Episode 16: Exploring Identity on the Web with Aleks Krotoski

 

Our guest for this episode (23 min.) is Dr. Aleks Krotoski, an award-winning international broadcaster, author and academic. She studies and writes about technology and interactivity. Her book, “Untangling the Web: What the Internet is Doing to You,” based on her hit columns in the Guardian and Observer, was published in 2012. Since then, she’s continued to break ground in academia and journalism, and she’s currently a Visiting Fellow in the Media and Communications Department at the London School of Economics and Political Science and a Research Associate at the Oxford Internet Institute.

During this episode, Aleks talks about how our online lives have become entangled with our offline ones. Her research has found that we bring our existing ideas about society to the virtual worlds we build. But unlike in the past, there’s less space to play around with our identities online. And, there’s more consequences — for many people, the things they did 10 or 15 years ago still pop up when you search their name. What does that mean for our own growth, and how is the Web evolving, too? To hear all this and more, listen to this episode.

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 15: Mental Health and the Web with Munmun De Choudhury

 

During this episode, (26 min. long), we talk with Munmun De Choudhury, a professor of interactive computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology, where she leads the Social Dynamics and Wellbeing Lab.  Her research centers on using social media to better understand and improve mental health. She draws on an interdisciplinary approach, combining social computing, machine learning and natural language analysis with insights and theories from the social, behavioral and health sciences.

In this episode, Munmun tells us what led to her research and why she wanted to focus on people’s wellbeing. She emphasizes how web science can help progress the ways that we currently approach mental health, but also talks about the challenges in her research. And she gets into how people signal or share about their mental health on the Web. To hear all this and more, listen to this episode.

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 14: Networks on the Web with Robert Ackland

 

Our guest for this episode, (21 min. long) is Robert Ackland, a professor from the School of Sociology at the Australian National University in Canberra. Rob studies networks on the Web, and he established the Virtual Observatory for the Study of Online Networks — VOSON for short — to provide tools for research on this topic. 

During this episode, Rob talks about his early work with hyperlinks, as well as how he evolved his research and VOSON tools as we entered the social media era. He explains how he got involved in web science, as his background is mainly in economics, as well as what he’s interested in now. And he talks about how we could use social bots as a positive force for political deliberation, even as so much of research on bots focuses on their negative effects. To hear all this and more, listen to this episode.

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 13: Web and the New Future of Work with Jaime Teevan

 

In this episode, (26 min. long) we talk with Jaime Teevan, chief scientist for Microsoft’s Experiences and Devices, where she’s charged with creating the future of productivity. She also developed the first personalized search algorithm used by Bing and introduced microproductivity into Microsoft Office. 

This conversation centers around a report by Jaime Teevan and her colleagues at Microsoft, which is what they believe to be the world’s largest synthesis of findings related to how people’s work practices have evolved since the start of the pandemic. She gives insights into our “New Normal” — and what our “Next Normal” may look like, too.  And she tells us how web science has informed this research. Most of us have felt the effects of the pandemic on the way we work, but Jaime breaks down why. To hear all this and more, listen to this episode.

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 12: Privacy and the Web with Danny Weitzner

 

For this episode, (29 min. long) we talk with Danny Weitzner, a proud founding member of the Web Science Trust who will be a keynote speaker at the upcoming 2021 ACM Web Science virtual conference. He’s a 3Com Founders Principal Research Scientist at MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and also the founding director of the MIT Internet Policy Research Initiative. His research interests include accountable systems, privacy, cybersecurity and online freedom of expression.

During this conversation, Danny takes us back to the start of web science and explores challenges that are both old — but still relevant— and new. He talks specifically about what approaches we can take to address privacy on the web. For example, you may have heard of the panopticon, but do you know what countervailance means? Do you know why accountability is so important to privacy? Danny can explain. Most of all, he points out how crucial web science is to solving these problems. To hear about all this and more, listen to the full episode!

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 11: Web Science Challenges in India with Ravindran Balaraman

 

Ravindran (Ravi) Balaraman is our guest for this episode (23 min. long). He is the Mindtree faculty fellow and a professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras. And he also heads the Robert Bosch Centre for Data Science and Artificial Intelligence at IIT Madras, which is the leading interdisciplinary AI research center in India and India’s first lab to join the Web Science Trust Network of laboratories from around the world. His research is pushing the boundaries of reinforcement learning, social network analysis, and data text mining. 

