Monthly Archives: November 2016

Assignment 9B

Vaidhyanathan argues that “we trust google with our personal info and preferences and without access to knowledge because we  trust technology that satisfies our prejudices” I think, it is true because when it comes on an information or any basic idea to our mind we google that and find out the answer. Google is very popular searching engine that people believe. Google probably knows more about anything than anyone so people might believe whatever Google says. Therefore, Google is the only search engine that we use in these days. I trust google because Google is the only search engine finds out my answers. However, people do not trust Google as a looking up personal information because when people type their first and last name it comes out so many different things and they are not related to them. Overall I prefer to use still Google because it is faster and easier than any search engines.

 

Assignment 10B

The development of new technologies, social media is taking an important place in our everyday life. People, especially young, are intensely monitoring their world and their peer’s. They constantly feel the need to see and know what their friends do about their life and to be seeing and approved by their friends also. The rapidity in which information is shared nowadays makes it almost impossible to catch up with daily information and news. This advancement also plays an invaluable role in the way information is shared around the world; it connects the world of information and allows people from everywhere to get the same news at the same time. One of the most important examples is Twitter. Twitter played a big in the Arab Spring that started in 2010 in Tunisia and sprayed across the Arab world. In times where information is crucial, in the future, information will change the way people interact and will considerably bring change to the world.

Assignment #9B

Vaidhyanathan argues that, “we trust google with our personal info and preferences and without access to knowledge because we trust technology that satisfies our prejudices.”

I do believe this is true, people do blindly trust google. Your google profile is molded to fit what your search history is. YouTube which is owned by Google is a great example. What to watch option, looks at your history to recommended users videos. Just recommending videos tells users that Google looks at user’s preferences without their knowledge. Since it does satisfies the users taste, most users do not think twice about it, trusting google. Chrome, another example saves usernames and passwords to make it easier for users. With this you don’t have to re-type usernames and password everything it’s asked. Google stores that personal info and since it satisfies users, users don’t fear it. I do trust Google, to some extent. Google is a search engine, it is up to me and my knowledge to see which sites are safe and useful. I am a person who doesn’t display personal information in sites. It is up to the users to see what information is out there and if they don’t like it, there are options. I also do like that Google stores my preferences, it makes my life easier and I see content that I like.

#9B ” Is this true? Do you Trust Google?

Do I trust google? Yes, It is true. How and Why?
Google is the easiest way to get information about anything we think about ,even if we miss articulate the word it gives us option in to choice what we meant. Nothing is like google in the time of laziness and depending in technology to do everything for us. Why I trust google? I trust it because none of my data that I saved in it was shared to public ,however I do not have any personal information to hide.
Vaidhyana than argues that, “we trust google with our personal info and preferences and without access to knowledge because we trust technology that satisfies our prejudices.” Is this true? Do you Trust Google?
To be respond to the question I need to prove that knowing our personal information is not completely wrong because when google know who is searching It makes it easy for both sides the users who is looking for a video to watch or paper to read even to a music to listen and for the website to provide the users with the right examples.

Assignment 9B Google

Vaidhyanathan argues that people trust google blindly and have immense faith in google. People trust google with personal information and this is a cause for worry. He is not totally against google in fact he says, “Google consequently is far more than just the most interesting and successful Internet company of all time. As it catalogs our individual INTRODUCTION 3 and collective judgments, opinions, and (most important) desires, it has grown to be one of the most important global institutions as well” . I agree with this 100%  Google is quite beneficial. It is amazing to have access to answers to all our questions something that probably was not possible twenty years ago.

At the same time when trust is concerned, I am not sure if i trust Google completely. While Google is the answer to everything it is quite scary. The other day I googled my mother’s full name and clicked on a link on Google that had her address and telephone number and that is scary. Also there is access to everything including bad sites with viruses and malware that can be linked through google. Still, I do strongly agree that Google is beneficial to everyone, I am not sure if I would put my immense trust in it.

Assignment 10B (Imagined Future)

My example of an imagined future in literature would be the imagined future in the book Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card. Ender’s Game is set in the future predicting an imperiled society after conflicts with an insectoid alien species. Children are trained to combat a third invasion by these species. The novel explores interplanetary spaceflights and alien species. The novel has received appreciation and criticism both alike. It is a great fantasy fiction novel that will transport you to another space and time.

Ender’s Game is the story of Ender Wiggin, a child genius chosen to save the world. The military needs a brilliant commander to fight buggers, alien enemies who have previously come close to wiping out humanity. Before he can face the enemy, however, Ender must make it through Battle School, where he learns that hatred is not reserved for the buggers alone. Battle School is where the best and brightest are trained to be military commanders through participation in intricate war games. Card’s writing allows the frenzied feel of the games to permeate the book, and Ender’s trials accelerate as time begins to run out for humanity. Because Ender is the most brilliant military mind that Battle School has ever seen, his success earns him the resentment of most of his peers. He has only himself to rely on, although his small core of loyal friends is there for him in more ways than Ender knows.By placing the fate of the world in the hands of a child, Card challenges traditional assumptions both about children and war. Ender may be small, but he thinks, feels, and acts like an adult, and an exceptional one at that.

