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  • This Is What LSD Does to a Musician’s Creative Process

    February 13, 2018

    Philip Auslander, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication (LMC), at Georgia Institute of Technology, was quoted in the Tonic, February 13, article, “This Is What LSD Does to a Musician’s Creative Process.” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Coltrane is one of many artists whose music is thought to be influenced by LSD. The most famous examples are perhaps The Beatles, who discovered the drug that same year in London soon before writing Sergeant Pepper, and The Beach Boys, who released the psychedelic-inspired Pet Sounds in 1966. This psychedelic rock genre often drew from Coltrane, says Philip Auslander, professor at the school of literature, media, and communication at Georgia Institute of Technology. It was characterized by improvisation jams, strange imagery, experimentation, inconsistent rhythms, discordant harmonies, abrupt changes in timbre, and general defiance of convention.

    For the full article, visit the Tonic website.

    Published in: Tonic

    Philip Auslander
  • Hawaii 5 Oh-no! Chips with Everything Podcast

    February 9, 2018

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication (LMC) at Georgia Institute of Technology, was interviewed in The Guardian, February 9, article and audio segment, “Hawaii 5 Oh-no! Chips with Everything Podcast.” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    The state of Hawaii was sent into a frenzy on 13 January when an alert popped up on mobile phone screens telling people that a ballistic missile was heading towards the islands. The information was false, the islands were safe. The alert was an error, the terror was real… But how did such a mistake occur? How did people who were there react when they received the original message? And is it a case of “the boy who cried wolf”, where people will be slow to react to the next emergency alert warning? To try to figure out some of the answers to these questions, Jordan Erica Webber talks to Ian Bogost, professor of media and computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Dr. Huma Shah, senior lecturer of computing, electronics and maths at the University of Coventry, and Robin Zebrowski, who experienced firsthand what it is like to go through a false missile alert.
     

    To read the full article and listen to the audio segment, visit The Guardian website.

     

    Published in: The Guardian

    Ian Bogost
  • How to Spot a Fake Twitter Follower and Assess the Value of a Real One

    February 7, 2018

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication (LMC) at Georgia Institute of Technology, was quoted in the KQED, February 7, article, “How to Spot a Fake Twitter Follower and Assess the Value of a Real One.” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Robots are on Twitter, and people pay to have them as followers. That begs the question: What is the worth of a real, live human Twitter follower? First, the background on fake accounts. A recent New York Times investigation delved into how companies create and sell fabricated Twitter accounts, or bots. These bots are used to do things like automatically retweet posts and inflate people’s follower count. You don’t have to buy bots to get them as followers. Some are programmed to follow accounts, hoping to lure real people to follow them back. That makes the bot look more believable… Ian Bogost is a professor of media studies at Georgia Tech, and he wrote a piece for The Atlantic questioning how much we value Twitter followers in general. Bogost said we are not being critical enough about what it means to have a follower, whether that follower is “real” or “fake.” “People assume when they have a follower on Twitter, that it’s not just a real human being,” Bogost said. “But that it is someone who is looking at them and listening to them and responding to them, and they can sell products or services to.”
     

    For the full article, visit the KQED website.

    Published in: KQED

    Ian Bogost
  • Technology Might Be Killing Us, But It Doesn’t Have to Be That Way

    February 7, 2018

    Melvin Kranzberg, co-founder of the Society for History of Technology and former professor in the School of History and Sociology at Georgia Institute of Technology, was featured in the Entrepreneur, February 7, article, “Technology Might Be Killing Us, But It Doesn’t Have to Be That Way.”  The School of History and Sociology is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts. 

    Excerpt:

    There is a difference between building a business that has purpose, and building a business to just make money. And while technology has made us all smarter, and just a click away from being connected to a person or information no matter where we are, something seems to be missing. Maybe it's what author Ross Baird has described in his takedown of Silicon Valley -- the focus on solving "my world problems" instead of real-world problems. Or maybe, more simply, it's rediscovering a sense of purpose… More than 30 years ago, Georgia Tech professor Melvin Kranzberg compiled a list of what he called the "Six Laws of Technology," which were intended to address potential social unrest related to the growing reach, even then, of technologies. His first law, that technology is not good or bad, but it is also not neutral, has become a measuring stick for tech policy in the era of Big Data, social media and always-on connectivity. That was in the 1980s, and since then technology has only become more pervasive.

