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Joji

Joji. Joji Mori (PhD Candidate) Doctoral Consortium IDG Group 4 th May 2010. Background. Bell, C. G., & Gemmell, J. (2009). Total recall : how the E-memory revolution will change everything. New York: Dutton.

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Joji

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  1. Joji Joji Mori (PhD Candidate) Doctoral Consortium IDG Group 4th May 2010

  2. Background Bell, C. G., & Gemmell, J. (2009). Total recall : how the E-memory revolution will change everything. New York: Dutton. • “Lifeloggers typically wear computers in order to capture their entire lives, or large portions of their lives” wikipedia

  3. Phones – Lifelogging devices • Smart Phones can be used/are being used as lifelogging devices • Location aware (GPS, Compass) • Call, SMS, Email, docs, photos, video, social network updates Hartnell-Young, E., & Vetere, F. (2005). Lifeblog: a new concept in mobile learning? Paper presented at the Wireless and Mobile Technologies in Education. WMTE 2005. IEEE International Workshop on.

  4. A critique of lifelogging • Beyond Total Capture: A Constructive Critique of Lifelogging Sellen, A., & Whittaker, S. (2010). Beyond total capture: a constructive critique of lifelogging. Communications of the ACM, 53(5), 70-77. • Selectivity, not total capture • Cues not capture • Memory refers to a complex, multi-faceted set of concepts • Synergy not substitution Related reference. Mayer-Schönberger, Viktor. (2009),  Delete : the virtue of forgetting in the digital age / Viktor Mayer-Schönberger  Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. ; Woodstock

  5. Facebook in “The Age” • Grieving issues - Gas leak tragedy: grandfather slams Facebook page 3rd June • Privacy fears - 30,000 quit Facebook in protest 2nd June • Data Mining - The terrors of Twittering: growing up in an unexploded data minefield 5th May

  6. Our digital past • It seems inevitable more of our everyday lives will be captured digitally • The end of the ephemeral Harper, R. Rodden, T., Rogers, Y., Sellen, A. (editors), 2008. Being human: Human–computer interaction in the year 2020. Cambridge: Microsoft Research

  7. Designing for deletion • How to better design for deletion in technology that stores personal digital content? • Think Email – does anyone have a good email storage/deletion system? • Think Facebook – What should happen to mundane, day to day stuff well into future? Inappropriate or incorrect comments relating to you, regretful photos, how do you delete a friend?

  8. Designing for deletion • Abundant storage • Accumulate • Limited storage • Active storage/deletion Stored Deleted Stored

  9. Demotion • GrayArea • Bergman, O., Tucker, S., Beyth-Marom, R., Cutrell, E., & Whittaker, S. (2009). It's not that important: demoting personal information of low subjective importance using GrayArea. Paper presented at the Proceedings of ACM CHI 2009 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems.

  10. Candidate audiences • Everyday life • The commuter (yesterday’s observation) • Reading MX • Spacing out * 2 • Music on phone * 2 • News on phone * 2 (I was reading sport news) • Billiards game on phone

  11. Candidate audiences • Youth into adulthood • Formal processes for deletion • Museums (unwanted artifacts) • Photographer – what to delete / keep? • Hard waste • Juvenile Crime, Bankruptcy Law Allen, A. L. (2008). Dredging up the Past: Lifelogging, Memory, and Surveillance. University of Chicago Law Review, 75(1), 47-74.

  12. Consider death • When you create a will, you decide the future of items of monetary, and emotional value • What digital content should be kept and who should have access to it? What should be deleted?

  13. Related Research • Technology Heirlooms Kirk, D. S. & Banks R. (2008). On the design of technology heirlooms. International Workshop on Social Interaction and Mundane Technologies (SIMTech ’08).

  14. Personal Experience

  15. Question for you • How should I best spend my time prior to collecting data, as the topic is still being formulated? • Especially given we typically apply grounded theory • Is meeting people and reading relevant literature enough?

  16. Contact details • Room 2.33 • Email: j.mori@pgrad.unimelb.edu.au • Phone: 8344-1554

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