Hapgood

Mike Caulfield's latest web incarnation. Networked Learning, Open Education, and Online Digital Literacy


  • Pictures from Pinterest

    I’ve been looking at political culture on Pinterest. I pulled these images from my feed today. Apologies that there are so many from the right and none from the left — that’s just what came up today. Political culture on Pinterest tends towards the Republican side of things (I’m training another Pinterest account to feed Continue reading

  • Assignment: Knife-Carrying Odinga Supporter

    There is currently unrest in Kenya over the Kenyan Supreme Court’s certification of results of a disputed election. A number of people have been killed in protests. There is some dispute around how many have died, but estimates range from five to eighteen. The police maintain that mobs in support of the opposition candidate have Continue reading

  • Traces #33: Pizza Laundering

    Originally sent on Nov 21, 2017 via Tinyletter. Your Autocracy Will Be Laundered Pizzagate: Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal. I’ve talked before about how most discussion of free speech and disinformation is stuck in a centralized model that ignores the current multi-agent process by which the fake is laundered into the real. This article Continue reading

  • Traces #32: Hall of Mirrors

    For some reason Tiny Letter’s archive is not showing the latest newsletter, so I am putting it here for safe-keeping. You can read other previous newsletters here, and also sign up to receive them by email. Global Potemkin Village A new NATO Stratcom report on social media-based disinformation is out. I haven’t finished it, but Continue reading

  • Digital Polarization on Pinterest Is Scary Aggressive

    The speed with which Pinterest radicalizes your feed with conspiracy-based disinfo is shocking. I speed up this video by 400% but the entire process takes less than 13 minutes I think. Here’s the final frame. I got here without taking a single explicit antivax action (e.g. I didn’t follow any antivax boards): Please watch the Continue reading

  • Traces #31: Mobile Misinformation

    First published Nov. 10, 2017 at TinyLetter Free Speech Is Like Free Markets. Broken. A New York courtroom gave every detained immigrant a lawyer. The results were staggering. This piece from Vox is about the sixth amendment of the U.S. constitution (the right to a lawyer) but is a good lens for the first amendment as Continue reading

  • Assignment: Is This Really Pew?

    The Pew Research Center is a good source of information on many issues; much of our current public debate is informed by data they collect. So here’s a question: is the site at people-press.org really Pew? Or is it an imposter? How do you know?   Continue reading

  • Climate-based Web Literacy Activity

    Some materials here for a web literacy presentation to students dealing with climate. The Stream Evaluating Search Results Here’s some searches. As usual, we use questions, while noting questions are not a great way to search the web. These searches have been chosen because they are at least partially problematic. Will the Thames freeze over Continue reading

  • Traces Newsletter #23: The Mobilization State

    Last night’s newsletter today. If you like the newsletter you should sign up here, as sometimes I post these here and sometimes I don’t. No main story this time. Please note a new edition to our format — some stories are marked “evolving”. These are stories which have caught my interest, but where the story Continue reading

  • How To Participate In Digipo (September 2017 version)

    Every time I say I can’t make it easier to participate in Digipo, I find a way to make it easier. The current process involves no skills greater than knowing how to work a word processor, and (more importantly) allows students to participate anonymously if they wish, without having to sign up for Google accounts Continue reading