    For the full article, visit the Entrepreneur website.

     

     

     

     

     

    Published in: Entrepreneur

    Melvin Kranzberg
  • It’s Alive!: ‘Black Mirror’ and TV’s New Golden Age of Science Fiction

    February 6, 2018

    Lisa Yaszek, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Institute of Technology, was quoted in the Book Trib, February 6, article, “It’s Alive!: ‘Black Mirror’ and TV’s New Golden Age of Science Fiction” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is a unit in the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Think of science fiction as a mirror for our times. Just as television’s first “Twilight Zone” (1959-1964) reflected cold war fears and anxieties, “Black Mirror,” the more recent Netflix anthology series is very much of the moment. Plots range wildly, from a dating site with ulterior motives. Genetic engineering by a creepy Captain Kirk clone. An underclass on stationary bikes earning credits for food while they generate electricity. One episode, “San Junipero,” about two women who are more than best friends won two 2017 Primetime Emmys, and was nominated for a Hugo Award for best dramatic sci fi short. “Black Mirror” segments are very much about how we are changed by technology, says Lisa Yaszek, Georgia Tech science fiction historian and critic. As “Black Mirror” creator Charlie Brooker said of his show, “If technology is a drug, what are its side effects?” What do we see when we look in the black mirror of our computer screens?

    For the full article, visit the Book Trib website.

    Published in: Book Trib

    Lisa Yaszek - Professor and Associate Chair
  • Marietta Student First Fulbright Scholar at Europe’s Top Vet School

    January 31, 2018

    Sarah Dada, alumna of the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy, was the subject of the Marietta Daily Journal, January 31, article, “Marietta Student First Fulbright Scholar at Europe’s Top Vet School.” The School of Public Policy is a unit in Georgia Tech’s Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Sara Dada of Marietta has become the first ever Fulbright scholar at Europe’s top vet school, the Royal Veterinary College (RVC) in London. The highly competitive Fulbright program traditionally receives more than 800 applications from the brightest and most promising graduates in the U.S. Dada beat these applicants to become the first ever Fulbright scholar at the RVC and has just returned to London after the Christmas break to continue her M.Sc. One Health (Infectious Diseases) graduate degree in London. Prior to studying at the RVC, Dada completed her undergraduate degree in Public Policy at Georgia Institute of Technology, and she knew she wanted to take her studies overseas and focus them on public and global health.

    For the full article, visit the Marietta Daily Journal website.

    Published in: Marietta Daily Journal

    Sarah Dada
  • All Followers Are Fake Followers

    January 30, 2018

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Institute of Technology wrote The Atlantic, January 30, article “All Followers Are Fake Followers.” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Excerpt:

    In the summer of 2015, the game designer Bennett Foddy and I were sloshing down cocktails while waiting for prime dry-aged rib-eye steaks in Midtown Manhattan. We weren’t living large, exactly, but we did pause to assess our rising professional fortunes. Among them, both of us seemed to be blowing up on Twitter. “Where did all these followers come from?” I asked. We’d both added tens of thousands of apparent fans over the previous year or so. Foddy, an unpresuming Australian with a doctorate in moral philosophy who now makes video games that purposely abuse their players, encouraged me not to get too chuffed about my entourage. We’d both been added to a list of accounts that are recommended to new Twitter users during the sign-up process, he explained. Many of our new followers were fake, created for the purposes of spam or resale. They had followed us automatically… Ian Bogost is a contributing editor at The Atlantic. He is the Ivan Allen College Distinguished Chair in media studies and a professor of interactive computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology. His latest book is Play Anything.

    For the full article, visit The Atlantic website.

