brands and companies, digital technologies have similarly enabled the automation of company’s interactions with customers (Kunz et al., 2017).According to Kumar et al (2010), AI represents the enabling technology for the transformation of marketing theory and practices: the enormous availability of data, the explosion of the possibilities to reach and interact on the markets and an increased speed of transactions. AI-enabled digital platform helps organizations to attract their customers (Bag et al, 2021; Chawla and Goyal, 2021).An increasing number of marketing decisions already use artificial intelligence in some way, and with the rise of big data is becoming easier to incorporate AI into business practices. Marketers may develop a more effective and personalized communication approach (Mogaji et al., 2020). For this reason, today AI is adopted in all activities where classification, forecasts and clustering are useful or necessary to solve problems and support decisions (management of anomalies in processes, logistics and optimization planning, customer service and customization).In the contemporary world the ubiquity of digital has made fluid the distinctions between channels and has integrated two dimensions of reality (physical and virtual one in phygital), the management of complex processes has become agile and adaptive, the advantages of integration and dynamic use of resources condition the operation of entire businesses. Well, what influence all this changes, new technologies and brand algorithms will have on social engagement?Prior studies on artificial intelligence in service and marketing research have not addressed customer engagement (Kaartemo & Helkkula, 2018). Perhaps, even Kaartemo & Helkkula (2018) specifically called for more research to answer the question: “How can we improve customer engagement through AI?”The article proposal is theoretical/conceptual in nature and starts from an updated review of academic literature on the aforementioned topics, mainly within marketing and business management disciplines, to achieve an interpretative attempt of Brand algorithm and social engagement (role) in digital era. References on request.

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