Search results for "VDP::Medievitenskap og journalistikk: 310"

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What a Friend We Have in Facebook : Norwegian Christian Churches’ Use of Social Media

2021

This study examines how Christian churches in Norway use social media. The key finding is that the churches do not take extensive advantage of the opportunities for two-way communication offered by the platforms, but primarily use their social media channels to promote church activities or broadcast content without inviting a dialogue. Based on the churches’ own stated appreciation for building relationships, as well as existing research from media and communication studies, media and religion studies, and studies within strategic communication, this article argues for a stronger focus on the ritual and relational aspects of online communication from the church organizations. Pais Open Acce…

Digitale medierbusiness.industryCommunicationReligious studiesMedia studiesKommunikasjonNorwegianVDP::Medievitenskap og journalistikk: 310Medialisation of religionlanguage.human_languagePeer reviewDigital mediaVDP::Media studies and journalism: 310TheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESMediealisering av religionKey (cryptography)languageDigital communicationSocial mediaSociologyDigital kommunikasjonbusinessDigital media
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Critical Incidents in Journalism: Pivotal Moments Reshaping Journalism around the World [Bokanmeldelse]

2022

Paid open access

JournalismVDP::Medievitenskap og journalistikk: 310JournalistikkVDP::Media studies and journalism: 310
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(Re)creating “society in silico” : surveillance capitalism, simulations and subjectivity in the Cambridge Analytica data scandal

2021

This article provides a different angle to understand the Cambridge Analytica (CA) data scandal. It focuses on the role of models and simulations in the big data campaigning tools CA allegedly used, and their epistemological and ontological potential to produce and reproduce voters' digital doubles that would first colonise and eventually replace the analogue selves they were related to. By integrating and revising Zuboff's surveillance capitalism framework with Debord's classic theory of the Spectacle, the article argues that the dystopian simulations played as real life experiments by surveillance capitalist firms such as CA have the ultimate goal of replacing analogue humanity with digit…

Political science (General)spectacledigital democracysubjectivitysurveillancecapitalismdigitalisationVDP::Medievitenskap og journalistikk: 310simulationJA1-92VDP::Media studies and journalism: 310
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