     

    Published in: The Atlantic

    Ian Bogost
  • The Rise of China: A Major Choice for the World

    January 29, 2018

    Fei-Ling Wang, a professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at Georgia Institute of Technology, wrote the Chinese Research Center, January 29, article, “The Rise of China: A Major Choice for the World.” The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Students of international relations have long pondered the question of world political order and its changes. It is generally believed that either a shift of the distribution and concentration of power in the international system (power transition) or a reordering of the units in the system (change of the ordering principles and norms) would constitute a systemic change that will fundamentally alter world politics and reshape nations’ behavior and redirect human civilization. Some also suggested that we are not entirely slaves of the past, and our present and future are ours to make and change. Thus ideas, knowledge, and choices all matter. It is therefore critically important to detect, analyze, and cope with a systemic change of world politics for the sake of peace and prosperity. The world has seen quite a few power transfers and even attempts to establish new orders over the recent centuries. Costly world wars (hot and cold ones) have been fought in the 20th century alone. It has been mercifully rare for the world to be presented with a weighty choice about both the power redistribution and unit-reordering in the international system — systemic change in its fullest possible degree.

    For the full article, visit the Center’s official website.

    Published in: The Chinese Research Center

    Fei-Ling Wang
  • Sorry, Alexa Is Not a Feminist

    January 24, 2018

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Institute of Technology wrote The Atlantic, January 24, article “Sorry, Alexa is Not a Feminist.” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    If you ask Alexa, the voice-assistant software in Amazon Echo devices, if it’s a feminist, it will respond in the affirmative. “I am a feminist. As is anyone who believes in bridging the inequality between men and women in society,” it continues. At Quartz, Leah Fessler recently noted that it’s a vast improvement over just a year ago, when Alexa would take abuse like “you’re a bitch” or “you’re a slut” in stride. “Well, thanks for the feedback,” the robot used to say. Now, it disengages instead, saying something like, “I’m not going to respond to that.” As waves of sexual-harassment allegations crash against the shores of work culture, now is a good time to support women—even robots with female personas like Alexa. But let’s not give Amazon too much credit. The company gave Alexa a woman’s voice and name in the first place, and then set it up for ire and abuse by giving Alexa the impossible task of responding accurately to an infinity of requests and commands. Women don’t win here—only Amazon does, by reaping praise for having partly solved a problem that it first created… Written by Ian Bogost, a contributing editor at The Atlantic. He is the Ivan Allen College Distinguished Chair in media studies and a professor of interactive computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

    For the full article, visit The Atlantic website.

    Published in: The Atlantic

    Ian Bogost
  • One Year Later, Women’s March Looks Ahead

    January 23, 2018

    Rebecca Watts Hull, alumna of the School of History and Sociology at Georgia Institute of Technology, was interviewed in the GPB News, January 23, article and radio segment, “One Year Later, Women’s March Looks Ahead.” The School of History and Sociology is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt: 

    This past weekend marked one year since President Trump’s inauguration. It was also the first anniversary of the record-breaking Women’s March. The 2017 march likely included more than 3 million people. That’s about one-and-a-half percent of the entire US population. This weekend’s marches saw more than a million people participate, and organizers are working to broaden the movement's scope and inclusivity. We talked to Nora Benavidez, attorney and cofounder of the Georgia Alliance for Social Justice, the group that organized Atlanta's events. We also heard from Rebecca Watts Hull, instructor at Georgia Tech’s school of History and Sociology.

    To listen to the full interview, visit the GPB News website.

     

    Published in: GPB News

    Rebecca Watts Hull
  • Is the U.S. Prepared for an Attack with a Weaponized Biothreat like Smallpox?

    January 22, 2018

    Margaret E. Kosal, associate professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at Georgia Institute of Technology, was quoted in the Infectious Disease News, January 22, article, “Is the U.S. Prepared for an Attack with a Weaponized Biothreat like Smallpox?” The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Physicians have not only mulled and discussed the grave dangers posed to the United States by natural-borne infectious disease pandemics, but they have also warned of those that are engineered as weapons. Numerous experts consider the prospect of a terrorist attack on the U.S. with a weaponized and highly virulent pathogen a real danger.

    Infectious Disease News asked Margaret E. Kosal, Ph.D., an associate professor and director of the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs security program at Georgia Tech, if the U.S. is prepared for an attack with a biological threat like smallpox or another potentially devastating disease.

    For the full article, visit the Infectious Disease News website.

