User:Morvenjamieson

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Hi, I am Morven and I am contributing to a class project. Morvenjamieson (discusscontribs) 15:29, 26 February 2019 (UTC)

Wiki Excercise #1 - Online Visibility and Footprint[edit | edit source]

How visible are you online? What form does that visibility take? I am extremely visible online on social media. I have multiple social media accounts some of which are open and some which are private. The option to keep an account private is very important as it prevents people from viewing things I might not necessarily want them to be able to freely access.

How much of the information is under your control? I feel that all my information online is very much controlled by myself. I can choose to my knowledge who can see what I have and what I have not posted online.

How does the theme of Web 2.0 relate to my online presence? The idea of Web 2.0 relates to my online presence because


Wiki Excercise #2 - To what extent are my online and offline identities aligned?[edit | edit source]

How does the way that you present yourself online reflect who you are? Is your online presence very different from in person? The way in which I present myself in an online setting is refined and more exaggerated than my presence in person. I have the ability to filter more of my online identity than myself in person.


What similarities and differences do your online and offline identities have? My online and offline identities are similar in the respect that they both have the same interests. Certain interests or pages I like or follow on social media platforms transverse into my real life. For example, if I like a certain musician or follow them on a social media platform it is highly likely I will be listening to their music in a physical setting. One way my online identity differs is it has more interactions with people that I would not be able to converse within a face to face settings. For example, frequently I use messaging platforms to contact long-distance family and friends, such as Facebook Messenger, Snapchat and Instagram/Twitter direct messages.


Has your online identity changed over time? What are the differences? Why do identities change over time? Over a short period of time, my online identity has changed quite dramatically. I think this is due to the fact that there have been dramatic changes with social media platforms. I believe the main reason that my online identity has changed is due to the addition of 'stories' to social media, which I almost now use as a near daily photographic diary. This is something I would never have considered using years ago when I irregularly would post something basic online.


Do other people shape our identities? Does each of us really have one fixed identity, or are they multiple? I think other people have a huge impact on my identity, even subconsciously. If I see an online trend I am much more likely to follow it. For example, if a film is released and my friends are posting about it online chances are I am going to watch the film too.


@Morvenjamieson: I think you have answered these questions with a very real and honest approach and I do agree/relate with a lot of what you have said. I think it was important that you mentioned specifically how the social media platforms changed, therefore how you used the apps changed with it. It is good to identify how and why your use changed and has made me consider if the changes made to apps has also influenced my use of them. Digitalmedia2018 (discusscontribs) 15:57, 17 March 2019 (UTC)

Wiki Excercise #3 -Annotated Bibliography[edit | edit source]

The chapter ‘Web 2.0 Tools and Context’ explains what the key tools of Web 2.0 are and what the potential use of these tools is in a corporate setting could be. ‘Web 2.0 Tools and Context’ aims to show how these tools can be used directly by users. This chapter scopes to show how Web 2.0 tools should be seen as a set of configurable components rather than individual components. It discusses the concept of Web 2.0, blogs, microblogging, wikis, social tagging, RSS (Really Simple Syndication), social networking, semantic web, mashups and combining web 2.0 tools into a system for work. This is useful to current web 2.0 research as it shows a clear link to the web 2.0 subject and explains basic information about the expansion of web 2.0. The limitations of this chapter are that it is short so cannot show a full scope of web 2.0 as a fully researched area. This chapter effectively explains the main technological advances of web 2.0 and their effectiveness. Morvenjamieson (discusscontribs) 16:18, 13 March 2019 (UTC)

Wiki Excercise #4 Social Movements In Digital Culture[edit | edit source]