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酷通npv最新版本安卓下载superⅴpn 下载
VIA: Haertz
Labels: advertising, billboards, photography, free加速器安卓 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载‘A Seismic Shock’: Jittery Companies Pull Back on Ads During Pandemic
Without an audience to steal attention from, advertising goes dark.
VIA: The NY Times
Labels: 2021翻墙梯子, news articles, NY times 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载The Humble Phone Call Has Made a Comeback
VIA: The NY Times
Labels: news articles, NY times, phone call, talk to me, telephone 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载Why Open Public Space is Central to a Vibrant, Democratic Society and How the Corona Virus Threatens to Divide Us
Why Open Public Space is Central to a Vibrant, Democratic Society and
How the Corona Virus Threatens to Divide Us
I just did an interview with public radio in Boston about the public space implications of the ongoing Covid 19 pandemic. The reporter was interested in what we will do without our “third spaces,” the places that we frequent every day and that give structure to our lives. I don’t know about you, but we still drive to our coffee place and now instead of sitting down and having breakfast, take out our coffee and sit at the beach to drink it.
Public space offers the daily glue by which we come into contact with diverse and different people who make up our social world. There is 30 years of ethnographic research evidence that public space is a major contributor to a flourishing society through promoting social justice and democratic practices, informal work and social capital, play and recreation, cultural continuity and social cohesion, as well as health and well-being.
But during this 'virus' moment we are all experiencing a shrinking sense of the world and focusing more on our own families, neighborhoods, cities and states as we translate the numbers of Covid 19 patients and increasing numbers of deaths into the risks that we are facing individually. This isolation tears the fabric of our lives and exposes how dependent we are on one another for our well-being and happiness and how interconnected our networks are in our local communities.
Most of my older friends are suffering from isolation and loneliness because they can’t go to their neighborhood gym to workout, meet in their local bar to talk at the end of the day or attend classes at their church or synagogue. The number of calls I make to my family and friends has increased and I treasure my online courses and meetings with students.
I expect that those ties will remain intact regardless of how long this persists as we are actively “missing them” in a palpable and visible way.
However, what I am more concerned about (and I heard myself say to the interviewer) is the impact on the use of public spaces that are now deemed dangerous because of the possibility of coming into contact with those who might be infected. Similar to people who live in a gated community, each time we walk outside we are reminded by the media not only to wash our hands but to exercise social distancing and avoidance. While this is certainly prudent advice, we need to ask what the long-term impact will be on the fragile ties that weave a complex society together.
Just the daily separation of us and them (or “people like us” and “others”) becomes a pattern that is expanded into increased segregation and with it less tolerance, more fear and greater prejudice. What then might be the consequence of fearing that others may be contagious and unknowingly cause us harm? I expect that social distancing could be a new norm, recruited for other purposes and feed into already festering class and racial anxiety, now in a “medicalized” form. And what about the xenophobia of calling it a “Chinese virus” and recent attacks on
“Chinese” people simply because our President has associated a nation with the initial infection. Where does this kind of thinking and daily practice lead? A “booster shot” to the already increasing xenophobic, racist hate crimes that predated the viral threat?
All this is to say that not only is our physical, mental and economic health being challenged, but also our social health that depends on ongoing interaction with people who are different in a multiplicity of ways. Psychologists have demonstrated that such contact has a liberalizing effect and increases creativity.
I think in these difficult days that it is more important than ever to think about the various challenges that we face, and to not retreat into separate “clean” places for some and “dirty” ones for others. Instead I suggest that we consider the bases of resilient communities and the lessons we can learn from them.
Resilient communities are flourishing, connected, and based on a human and non-human ecological network that is adaptable, flexible and responsive. This useful conceptualization draws upon ideas drawn from positive psychology, contact theory and human ecology. Positive psychology studies the strengths and attributes that enable individuals and communities to thrive. Seligman and Csikszentmikhalyi provide evidence that flourishing is comprised of encouraging positive emotions, engagement through activities, relationships with other people, meaning and purpose, and accomplishments. Contact theory demonstrates how face-to-face interaction promotes social cohesion while ecological multispecies models emphasize the importance of networks for the health of interconnected ecosystems.
To these psychological and biological considerations, my research adds social justice as a critical additional component, which at the individual level is sense of fairness, but at the community and societal level is composed of social inclusion and belonging, cultural representation, recognition of difference, and an ethic of caring.
