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Archives: Social Media

All the News That Fits — What’s Really Driving Altmetric’s Top 100 Articles List?

The Altmetric “flower” is an icon, and the annual Top 100 list a much-anticipated event. But is the flower really a stalk?

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Dec 13, 2017
  • 13 Comments
  • Time To Read: 5 mins

Book Review: “The New Analog” by Damon Krukowski

Is “signal” meaningful in the absence of “noise”? Damon Krukowski asks what important things have been lost in our transition from analog to digital media in his book, “The New Analog”.

  • By David Crotty
  • Nov 14, 2017
  • 2 Comments
  • Time To Read: 4 mins

Puppetmasters — Who Is Pulling the Strings in the New Information Economy?

Information manipulation is not new, yet everything is different. How do governments, preprints, algorithms, and our own responsibilities intersect? Where does peer review come in now?

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Nov 13, 2017
  • 6 Comments
  • Time To Read: 8 mins

Guest Post — Academics and Copyright Ownership: Ignorant, Confused or Misled?

Elizabeth Gadd takes a look at the contradictions between scholarly culture and copyright culture, and the cognitive dissonance created.

  • By Elizabeth Gadd
  • Oct 31, 2017
  • 27 Comments
  • Time To Read: 8 mins

Book Review — “World Without Mind,” by Franklin Foer

Franklin Foer’s new book is a bracing account of the current information economy, the monopolies and motivations at its heart, and the weakening of democratized knowledge.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Oct 30, 2017
  • 5 Comments
  • Time To Read: 6 mins

“Technology is Not Neutral” — How Online Companies Manipulate Billions of Minds

A former Google employee explains the tricks that online companies use to manipulate users and suggests there’s a better way.

  • By David Crotty
  • Oct 27, 2017
  • 4 Comments
  • Time To Read: < 1 min

Guest Post — Does ResearchGate Emerge Unscathed, or Even Strengthened?

Librarian Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe offers thoughts on where the ongoing clash between scholarly publishers and ResearchGate may end up.

  • By Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe
  • Oct 26, 2017
  • 30 Comments
  • Time To Read: 7 mins

Building Healthy Online Communities — An Interview with Rachel Happe

Community management has become a key part of social media and online publishing, whether we realize it or not. In this interview, an expert in the fields shares some views of how organizations can benefit from a more singular focus.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Oct 24, 2017
  • 3 Comments
  • Time To Read: 6 mins

The Facebooking of Scholarly Research

The search tools and social networks we increasingly rely on are all dependent on advertising-based business models. What does this mean for scholarly communication?

  • By David Crotty
  • Oct 12, 2017
  • 15 Comments
  • Time To Read: 5 mins

About Face — Scholarly Publishing and Social Media Regulation

A possible consequence of moves to more tightly regulate social media companies may be they start looking for new investments. And they already have some in scholarly publishing.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Oct 3, 2017
  • 8 Comments
  • Time To Read: 6 mins

Technology as the New Tobacco

Comedian Bill Maher draws a disturbing parallel between social media and cigarettes.

  • By David Crotty
  • Sep 29, 2017
  • 5 Comments
  • Time To Read: < 1 min

The End of Summer and Musings on Nostalgia in an Age of Abundance

We’re taking the last week of summer off. To hold you over, a brief book review, some rare concert footage and some musings on memory and storytelling.

  • By David Crotty
  • Aug 28, 2017
  • 6 Comments
  • Time To Read: 3 mins

Revisiting: Why Technology Will Not Get Cheaper

Revisiting Kent Anderson’s 2016 post on the ever-increasing costs of digital publishing.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Aug 24, 2017
  • 2 Comments
  • Time To Read: 6 mins

Trouble at Hand — How Mobile Devices Perpetuate Weak Business Models

The rise of mobile is cementing business model expectations and driving new monopolies, but the ethics, incentives, and consequences of these models need to be considered.

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Jul 24, 2017
  • 20 Comments
  • Time To Read: 6 mins

The Trance of Dysfunction — Why Trolls Have Come to Dominate Discourse

Trolls dominate for many reasons — economics, technology, our predilection for sordid entertainment. But they’ve chilled online discourse and damaged civil exchanges, even making some publishers reluctant to take full advantage of the potential of the Internet. Are we ready for v2.0 of commenting?

  • By Kent Anderson
  • Jul 10, 2017
  • 11 Comments
  • Time To Read: 7 mins

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The mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is to advance scholarly publishing and communication, and the professional development of its members through education, collaboration, and networking. SSP established The Scholarly Kitchen blog in February 2008 to keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing.

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