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By JOHN DELLA CONTRADA Contributing Editor
The Internet, mobile technologies and new-media technologies may be
the most influential drivers of cultural change in American society
today, according to UB faculty members offering courses this semester
exploring the social and cultural consequences of information and
communication technologies. The courses"The Age of
Information," "Cyberporn and Society," "Technology Law and Cyberspace"
and "Elements of Machine Culture"will examine how new technologies
are shaping culture and changing human behavior. A wide range of
technology-driven topics and issues will be covered, some of
whichsuch as obscenity and free speech, privacy and intellectual
propertyoften are debated during periods of significant cultural
or technological change; while other issuescybercrime, virtual
reality, spam and artificial intelligenceare new to the cultural
landscape. According to W. David Penniman, dean of the School of
Informatics, the linkage between technology and cultural evolution has
been a serious area of scholarly concern through the ages. He points out
that the influence of technology on society was popularized by the PBS
series "Connections," which explored the dramatic changes technologies
wrought upon society, including the areas of warfare, food production
and transportation. "We now are seeing a most dramatic
influence of technology on human communication and our behavior is, in
turn, driving changes in the communication technology that is coming to
market," Penniman says. The School of Informatics, in particular,
is committed to the study of how information, technology and people
interact within a variety of cultures, according to Penniman. The school
is one of only two in the U.S. to have "informatics"roughly
defined as the intersection of people, information and
technologyas its focus and in its name. "The Age of
Information" and "Cyberporn and Society" are three-credit, undergraduate
elective courses being offered by faculty in the School of Informatics,
which also is offering the graduate-level course "Online Gaming
Research" and last semester offered the graduate course "Communication
Technology and Social Change." Pauline Hope Cheong, assistant
professor of communication and instructor for "The Age of Information,"
says the course will help students "thoughtfully address the
implications of living and interacting with information and
communication technologies. "I encourage my students to strive
for technology literacy, specifically as it relates to critical
awareness of the social dynamics in the intersection of human
communication, technological applications and organizational structure,"
she says. "Cyberporn and Society" will examine the role of
pornography in the development of the Internet and related technologies,
and how the prevalence of cyberporn has affected social structure, mores
and expectations, according to instructor Alexander Halavais, assistant
professor of communication. "This course is not about how to
appreciate, criticize or produce pornography," explains Halavais. "We'll
look at the interaction between pornography and technology; the effects
of pornography on society and the effect of the cyberporn industry on
the emergence of new media," he says. While a course on
cyberporn may on the surface seem sensationalistic, the topic, according
to Penniman, has serious academic value and continues a long academic
tradition of examining emerging societal trends, including trends
involving controversial subjects like sex, prostitution and pornography
in banned literature and in other media, such as videotapes, televised
movies on demand and online "escort" services. "Any serious
scholar concerned with the evolution and diffusion of technology must
consider the significant role adult material and even prostitution have
played in the adoption of new technologies," he says. "The role of
pornography, and especially cyberporn in the age of the Internet, must
be a significant concern for students who will be our leaders in shaping
future research, legislation and policies." The emergence of
cybercrime and the creation of laws and policies to regulate cyberspace
are of special interest to law professor Robert Reis, who will teach
"Technology Law and Cyberspace" in the UB Law School this semester.
According to Reis, the anonymity and vast reach of cyberspace,
combined with the enabling power of new technologies, has given people
new opportunity to behave outside the moral, or legal, constraints of
society. "Cyberspace is fertile ground for the amoral, immoral
and unscrupulous to ply their trades," Reis says. Moreover,
"there's a whole subculture of people who feel entitled to break the
lawby copying a music CD, defaming a person or business online or
hacking into a computerbecause the technology has empowered them
to do so without fear of being detected," he adds. Behavior in
cyberspace is a major concern to lawyers, Reis says, because much of the
legal system depends on voluntary compliance, with the sense that if you
harm someone you will be detected, identified and prosecuted. Reis says
the legal system eventually will catch up to technology. He expects new
laws will be created to further regulate cyberspace and monitor the
activities of people who venture there. Within the Department of
Media Study, "Elements of Machine Culture" will take a more conceptual
approach to technology's influence on culture. According to instructor
Marc Böhlen, assistant professor of media study, the course will
focus on "cultural aspects of technologies and the desire for and belief
in the 21st-century machine," from coffee grinders to automobiles to
mobile phones and autonomous robots. "The course will follow
the conception and history of the machine from the monastery bell to the
latest humanoid robot," Böhlen explains. His students will be asked
to critically contemplate, via case studies, select technologies and to
examine the consequencesconceptual, economic and socialof
automation in general.
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