Public space is the major site of social interaction, contact and connection in our society. Failing to appreciate its importance and its promise as we practice social distancing and relocate our social lives to a virtual realm, also puts us at risk. I suggest that we remember and continue to celebrate what we are temporarily losing so that when we can come together again, we appreciate its power to improve our lives.
Setha R. Low is a Distinguished Professor of Environmental Psychology, Geography, Anthropology, and Women’s Studies at The Graduate Center, City University of New York. She is also director of the Public Space Research Group. Dr. Low is the author of 15 books, including Spaces of Security and Behind the Gates: Life, Security and the Pursuit of Happiness in Fortress America (Routledge, 2003, first edition ). She is currently writing the forthcoming Why Public Space Matters, which is under contract with Oxford University Press.
Labels: criticism 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载landeng_landeng官网 安卓_lan灯破解版安卓版:2021-6-12 · 蓝灯加速软件 Lantern (中国) 蓝灯Lantern是一个免费的网络加速应用程序,升级至蓝灯专业版(LanternPro)将获得更强大的功能。蓝灯中国官网提供最新蓝灯客户端下载,包括lantern安卓版,lantern电脑 …Since the Covid-19 Pandemic hit, the project has been put on indefinite hold as I wait to see how our public presence and willingness to interact with one another changes over time. I hope that eventually the project will make sense again and that I will be able to implement it some time next year. In the meantime, Download Quarantine Chat [HERE] and talk to a stranger once a day while you are in self isolation. It isn't completely serendipitous since you have to sign up to participate, but its an interesting opportunity to explore the power of stranger interaction and what it means to reach out to your neighbors, or be there when your neighbors reach out to you. Labels: payphones, phone booth, phonebooth, talk to me 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载hi vph加速器下载As a collective group of Australian artists, we have been driven to reclaim public advertising space with posters speaking to the Australian government’s inaction on climate change and the devastating bushfires. We do not accept that this situation is ‘business as usual’. We are making these issues visible in our public spaces and in our media; areas monopolized by entities maintaining conservative climate denial agendas. If the newspapers won’t print the story, we will! #Bushfirebrandalism [More HERE] Labels: 天行破解版无限免费, Australia, civic media, Other Artists, video 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载Planet Money #964 Billboards
Surveillance capitalism is a threat to democracy, free will, and just about everything you hold dear. If that sounds alarmist, take some time to look into it because I promise you it is not. When the data exhaust you produce is harnessed for profit, every decision you make will be the result of something you have seen or heard that was intentionally put in front of you for someone else's benefit. Saving 20% on a new pair of shoes just isn't worth the price.
http://overcast.fm/+HuIioSKgo Labels: billboards, podcast, surveillance capitalism You Are Now Remotely Controlled
VIA: The NY Times
The debate on privacy and law at the Federal Trade Commission was unusually heated that day. Tech industry executives “argued that they were capable of regulating themselves and that government intervention would be costly and counterproductive.” Civil libertarians warned that the companies’ data capabilities posed “an unprecedented threat to individual freedom.” One observed, “We have to decide what human beings are in the electronic age. Are we just going to be chattel for commerce?” A commissioner asked, ‘‘Where should we draw the line?” The year was 1997. More [HERE] Labels: news articles, NY times, surveillance capitalism 酷通npv最新版本安卓下载快喵Ⅴpn
Not anti-advertising, but in one of our favorite city locations.
VIA: Creapills A little green, in the middle of a concrete city : it always stands out. But what better way to bring a little nature into the lives of its inhabitants? This is a well thought out initiative, both artistic and meaningful. We explain to you! More [HERE] Labels: Bus Shelters, Other Artists, poland Tuesday, January 21, 2023Talking the Talk, Even With Strangers; An Inquiring Couple With a Sign Are Just Looking for a Nice Story
Very excited to find out about this type of stranger outreach happening in NYC. I know its not directly ad related but it is about finding meaningful connection in public space which is becoming a bigger concern of mine as I transition from young anger based action to more measured solution based concepts.
