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REVOLUCION SILENCIOSA

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Daß sich vor unser aller Augen eine dramatische Veränderung vollzieht, zeigen schon die Anglizismen, die sich in unserer Sprache eingenistet haben: Wir mailen, googeln, skypen und twittern. Die digitale Revolution, so die These von Mercedes Bunz, könnte ebenso dramatische Folgen haben wie die industrielle im 19. Jahrhundert. Die Software »Pudding« beispielsweise ist in der Lage, mittels Spracherkennung während eines Telefongesprächs Hintergrundinformationen zu liefern. Das Programm »Stats Monkey« verfaßt bereits selbständig Sportreportagen. So wie die Maschinen damals die Tätigkeit der Arbeiter veränderten, verändern nun die Algorithmen den professionellen Alltag der Mittelschicht.

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First published October 1, 2012

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About the author

Mercedes Bunz

11 books9 followers
Mercedes Bunz is Senior Lecturer in Digital Society at King's College London, and a German art historian, philosopher and journalist.

Bunz studied philosophy and art history at the Freie Universität Berlin, after passing her final exams at the Celtis-Gymnasium secondary school in the German town of Schweinfurt in 1991. Together with Sascha Kösch, Riley Reinhold, and Benjamin Weiss she founded the Berlin music monthly De:Bug in 1997, becoming its co-editor and editor-in-chief from 1999 until 2001.

She was awarded a scholarship by Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, enabling her to graduate at Bauhaus-Universität Weimar writing about the history of the internet between the 1950s and the 1980s. Her dissertation thesis was published as a non-fiction book in 2008. This was also used by Melih Bilgil in his 2009 animation History of the Internet.

Mercedes Bunz's work has been both academic and journalistic. Having worked as a freelance journalist for a period, Bunz became a lecturer at Bielefeld University. In that same year she also began working for Berlin city magazine zitty before running the on-line business of the German daily Tagesspiegel In 2009, she joined the London newspaper The Guardian as a media and technology reporter. She stayed with The Guardian until the beginning of 2011, where she followed events in on-line journalism and social networking websites.

In 2010 Bunz was awarded the Fachjournalisten-Preis by the German association of specialist editors, or Deutscher Fachjournalisten-Verband.
In 2011 she held the Impakt Fellowship of the Centre for the Humanities from the Utrecht University. She has written for the German internet magazines Telepolis and Carta.

Her book on the impact of algorithms on society was published by Suhrkamp in 2012.
An updated version of Mercedes Bunz: The Silent Revolution: How Digitalization Transforms Knowledge, Work, Journalism and Politics without Making Too Much Noise came out with Palgrave Macmillan in 2014.
The Spanish version "La Revolución Silenciosa" has been translated by Cruce and came out in 2017.

She has been a member of the Interdisciplinary Network for the Critical Humanities Terra Critica and is a co-founder of meson press, an open access press that publishes research on digital cultures, technology and networked media, one outcome of the Hybrid Publishing Lab, Leuphana University, which she directed from 2012-2014.

She became Senior Lecturer at the University of Westminster, London in 2014.
In 2018, her book written together with Graham Meikle on the internet of things came out with Polity, in which they explore questions regarding networked sensors and Artificial Intelligence as things become media.

On 31 October 2017 Mercedes Bunz gave evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee for Artificial Intelligence and presented her Artificial Intelligence research on the importance of publicly available datasets given the rise of machine learning that has been taken up in the report.
In September 2018 she became Senior Lecturer in the Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London. In 2019 her co-written book on digital communication and machine communication was co-published (open access) by University of Minnesota Press and meson press.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Dan.
2 reviews1 follower
March 18, 2014
Sehr schön geschrieben! Die Linie ist klar: Algorithmen verändern unsere Gesellschaft auf revolutionäre Art und Weise. Diese These wird anhand von interessanten und abwechslungsreichen Beispielen erklärt und unter Zuhilfenahme theoretischer Ansätze konsequent und kritisch vertreten. Allein deswegen hat sich das Buch für mich gelohnt. An der einen oder anderen Stelle hätte ich mir mehr Tiefgang gewünscht (Wissensaggregation, Expertensysteme, Internet der Dinge) aber irgendwas ist ja (fast) immer.
Profile Image for Franz Schuier.
23 reviews
December 31, 2012
Interessante und zum Großteil gut recherchiertes Buch. Nur eine Anmerkung: J.Larniers Kritik der Web 2.0 Mechanismen mit Meckels und Schirmachers Grundsätzlicher und Kulturpessimistischer Technologiekritik gleichzusetzen, halte ich für falsch.
Profile Image for Andy Von Hayn.
24 reviews1 follower
January 30, 2013
Ein großartiges und intelligentes Buch. Eine Wohltat, einen unaufgeregten und fundierten Text über klassische Medien und das Internet zu lesen.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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