We Are Data: LJ2
Overall I was overwhelmed and very shocked by the reading We Are Data by John Cheney-Lippold, as it explains how we are perceived online and what that means for each of us. I was fascinated to learn that there is a threshold for someone to be classified as “Google famous” and that a traditional celebrity may not be considered so, depending on their online presence. I was also fascinated that the algorithm designed to expedite the process of repealing information cannot differentiate between celebrities stage names and legal names, like the example used of Rihanna versus her full legal name (xi). I was also intrigued that we are not perceived by who we perceive ourselves to be, but that our online data is used to build a profile of us based on our activity that may be wholeheartedly incorrect (3) and that it can affect the level of privacy you are afforded. According to Lippold, “you are rarely ‘you’ online” (4) instead our online selves are a separate version ...