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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lilburn, Jeff
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ975615
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author Lilburn, Jeff
author_facet Lilburn, Jeff
Lilburn, Jeff
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Commercial Social Media and the Erosion of the Commons: Implications for Academic Libraries Lilburn, Jeff Academic Libraries Internet Social Networks Scholarship Web 2.0 Technologies Librarians Library Services Recent scholarship challenges the celebratory discourse surrounding Web 2.0. This paper engages with this scholarship to examine critically the implications of academic libraries' presence within commercially owned social media spaces. It considers the apparent contradiction between work to promote the principles of open access and the idea of the commons, and engagement with commercial social media that may be contributing to the enclosure of the commons. It also examines whether the form of participation permitted within commercial social media sites may be limited and subordinating. The paper concludes with possible directions for further research and analysis. (Contains 59 notes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ975615
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Commercial Social Media and the Erosion of the Commons: Implications for Academic Libraries
Lilburn, Jeff
Academic Libraries
Internet
Social Networks
Scholarship
Web 2.0 Technologies
Librarians
Library Services
Commercial Social Media and the Erosion of the Commons: Implications for Academic Libraries Lilburn, Jeff Academic Libraries Internet Social Networks Scholarship Web 2.0 Technologies Librarians Library Services Recent scholarship challenges the celebratory discourse surrounding Web 2.0. This paper engages with this scholarship to examine critically the implications of academic libraries' presence within commercially owned social media spaces. It considers the apparent contradiction between work to promote the principles of open access and the idea of the commons, and engagement with commercial social media that may be contributing to the enclosure of the commons. It also examines whether the form of participation permitted within commercial social media sites may be limited and subordinating. The paper concludes with possible directions for further research and analysis. (Contains 59 notes.)
title Commercial Social Media and the Erosion of the Commons: Implications for Academic Libraries
topic Academic Libraries
Internet
Social Networks
Scholarship
Web 2.0 Technologies
Librarians
Library Services
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ975615