How the Internet
Reinforces Inequality in the Real World
Maps have always had a way of
bluntly illustrating power. Simply appearing on one can be enough to make a place
or community matter. Meanwhile, absence from "the map" conveys
something quite the opposite. Recall 19th century colonial
surveys of Africa with the continent’s vast interior labeled as “unknown.”
That one word on unmapped territory was simply another way of saying – in the
eyes of the mapmaker – that the region was of little consequence. Whoever lived
there didn't matter.
This old idea of paper maps
as power brokers offers a good analogy for how we might think today about the
increasingly complex maps of digital information on the physical world that
exist in the "geoweb."
This is where Wikipedia pages and online restaurant reviews and geocoded tweets
live, all theoretically floating atop the actual cities and neighborhoods they
describe.
http://www.theatlanticcities.com/technology/2013/02/how-internet-reinforces-inequality-real-world/4602/
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Ted Hildebrandt
Director of Social Planning
Community Development Halton
860 Harrington Court
Burlington, Ontario L7N 3N4 Canada
Phone: (905) 632-1975, (905) 878-0955
Fax: (905) 632-0778
Email: [hidden email]
Web: www.cdhalton.ca
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