Arriving at Battle School, Ender quickly and easily masters increasingly difficult war games, distinguishing himself and winning respect amongst his peers. Ender is soon ordained by Graff as the military’s next great hope, resulting in his promotion to Command School. Once there, he’s trained by Mazer Rackham, himself, to lead his fellow soldiers into an epic battle that will determine the future of Earth and save the human race. 

 

Assignment 9B (Google)

Vaidhyanathan argues that, “we trust google with our personal info and preferences and without access to knowledge because we  trust technology that satisfies our prejudices”, I believe this true when it comes to information or basically anything that comes to mind. We depend a lot on google for the answer.Google is a very huge popular search engine that people rely on. I always use google whenever I need an answer to my question. Google is the only search engine that I use. People put their trust in google because it is fast and you are able to find almost anything that you are looking for. Some people put out their personal information and preferences out there because they believe that google is a trusting source of technology.What people love so much about Google is the fact that it is high-speed and they think that they receive information very close to what they are searching for. Google tracks every information about you. Google has access to your photos, and they also can track where you are going from google maps. I trust google for the most part whenever I need a quick answer to my question and whenever I need to look something up. I don’t trust  google with my personal information. You don’t really know if your information is secured.

Google is the most trusted website because of its branding and Google opening statement declares “When you use our services, you trust us with your information.” Yet I do not have total trust in Google or any other site. Mainly because Google has all my personal information and knows my activities. Google’s presence in the digital world has set up a vast framework that has incorporated email, cloud computing, Apps, maps, and docs, that is seems to be accepted globally.Google is the one I used the most and but as much as I want to think that everything is secure, it really isn’t.Google tracks and records my actions. This can often feel like an intrusion of privacy and makes me cautious about my personal documents and pictures. Everyone knows Google and mentions using it therefore this makes me think it’s the most reliable search engine however I do not trust it with my person information . I do prefer Google over other search engines because it is fast and you can find more results.

Assignment 8B

Marybeth Meszaro’s article talks about authority in terms of learning and information. She starts out her article explaining that she is puzzled that librarians sometime blame themselves when students do not use their resources to their full advantage. She also explains that there is an assumption that the faculty commands more authority than librarians.  This type of authority is what Patrick Wilson calls “administrative authority”. What this means is that students of undergraduates attribute most administrative authority to faculty as faculty controls their grade. There is a crisis as Meszaro explains that this distinction between authority causes students to favor and respect only certain opinions and this reinforces a question in authority. The author suggests that faculty and librarians should join forces and lean towards a more cognitive authority and thus this will be a better approach for students. The cognitive authority should focus less on “issues of access and retrieval and more on student attitudes and beliefs about knowledge”.

 

Assignment 8B

Assignment 8B

In the article “Who’s in Charge here? Authority, Authoritativeness, and the Undergraduate Researcher”, Meszaros describes different factors involving authority between teachers, librarians, and  students.  One of the lady speaks of is what a popular of students think of their faculty members within their school. Administrative authority is defined as “one has by virtue of occupying a position. One’s moral behavior determines one’s occupancy. When students pay attention to their professors, it is largely because they are afraid for their grades and they want to get a nice grade. Students don’t listen to their professors because of their skill. At the end of the day the authority is the one who has reasoning abilities that help you as a student feel self-confident and help you succeed. It does not matter whether it is a professor or a librarian.

Assignment 8B- Questioning Authority

Meszaros article “Who’s in Charge Here” opens with the views of librarians that blame themselves when students often do not take advantage of their expertise in that they ask their peers, parents, or even stranger-student for help rather than the helpful librarian. The article went on to discuss the notion that instructional faculty command more authority than librarians. Meszaros calls this authority “administrative authority”- an authority one has by virtue of occupying position.

Still, there is a crisis of authority- “The New Epistemology”  says Tim Clydesdale. After interviewing 400 students on 34 campuses Clydesdale found only few were in awe of their institutions or faculty. And most ambivalent about anyone’s knowledge claims other than their own.

So, what does “questioning authority” means? Meszaros answers it this way “who do not get respect or who get less.” Yet, the more important question he says is how all of us can validate the notion of disciplinary cognitive authority so as to help students move beyond the unsophisticated epistemological positions of dualism or multiplicity. Thus, librarians can join hands with faculty by focusing less on issues of access and retrieval and more on students attitudes and beliefs about expertise and cognitive authority.