used to think of the internet as a huge library‚ with services like Google providing universal map‚ but that is not true‚ websites like Facebook‚ Google‚ Yahoo news‚ and the New York times are personalized‚ based in your web history‚ these website filter information to show you stuff they think you want to see. they can be very different from what everyone else sees‚ and what you are looking for. These websites take your personal information like your location‚ the language your speaking‚ the pages
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reading response argues that Pariser’s theory of the filter bubble is flawed because it fails to explain a wide range of political reality. First‚ this reading response summarizes Pariser’s theory of the “filter bubble”. Next‚ this reading response debates that Pariser’s theory of the “filter bubble” is incorrect because it too broadly describes political reality. Then‚ this reading response justifies that Pariser’s theory of the “filter bubble” explains a small portion of politics in the media.
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Vanessa Riveron ENC 1102 Professor Warman 01/30/13 Rhetorical Essay Draft In the Ted Talk “The Filter Bubble”‚ the speaker Eli Pariser talks about the negative effects of personalizing the web and how it destroys the sense of unity that the web was based on. “Your filter bubble is your own personal‚ unique universe of information that you live in online. What’s in your filter bubble depends on who you are‚ and it depends on what you do. But you don’t decide what gets in — and more importantly
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who needs information from the World Wide Web‚ uses search engines like Google or Yahoo! to find the specific information he or she is looking for. These engines help us to filter all the information given by the internet with the help of invisible algorithms. Without them we would sit many hours in front of the screen and filter the information by ourselves. For example the search of a brownie recipe has an output of over forty billion search results. For this reason it is good to have these algorithms
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the three dynamics that the filter bubble introduces for us and discuss the effects of each one on privacy and our internet experience. Upon reading the chapter‚ the filter bubble fundamentally alters the way we encounter ideas and information. According to the book‚ the filter bubble introduces three dynamics we’ve never dealt with before which is one‚ you are alone in it‚ second‚ the filter bubble is invincible‚ and third‚ you don’t choose to enter the filter bubble (Pariser‚ 2012). In terms of
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The speech given by Eli Pariser is about introducing the term “Filter Bubble” to the audience. One day while scrolling on his facebook news feed‚ Praiser noticed there is a filtering of information shown as he compared it to his friends. Praiser described Filter Bubbles as personalized filters integrated into search engines using unique website algorithm to selectively presume what information flows into this unique bubble of your own. According to Pariser‚ the problem is that the internet is showing
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computer and the browser you’re using. You should take in account that sites like Google aren’t perfect. Some people argue that this particular altering of the search results limits the possibility of broadening your view and it traps you in your bubble. This is‚ however‚ not the case. If anything‚ it helps you expand your view by letting you find exactly what you want as effectively as possibly. People are not suffering from exclusion from information‚ when searching for particular views. Site
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Before I read the text “The Filter Bubble” by Eli Pariser‚ I predict that the text will be mostly about how self-aware technology is becoming. Also‚ I think the author will take a firm position against this kind of technology for various reasons. Lastly‚ I think the author will somehow tie this kind of developing technology to humanity losing its freedom because of it. After reading the text‚ I concluded that my pre-reading analysis was right. The author takes ample amount of time to accentuate
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The following describes filter types‚ what they do and how they perform. Along with definitions and detailed graphs‚ we are hopeful this information is both useful and informative. Filter Types Monolithic Crystal Filters 2 Quartz resonator internally coupled utilizing piezoelectric effect. Discrete Crystal Filter Single quartz resonator with external components utilizing the piezoelectric effect. Notch filters Crystal or Discrete component filter that passes all frequencies
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