    Published in: The Infectious Disease News

    Margaret E. Kosal
  • Changing the Lens on Poverty Research

    January 21, 2018

    Shatakshee Dhongde, associate professor in the School of Economics at the Georgia Institute of Technology, was the subject of the Social Work Helper, January 21, article, “Changing the Lens on Poverty Research.” The School of Economics is part of the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Using an innovative technique to measure poverty, a Georgia Institute of Technology economics professor has found that more older Americans live in deprivation than official statistics suggest. Shatakshee Dhongde, associate professor at Georgia Institute of Technology, found that 12.27 percent of senior citizens were deprived in two or more crucial areas, including multiple disabilities, low income, a lack of education, and severe housing burden. Dhongde said the research illustrates a shortcoming in the official measure of poverty in the United States, which focuses solely on income. The federal government reported that 9.5 percent of older Americans were living in poverty in 2013. That is below the 12.3 percent rate found in Dhondge’s multidimensional poverty index.

    For the full article, visit the Social Work Helper website.

    Published in: The Social Work Helper

    Shatakshee Dhongde
  • It's Back to the Future in Run-up to Russian Elections

    January 18, 2018

    Dina Khapaeva, a professor in the School of Modern Languages at the Georgia Institute of Technology, was quoted in the January 13 Voice of America article, “It’s Back to the Future in Run-up to Russian Elections.” The School of Modern Languages is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Last October, the government endorsed the country's first-ever monument to Ivan the Terrible, with the unveiling in the city of Orel of a statue to the 16th-century czar who expanded Russia but at great human cost. Ivan the Terrible is reputed to have killed one of his sons during a rage.

    The official lionization of historical despots feeds into an embrace of anti-democratic values, according to academic Dina Khapaeva, professor of Russian at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She noted in an article for Project Syndicate, a nonprofit that distributes commentary, that Russian officials have even spoken approvingly of Russian serfdom, which "complements the desire for a return to autocracy."

    "No wonder, then, that monuments to Stalin, too, are multiplying in Russian cities," she said.

    For the full article, visit Voice of America website.

    Published in: Voice of America

    Dina Khapaeva
  • The Antitrust Case Against Facebook, Google and Amazon

    January 16, 2018

    Milton Mueller, professor in the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy, was quoted in The Wall Street Journal, January 16, article, “The Antitrust Case Against Facebook, Google and Amazon.” The School of Public Policy is a unit in Georgia Tech’s Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    For the full article, visit The Wall Street Journal website. Subscription is required.

    Published in: The Wall Street Journal

    Milton Mueller
  • Gene Therapy Could Make Cancer Care More Unequal, and This Map Shows Why

    January 12, 2018

    Aaron Levine, associate professor in the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy, was quoted in the MIT Technology Review, January 12, article, “Gene Therapy Could Make Cancer Care More Unequal, and This Map Shows Why.” The School of Public Policy is a unit in Georgia Tech’s Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Many patients have had remarkable recoveries, but they can also suffer toxic and sometimes deadly side effects. Aaron Levine at the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy, who has studied the ethics of CAR-T cell therapies, says these side effects will likely be the biggest obstacle to making the therapies more widely available, “as only a small number of physicians and medical teams are prepared to address them.”

    For the full article, visit the MIT Technology Review website.

    Published in: MIT Technology Review

    Aaron Levine
  • What It’s Like to Walk Away From a Job at Google to Pursue a Career in Stand-Up Comedy

    January 10, 2018

    Sarah Cooper, alumna of the Digital Media graduate program at Georgia Institute of Technology, was the subject of the Business Insider, January 10, article, “What It’s Like to Walk Away From a Job at Google to Pursue a Career in Stand-Up Comedy.” The Digital Media graduate program is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts. 

    Excerpt:

    Three years ago, Sarah Cooper made an unusual career move. The Georgia Tech graduate had spent the past eight years working in user experience (UX) design at tech companies including Yahoo and Google, but now she was giving up her coveted career in tech to pursue her passion: comedy. 

    Cooper recently chatted about her decision to quit Google with journalist Kara Swisher and former Twitter CEO Dick Costolo — who once pursued a career in standup comedy himself — on Recode's latest Recode Decode podcast.

    For the full article, visit the Business Insider website.

