Social Networks
#ff @HealthJusticeCT @LorenBonner @CHCradio @CTHealth @LeeAase @pfanderson @LudloweRehab @Jordanfenster @jayparkinson
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/10/2011 - 16:50Well, yesterday was the Weitzman Symposium which has taken up a lot of my focus. I tweeted a bit of the conference and had some good discussions. So, for today’s FollowFriday, let me list a few of them
@HealthJusticeCT is an interesting group focused on health disparity issues. @LorenBonner is the producer for @CHCRadio She listened into the stream, as well as some of the #healthapps discussion in DC.
@LeeAase is the Director of the Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media. @pfanderson is an longtime friend online. I believe we first met via Second Life and that she is involved with the Social Media Health Network along with Lee and myself.
@LudloweRehab retweeted when we came back from lunch, and I appreciate that. I haven’t been following them, but I’ll keep my eyes open for what they have to say.
I also want to shout out to @Jordanfenster who tweeted about our live streaming. Thanks, Jordan.
To end things off, I want to mention @jayparkinson who ended off the Weitzman Symposium. It was a great presentation.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 06/08/2011 - 17:24Anthony Weiner and Andrew Breitbart: Sexting and Cyberbullying
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 06/07/2011 - 08:32We all look at the news from our own contexts and through our own filters. I’ve been thinking about this a bit recently in terms of the recent news about Congressman Anthony Weiner sending lewd pictures over the internet. On the Social Media Health Network, there has been a discussion about this which seems to focus on public relations and the use of Twitter. It is an important way of looking at what has happened and relates well with my job at the Community Health Center. Yet I have a slightly different, but related framework to look at this with.
Back in March, the American Academy of Pediatricians released a clinical report, The Impact of Social Media on Children, Adolescents, and Families. One of the key recommendations of the report is that
the AAP encourages all pediatricians to increase their knowledge of digital technology so that they can have a more educated frame of reference for the tools their patients and families are using, which will aid in providing timely anticipatory media guidance as well as diagnosing media-related issues should they arise.
The press release about the clinical report has this to say:
because tweens and teens have a limited capacity for self-regulation and are susceptible to peer pressure, they are at some risk as they engage in and experiment with social media, according to the report. They can find themselves on sites and in situations that are not age-appropriate, and research suggests that the content of some social media sites can influence youth to engage in risky behaviors. In addition, social media provides venues for cyberbullying and sexting, among other dangers
It appears that it is not only tweens and teens that have a limited capacity for self-regulation. Some would suggest it applies to most politicians and media personalities as well.
A second part of the framework I’m looking at Congressman Weiner’s behavior from is Marc Prensky’s Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants. The key idea is that adolescents today have grown up in a digital culture. They are digital natives. They are used to thinking about everything happening online. They may still make bad choices or not fully understand the possible consequences of their online actions, but they are growing up digitally.
Older adults have not grown up in a digital world, and are digital immigrants.
As Digital Immigrants learn – like all immigrants, some better than others – to adapt to their environment, they always retain, to some degree, their "accent," that is, their foot in the past. The “digital immigrant accent” can be seen in such things as turning to the Internet for information second rather than first.
Congressman Weiner has not grown up in a world where cyberbullying and sexting are normal parts of adolescence, and I suspect that those who have grown up digitally may see the recent news very differently from digital immigrants.
Congressman Weiner was a popular guy in the progressive clique. He participated in sexting. A cyberbully from the teaparty clique, Andrew Breitbart, did what cyberbullies do. They capitalize on a mistake their enemies have made and spread it around the internet as widely as possible. It isn’t a lot different than what is happening in high schools around the country, except that these people are congressmen and media personalities.
We need better education about the dangers of sexting and cyberbullying. Apparently, we need it not only for tweens and teens but also for Congressmen and media personalities.
Social Music
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/05/2011 - 21:00Music, like other forms of media is very social, from the mix tapes of my youth to the social media tools of today. This weekend, I started thinking about where we are with social media. For a long time, I’ve used Pandora and Last.fm I’ve liked tools that have mashed up Last.fm and Pandora as well as listed music I’ve played on my N900 on Last.fm. However, there have been some interesting developments since I started playing with Pandora and Last.fm. I just wish I could find an app that would scrobble the tunes I’m listening to on a Pandora android app to Last.fm
What got me thinking about this is over the weekend, I noticed a lot of my friends posting YouTube music videos on their Facebook Wall. I started adding them to a playlist on YouTube. With that, I can then play the playlist on my cellphone or on my Roku Player. (Yes, I loaded the YouTube Private Channel before it got shutdown, and I hope to use it until Roku and Google work out their issues and make YouTube fully supported).
Of course, I started thinking about how it would be nice if I could just click on the video to more easily add it to my Social Music playlist on YouTube, similar to the way you can get Last.fm to save information about music you’ve listened to or easily like songs on Pandora. Perhaps someone will come up with a nice way of doing this.
I also took a quick look at Vevo. So far, I am very unimpressed with it. It won’t allow me to upload my avatar and won’t save a bunch of my settings. Most of the music seems way to mainstream for my tastes, and I couldn’t find a way to associate my online profile to the Vevo Android app.
Meanwhile, music is moving to the cloud. The Last.fm app on the Android doesn’t seem to scrobble music from Amazon’s MP3 cloud. Perhaps that will get fixed at some time. However, Amazon’s MP3 cloud really hasn’t caught my attention. I’ve thought about experimenting with Ubuntu One, but it costs $3.99 a month to have mobile access, and it just isn’t worth that much.
So, what are you doing to share music?
#ff Roulette
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/03/2011 - 21:17@g4c @criana @jcstearns @sbc111 @JRStratford @MatthewBrowning @damfino11
For this week’s Follow Friday post, I have decided to play #ff roulette. Currently, I follow about 2900 different people on Twitter. Every week, I try to find some interesting way of highlighting some of the people I follow. Today, I’m just randomly picking some of the people who are tweeting as I write this post.
Starting off the list is @g4c. “Founded in 2004, Games for Change is the leading global advocate for supporting and making games for social impact” Years ago, I used to make it to the G4C conferences, but I’ve been too busy to go in recent years.
Next up is @criana. I’m not sure if I’ve ever met her face to face, but she’s from Connecticut and makes websites and I believe we met online through Connecticut related social media.
Third is @jcstearns. Josh is works for FreePress.org which is a great organization and Josh has a lot of important things to say about media.
Next is @sbc111. I’ve met @sbc111 at various social media events around Connecticut. He’s a good Microsoft oriented geek and an interesting guy.
I believe that I met @JRStratford through Podcamp Western Mass.
Another Connecticut person shows up in #ff Roulette, and that’s @MatthewBrowning. I’ve met him through various social media events, and he’s got a strong interest in health care social media.
Ending of the list for this week is @damfino11. He’s from Western Mass and I believe I met him at the Podcamp WesternMass.
That’s it for this week.