VIA: The NY Times Liz Barry and Bill Wetzel sit on sidewalks around the city, not asking for money, or sociological survey data, or dates, or even a shower, though that would help after weeks of camping in parks and on rooftops. They just want to hear stories. More [HERE] Labels: news articles, NY times Wednesday, January 15, 2023A Project Salvages and Installs No-Cost Payphones to Revive a Fading Technology
VIA: free加速器安卓
Labels: HyperAllergic, payphones, phone booth, phonebooth free v pn加速器天行破解版无限免费
*When It Changed ...* is a three-part blog post written by David Reinfurt and Eric Li and edited by Meg Miller for Are.na around billboard legislation in Vermont, Web 2.0, and ambient software.
Please read it here: http://www.are.na/blog/when-it-changed-part-1 http://www.are.na/blog/when-it-changed-part-2 下载SuperVPN最新2.6.6安卓版APK - Download APK free ...:SuperVPN下载,SuperVPN安卓最新版2.6.6APK免费下载。SuperVPN完全免费的VPN客户端易于使用, 一键连接到VPN.不限带宽,不限制试用时间 It was 2018, just before the end of summer, and I was in Post Mills, Vermont, paging through old copies of Vermont Life magazine. My wife’s mother and father, longtime state residents, have saved copies of the magazine from the last 50 years or so. It’s published quarterly, each issue taking advantage of Vermont’s four crisply rendered seasons. A story might detail the comings and goings in the town of Corinth around a furniture maker’s workshop at the start of fall, or the raising, in early spring, of a round barn in Bradford. Each story is particular, and somehow each is also generic. More [HERE] Labels: free加速器安卓下载, digital advertising, vermont free加速器安卓下载模拟器上谷歌 google play商店_夜神安卓模拟器新手帮助页:夜神安卓模拟器(夜神模拟器),是全新一伋的安卓模拟器,与传统安卓模拟器相比,基于android4.4.2,兼容X86/AMD,在性能、稳定 ...
VIA: It's Nice That
Wunder, an independent Canadian creative agency based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, has taken out $10,000 worth of advertising space only to fill it with absolutely nothing. In a stunt that ultimately goes against what the agency exists to do, the self-initiated campaign – titled White Christmas – offers respite from the deluge of advertising at this time of year by posting blank ads on print and digital billboards, buses, bus stops, newspapers, social media and even radio.More [HERE] Labels: ad takeovers, advertising Friday, December 20, 2023You See Pepsi, I See Coke: New Tricks for Product Placement
VIA: superⅴpn 下载
Then there was virtual product placement. Products or logos would be inserted into a show during the editing, thanks to computer-generated imagery. Now, with the rise of Netflix and other streaming platforms, the practice of working brands into shows and films is likely to get more sophisticated. In the near future, according to marketing executives who have had discussions with streaming companies, the products that appear onscreen may depend on who is watching. More [HERE] Labels: ad creep, digital advertising, news articles, NY times, product placement Tuesday, December 10, 2023Just a Quarter of New York’s Wi-Fi Kiosks Are Up. Guess Where.
I am not surprised.
VIA: The NY Times
Labels: free加速器安卓, Link NYC, New York, 比特加速安卓, surveillance capitalism Thursday, November 21, 2023Car-Mounted Ads Take a New Direction: Data Collection
VIA: Citylab
Labels: 2021翻墙梯子, citylab, data, news articles, 云帆永久免费, surveillance capitalism free加速器安卓How Advertising Conquered Urban Space
VIA: CityLab
Labels: advertising, cities, citylab, news articles Thursday, November 14, 2023Guerrilla Girls Target MoMA Trustees With Ties to Jeffrey Epstein in an Ad Takeover
VIA: Hyperallergic
Labels: 云帆永久免费, AiAP, guerilla girls, HyperAllergic, New York, Other Artists, phone booth Wednesday, November 13, 2023"Who Is Gonna Pay For This Mess" in the Maine Arts Journal Quarterly
Huge thanks to the Maine Arts Journal for including my essay from the PublicAccess Zine in its entirety. As much as the PublicAccess Zine was about the artwork and media created by other people using the tools that I produce, that essay is an important part of explaining my thinking about cities, the energy they create and the desire we share to harness that energy for our collective good.
There is a collective us, in particular when we speak of cities. Parisians and Paolistas. These are the names we use when our cities reach scale and we stop referring to ourselves as from somewhere and instead as part of something. I’m a New Yorker. All of a sudden the bustle on our streets hits a fever pitch and our collective attention pervades the air so heavily that contracts are drawn up to determine who will be responsible for the accumulation of all those eyeballs and what percentages will be offered in return. Out of thin air and a saccadic frenzy, value is created in the cohabitation of a shared plot of land.
