As a cyberculturalist, I study the co-evolution of network and culture. I am interested in ways to promote creative economies, by helping people understand how the participatory and self-governing aspects of social computing generates new forms of social, economic and legal affordances.
With an academic background in communication theory, my research has ranged from Public Deliberation in Internet-Regulated China, to Social Capital among Online Non-Profit Organizations. My practice includes conducting social media strategy workshops for academic, commercial and non-profit organizations.
As an experiment in memory, privacy and cybernetics, I've worn networked cameras and computing devic...