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gdecugis's comment,
October 9, 2012 9:55 PM
Hi Beth! Me? No, this was for Dataweek here in San Francisco...
Michael Procopio's curator insight,
January 27, 12:48 PM
Love this quote "Content marketing and curation is like Star Trek chess. You are playing a game in many dimensions simultaneously." Delete the scoop?
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PlasmaBorneElectric's comment,
April 26, 11:33 AM
The .0001% want people to believe theres's a shift and rise in consciousness so that people will once again depend on superstition and wishful thinking instead of getting active in the real world. As people pray and/or take drugs which they believe these useless things will change the world the .0001% are busy in the real world making changes that will change the world. The .0001% want you to focus on spirit and the soul while they focus on Science, Digital Technology Hardware & Software not some bullshit spirit and/or soul.
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Marco Pozzi's curator insight,
May 20, 3:47 AM
Web semantico. Un gran passo avanti o un grandissimo sforzo tecnologico sproporzionato rispetto agli obiettivi prefissati? Delete the scoop?
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gdecugis's curator insight,
April 25, 8:11 PM
As Clair tweeted "a single twitter handle (AP's) is hacked and the Dow tumbles 150 points." Why? As she explains through a combination of automated trading and lack of social media usage by the traders. Technology is great. But I'm a firm believer that the best way to leverage it is not to let it go on auto-pilot but rather have its output curated by humans - a concept we like to call Humanrithm which we apply at Scoop.it, for instance when our discovery algorithm only makes content suggestions but lets users decide what gets published and what is not. Did we get lucky this time? Some people probably weren't and lost something in that story. But if we don't want SF movies to become real one day, we have to start educating and empowering everyone to curate social media.
Pierre Scampini's curator insight,
April 26, 6:20 AM
Tous les outils quels qu'ils soient doivent être créés pour servir l'humain et non s'auto-gérer au-delà du raisonnable. Gardons cette éthique y compris dans les sytèmes de l'information et leurs processus. Quelques questions universelles peuvent nous aider à en faire le diagnostique et s'aplliquent à tous les systèmes ou projets:
1- Est ce que cela tiens la mer ? Est ce relié au monde des vivants ? (Approche)
2- Est ce bien fait ? ( Déploiement)
3- la boucle PDCA est elle bouclée et enrichie ? (Evaluation)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All our tools should be created to serve humans and not to serve themselves. We must keep this ethical idea in mind for IT systems too. Universal questions should help us. They could be used to make the diagnostic of any system or project:
1- Does it stay afloat ? Is it linked with living world and specially human world ? (Approach)
2- Is it well done ? ( Deployment)
3- PDCA (Prepare, Start, Control, Secure) is complete ? (Assesment)
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gdecugis's curator insight,
November 27, 2012 12:36 PM
Interesting write-up by Steve Rosenbaum on how algorithms and humans compete to solve some of the biggest technological challenges today. Particularly in the content curation space, which reminds me of my own talk at Data Week earlier this year.
Eelco Kraefft's curator insight,
December 15, 2012 7:55 AM
Kurzweil, author of The Singularity is Near', and mentioned in this article was just hired by Google. Does this mean Google News will soon grow into a more perfect content (80%+) curator than Rosenbaum now sees, compared to humans? Delete the scoop?
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Our most powerful 21st-century technologies - robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech - are threatening to make humans an endangered species.