Détail

Titre
The filter bubble: what the Internet is hiding from you
Cote
ZA 4237 P37 2011
Auteur(e)s
Pariser, Eli
Éditeur
New York : Penguin Press, c2011.
Description Physique
294 p.
Abstrait
The hidden rise of personalization on the Internet is controlling--and limiting--the information we consume. In 2009, Google began customizing its search results. Instead of giving you the most broadly popular result, Google now tries to predict what you are most likely to click on. According to MoveOn.org board president Eli Pariser, this change is symptomatic of the most significant shift to take place on the Web in recent years--the rise of personalization. Though the phenomenon has gone largely undetected until now, personalized filters are sweeping the Web, creating individual universes of information for each of us. Data companies track your personal information to sell to advertisers, from your political leanings to the hiking boots you just browsed on Zappos. In a personalized world, we will increasingly be typed and fed only news that is pleasant, familiar, and confirms our beliefs--and because these filters are invisible, we won't know what is being hidden from us.
Table des Matières
The race for relevance -- The user is the content -- The Adderall society -- The you loop -- The public is irrelevant -- Hello, world! -- What you want, whether you want it or not -- Escape from the city of ghettos.
Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Langage
English
Sujet
Invisible Web
Information organization
Semantic Web - Social aspects
World Wide Web - Subject access
Internet - Censorship
ISBN
9781594203008
Localisation
STACKS (RC)
Accès
Public
ID
CAT 17138
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