In this episode, Ravi explains the unique challenges that India faces in web science, including how displaced migrants feeling alienated from the Web. He also explains some solutions, like increasing access to devices with local languages programmed in. And Ravi talks about the importance of AI and how that can help or hurt in pursuits of different social goods, as well as just how explainable AI could get. To hear about all this and more, listen to the full episode!

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 10: Digital Inequality in Web Use with Eszter Hargittai

 

Our guest for this episode (28 min. long) is Eszter Hargittai, who is a professor and holds the chair of the Internet Use and Society in the Department of Communication and Media Research at the University of Zurich,  where she also heads the Web Use project research group. She’s also one of the most cited web science researchers in the world. Her research focuses on the social and policy implications of digital media, especially how differences in people’s web skills and digital literacy influence what they do online. 

During this conversation, Eszter gets into why she wishes people would use the term “digital inequality” more, as well as how it means something different than “digital divide.” She describes her research on how people’s web skills vary, including her findings dealing with disability status and age. Eszter also discusses why she feels it’s important to explore the challenges of studying web science, as well as have people shared how they overcome those difficulties, a topic on which she has (co-)edited three books. Plus, she shares a peek into what she’s writing right now: a book about web use and COVID-19, which is based on a large data collection effort across three countries that she and her team completed in last April. To hear about about all this and more, listen to the episode!

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 9: Identity and the Web with Deen Freelon

 

Our guest for this episode (29 min. long) is Deen Freelon, an associate professor in the School of Media and Journalism at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.  His research ranges from political expression through digital media to data science to computational methods. He has also served as principal investigator on grants from the Knight Foundation, the Spencer Foundation and the US Institute of Peace. Not only does Deen make intellectual contributions to the fields of web science, communication studies, and more, but he also focuses on engaging and helping the general public with his insights.

In this conversation, Deen tells us why it is so important to incorporate identity into web science research, and how that has influenced his own work. That includes his recent article on Black-presenting trolls, and why disaggregating ideology from race was crucial to his insights. Deen also discusses the difference between disinformation and misinformation, as well as why there needs to be more research into left-leaning disinformation. And he describes what tools he’s created to help other researchers as well as the general public — coming up are developments to his “filter map” project. To hear about about all this and more, listen to the episode!

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 8: Data and Privacy with Alex “Sandy” Pentland

 

In this episode (25 min. long), we talk with Alex “Sandy” Pentland, who is one of the most cited web scholars at the crossroads of web science, network science, and computational social science. He’s a professor of Media Arts and Sciences at MIT, directs the MIT Connection Science Research Initiative, and heads MIT’s Human Dynamics Group, among other accomplishments. His work has pioneered organizational engineering, wearable computing, modern biometrics, and more.

In this conversation, Sandy brings insight to how data is the “new resource.” He talks about issues of data and privacy, as well as why people should have more control over their data. He also discusses what he learned in his study of signals and the mobile web, why wearable devices have a social dimension, and how the web can help respond to COVID-19. And he tells us the power of blockchain as the web evolves from not just a communication medium but also toward a transaction medium. To hear about this or more, listen to this episode!

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.

Episode 7: Work and the Web with Gina Neff

 

In this episode (22 min. long), we talk with Gina Neff, whose work focuses on…work! No, that’s not a typo — she’s actually a sociologist who studies how web-based technologies are shaping the changing nature of work. Gina is a professor of Technology & Society at the Oxford Internet Institute and the Department of Sociology at the University of Oxford, and has published three well-acclaimed books. 

In this conversation, Gina tells us about the cross between web science and work. She brings us through the early onset of the Web, discussing why an Internet industry would form in New York City, even though the Web is hypothetically worldwide. Part of the reason is that industries rely on social capital, which is easier built in person. That’s precisely the type of interactions that we’ve largely lost during the pandemic and work-from-home era. And Gina touches on this too, talking about work done over web meetings and potential privacy concerns if workers get tracked at home. To learn about all this and more, press play!

Click here for this episode’s transcript, and click here for this episode’s show notes.