Difference between revisions of "Society and technology"

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(Relevant courses)
(Relevant courses: fix princeton link)
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*[[List of UW courses on society and technology]]
 
*[[List of UW courses on society and technology]]
 
*[http://www.princeton.edu/pr/pwb/02/0603/3b.shtml Princeton Wireless course]
 
*[http://www.princeton.edu/pr/pwb/02/0603/3b.shtml Princeton Wireless course]
*[http://www.cs.princeton.edu/courses/archive/fall03/cs109/ Princeton course by Brian Kernighan] on "Computers in our world"
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*[http://www.cs.princeton.edu/academics/catalog.php Princeton course catalog]: includes course taught by Brian Kernighan on "Computers in our world"
 
*[http://swig.stanford.edu/pub/courses/Digital_Dilemmas/ Stanford course: "Digital Dilemmas"]
 
*[http://swig.stanford.edu/pub/courses/Digital_Dilemmas/ Stanford course: "Digital Dilemmas"]
 
*[http://www.kelty.org/or/classes/anth315.02.pdf Syllabus of Rice's Anthropology 315 course (PDF)]
 
*[http://www.kelty.org/or/classes/anth315.02.pdf Syllabus of Rice's Anthropology 315 course (PDF)]

Revision as of 00:55, 18 May 2005

The society and technology interest group (soctech) is an informal interest group that we are starting up among UW-CSE students to promote awareness of various social computing issues, in both CSE and the UW. We plan to collaborate with other departments, with possible aims including the production of cross-departmental courses, lecture series, or white papers.

We're just getting started; we have a mailing list, soctech@cs. Here's the public list info page.

Current activities

Meeting notes

People and organizations

This is a non-exhaustive list of people and intra-UW institutions with which we're working.

Relevant courses

Resources

Software

People

Scholars

  • Paul Agre, prof. of information studies at UCLA
  • Lawrence Lessig, professor of law at Stanford
  • Yochai Benkler, professor of law at Yale, director of Engleberg Center for Information Law and Policy at NYU

Research centers and groups outside UW

Conferences

Government

Funding agencies and programs

Mailing lists

Sources

Websites

Projects

  • SoftwarePluralism project: a balanced resource for users, lawyers, and businesspeople to make informed decisions about software development models.

Blogs