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UID:20260415T231603CEST-30612rc6uX@http://www2.movingimage.us
DTSTAMP:20260415T211603Z
DESCRIPTION:\n	MoMI is pleased to collaborate with Theorizing the Web on an
  ongoing biweekly series of events. In the first installment\, we present 
 two provocative explorations of how online platforms can reinforce asymmet
 ries of privilege and power. In “‘What Is Nextdoor For?’ Spaces of Imagini
 ng and Politics of Performing Community\,” Keli Gabinelli investigates how
  the online platform Nextdoor demonstrates the way that imagined communiti
 es online are sustained through mechanisms of exclusion. Then\, in “The Mo
 ralization of Predictivity in the Age of Data-Driven Surveillance\,” Sun-h
 a Hong examines post-9/11 counterterrorism surveillance\, and the longstan
 ding biases and prejudices inherent in data-driven efforts to predict and 
 preempt acts of terrorism. The discussions will be moderated by Zach Kaise
 r\, followed by an audience Q&amp\;A. \n\n\n	Join the conversation. \n\n\n
 	About the speakers: \n\n\n	Keli Gabinelli is a 2017 Master's graduate of 
 New York University's Media\, Culture &amp\; Communication department. Sin
 ce leaving the Big Apple\, she's relocated to Santa Cruz\, California\, wh
 ere she works as a Media Activist for the watchdog organization Media Watc
 h. \n\n\n	Sun-ha Hong (@sunhahong) examines speculations and fantasies sur
 rounding big data and smart machines. His book Technologies of Speculation
 : The Limits of Knowledge in a data-driven Society (NYU Press\, 2020) trac
 es shifting standards of knowledge and certainty in the age of data-driven
  surveillance. Sun-ha is Assistant Professor of Communication at Simon Fra
 ser University.\n\n\n	Zachary Kaiser (@ZacharyKaiser) is Associate Profess
 or of Graphic Design and Experience Architecture at Michigan State Univers
 ity. His current body of research questions the ideologies embedded in the
  design of technological products and services with which we interact and 
 the impact of these ideologies on human intersubjectivity. \n\n
DTSTART:20200826T140000
DTEND:20200826T150000
LOCATION:Museum of the Moving Image
SUMMARY:Theorizing the Web Presents: Watching Me\, Watching You
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