Monday 25 March 2013

What Happens When Technology Converges?



As expressed in Lunenfeld's article our society is moving away from download based media towards upload based media.  Here he is describing how download based media was media that the audience has passively consumed and ‘downloaded’, whereas upload based media, demands the audiences participation to upload and create their own media.  He puts forth the idea that we are moving from a consumption model to a production model and describes television, which was once the main source of domesticated media, as “the high fructouse corn syrup of the imagination.”  This expresses how television requires no individual thought or imagination and instead the audience becomes sheep that passively consume what the advertisers paying want them to hear.  Uploading, on the other hand requires active audience participation which expands individuals opinions and knowledge of different forms of media.
As the Internet continues to expand we see how uploading for ourselves is possible more and more through the convergence of different types of media.  Take Facebook for example, what used to be simply a social media site to converse and keep up with friends, has turned into a website that connects video functions, audio functions, web pages for bands, movie stars and television shows and more functions that one could possibly hope to harness alone.  Like Sterne argues though, while its true we are able to upload for ourselves “our deepest commitments—to inclusion, equality and participation within a public—bind us to practices whereby we submit to global capital”.  In the example of Facebook, yes we are able to use the functions to our advantage, but we are still consuming main stream media and products by 'liking' the pages of television shows or other cultural product pages.  Corporations use social media that is based on active participation, to get people participating in what will make money for them in the long run.  So still in an era where active participation is encouraged, we are still essentially being controlled for the sake of consumerism.  This is however now the only way in which corporations can continue staying in business as forms of advertising on television have become less effective with the rise of the Internet.
Who would ever think that I would feel sorry for the large corporations that have been brainwashing my mind to consuming products but as the Internet is expanding towards new media, television, music, movie and advertising industries have needed to try extremely hard to keep the audience engaged in their products.  Since the age of “produsage” the music industry especially has been fighting hard for artists(and producers of course) to continue making money as it is now so easy to pirate songs of the Internet.  Similarly, movies and television shows are less consumed through businesses, and more so freely online with streaming and downloading website littering the Internet.  This being said, I am sure the corporations will find ways of continuing to make money, but they are going to have to exploit the new media that is continuing to emerge, such as through pages on Facebook.
 Everything is done online or on a computer now, and we are finding new ways to make the Internet accessible at all times, such as having it on phones or now on the iPad.  Technology has expanded so much that I would not be surprised if in the next 50 years that our use of paper could be completely erased and instead we will do all of our writing on individual iPad’s or something similar.  If the Internet and especially social media had not become so popular, I doubt that such technology would be created so quickly.  As Rheingold discusses it was the power of communities and connectivity, like Facebook, that are the heart of the digital era and not specific technology like the iPad. This of course would not be a bad thing as it would help the environment, but it just shows how much the Internet and the convergence of different types of media and technology have changed, and are continuing to change our every day lives.
            Through taking this course I have realized how many different tools for sharing your ideas are really on the Internet.  While I have always assumed that these sort of functions were possible given the immense library of apps and websites on the Internet, I had never before used them or thought of using them to spread my own ideas.  Now that I have had the opportunity to share my opinions on a virtual world I have to say that it feels good to see 775 pages views on my blog, a number that I would have thought unachievable for me, even if most of the views are my own classmates and professors.  The feeling that someone is actually reading and is interested in what I have to say makes me more inclined to continue to use forms of social media to do some of my own ‘uploading’.
 

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