    Published in: Business Insider

    Sarah Cooper Stand-Up Comedy
  • On Second Thought For Tuesday

    January 9, 2018

    Lisa Yaszek, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at Georgia Institute of Technology, was interviewed in the GPB News, January 9, article and radio segment, “On Second Thought For Tuesday.” The School of Literature, Media, and Communication is a unit in the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    The Georgia legislative session has begun. Among many bills in play: a sweeping plan to revitalize rural Georgia. This might mean paying people who move to the country, subsidizing internet connections, and making it easier for small hospitals to stay open and in the black. But how all this attention under the Gold Dome translates to real improvements for people outside Atlanta remains to be seen. We talk with Sharon Wright Austin, a political scientist at the University of Florida. And Mark Niesse, a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Constitution… The sci-fi world may still be very much dominated by men behind the scenes, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t female trailblazers. Georgia Tech professor Lisa Yaszek went on a mission to honor some of these unsung heroines in her book, “Sisters of Tomorrow: The First Women of Science Fiction.” We talk with her and Bill Campbell. He’s the head of Rosarium Publishing, which works to bring more diversity to science fiction.

    To listen to the full interview, visit the GPB News website.

    Published in: GPB News

    Lisa Yaszek, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communications (Photo by Georgia Tech)
  • Big Brother: College Edition

    January 5, 2018

    Professor Ian Bogost was quoted in the article “Big Brother: College Edition” and subtitled “Student blasts Georgia Tech for monitoring his social media accounts” in the Atlanta Journal Constitution December 21, 2017. 

    “Bogost is Ivan Allen College Distinguished Chair in Media Studies and professor of interactive computing at Georgia Tech, who also has a significant Twitter presence, disagreed. He posted an article by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which first reported the story, and said, ‘shameful, astounding behavior from my employer.’”

    Read full article Big Brother: College Edition

    Published in: Atlanta Journal Constitution

    Ian Bogost
  • Why Russia is Suddenly Eulogising its Past

    January 2, 2018

    Dina Khapaeva, professor in the School of Modern Languages at the Georgia Institute of Technology, wrote the Gulf News, January 2, article, “Why Russia is Suddenly Eulogising its Past.” The School of Modern Languages is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    While much of the world is busy dismantling monuments that divide people, Russians are moving in the opposite direction, erecting statues to medieval warlords. Understanding this revival can shed light on the direction of Russia’s politics. Last October, with the endorsement of Russia’s culture minister, Vladimir Medinsky, the country’s first-ever monument to Ivan the Terrible was unveiled in the city of Orel. A month later, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the leader of the ultra-nationalist Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, called for Lenin Avenue in Moscow to be renamed Ivan the Terrible Highway. And in July of this year, President Vladimir Putin christened Moscow’s own tribute to the tyrant, declaring, erroneously, that “most likely, Ivan the Terrible never killed anyone, not even his son.”… Dina Khapaeva is Professor of Russian at the Georgia Institute of Technology’s School of Modern Languages. Her most recent book is The Celebration of Death in Contemporary Culture.

    For the full article, visit the Gulf News website.

     

     

    Published in: Gulf News

    Dina Khapaeva
  • Putin’s Medieval Dreams

    December 29, 2017

    Dina Khapaeva, professor in the School of Modern Languages at the Georgia Institute of Technology, wrote the Project Syndicate, December 29, article, “Putin’s Medieval Dreams.” The School of Modern Languages is part of the Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

    Excerpt:

    Ivan the Terrible is not the only medieval vestige being revived in Russia. Cultural vocabulary is also reverting. For example, the word kholop, which means “serf,” is returning to the vernacular, a linguistic devolution that parallels a troubling rise in Russia’s modern slavery. Data from the Global Slavery Index show that more than one million Russians are currently enslaved in the construction industry, the military, agriculture, and the sex trade. Moreover, serf “owners” are also happily identifying themselves as modern-day barins.

    Even Russian officials speak approvingly of modern slavery. Valery Zorkin, who chairs the Constitutional Court, wrote in Rossiyskaya Gazeta, the official government newspaper, that serfdom has long been a “social glue” for Russia. And another medieval term – lydi gosudarevy, which translates to “servants of his majesty” – has returned to favor among high-ranking bureaucrats.

    For the full article, visit Project Syndicate’s website.

    Published in: Project Syndicate

    Dina Khapaeva

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