Curly, Philadelphia, PA
Pedro Sega, Madrid, Spain
And yet this resource isn’t like the others. This resource is human. When you sift through the soil, I lose nothing, but when you dig into my mind, I lose my train of thought. See what you pay attention to is what you are thinking about, and what you are thinking about makes you who you are. The two inextricably linked. The development of your thoughts, a direct linear result of the things you have attended to along the way. Which is one way of saying that what we put in front of our faces should be worth the price.
Joe Boruchow, Prosperity Theology, Philadelphia
I guess we could simply decide that despite our numbers we don’t want to mine the hills of our attention, leaving us instead with extended vistas of avenues and alleyways. The absence of signification, a welcome respite from the daily intoxication of our mediated world. It’s a worthwhile consideration, like leaving some trees in the forest, or some oil in the ground. But ask a Muscovite or Angelista, whose attention has created so much potential, to leave untapped the bounty of their creation and you will understand why our cities look the way they do. A constant roar blankets our streets and our bodies vibrate in proximity to one another. Who could stop us from erecting signs? 主题美化_安卓主题美化软件-太平洋下载中心:2021-6-4 · 太平洋手机下载中心提供免费手机软件下载。包括安卓(Android)软件下载、安卓(Android)游戏下载、主题美化。海量安卓软件游戏,高速安全下载。
Dr D, London
And so they appear one after another along the horizon, heavy machinery erected downtown to tap the ferment of our minds. Each bus shelter, every taxi topper, billboard, flyposter, lollipop, phonebooth, and info kiosk is an industrial excavator mining your thoughts, momentarily distracting the trajectory of our thinking and converting that moment into a valuable resource. In truth, I find the whole thing a bit miraculous, like a well that doesn’t produce unless we all stand around watching it. Look away and the flow stops, turn back around and a steady stream of value comes pouring out. This is the great alchemy of our cities and the foundation upon which to make our demands.
Robert Montgomery, Stavanger, Norway, photo by Mark Rigney
Today the lion’s share of the attentional resources collected in our cities are siphoned off and sold to advertisers. Promotion swoons for opportunity and an exorbitant amount of money is exchanged to orchestrate what we are thinking about, if only for a brief moment in time. Repeated over the geography and infrastructure of our cities, those brief moments cohere into a meaningful focus, the echoes of which reverberate in our heads. One could take issue with this fact, the echoing, and I do. It bothers me to think about all the neurons we have encoded with the rambling logic of commercial myopia. The sustained focus we offer up to the machinations of consumer culture. Remember that the price for the intrusion is not only our distraction, but the needing it leaves behind.
Dede, Tel Aviv, Israel
And yet the weight of these impositions pales in comparison to the forfeiture of our collective resources and the missed opportunity to let the combustion on our streets reflect the inner dialogue of our minds. As it stands now those advertisers, intent to arrest your eyes and momentarily lay the groundwork for your thinking, empty their coffers into privatized hands. Multinational landlords of our shared public spaces collect the bounty of our attention and haul it off to shareholders and investment bankers. Modest revenue sharing schemes and public infrastructure contracts obscuring the obvious fact that the electricity between us has quietly come to serve someone else.
ARRT!, Brunswick, Maine, Brooklyn Ad Box
As a New Yorker I am always surprised how the clarity of this grievance escapes us. Our willingness to squander the abundance produced by our cohabitation, given the limited resources with which we make due. But what if the harvesting of our collective attention paid for something more than a blanket of consumerist propaganda? What if the alchemy of living in such close proximity to one another, for crowded trains and bustling streets, for gathering together on an island, or building a life together at the rivers bend, was that the network of signs on our streets championed the public’s interests? Each bus shelter, every taxi topper, billboard, flyposter, lollipop, phonebooth, and info kiosk, an opportunity to think for ourselves.
Icy and Sot, Istanbul, Turkey
This book documents a small selection of posters made using PublicAccess keys. It is a crude attempt to daydream into reality a more utopic future and promote a fleeting revolution from which the incantations on our streets burst with locality. Those who participated represent a small portion of the public with the time and privilege to dedicate to such activities. It does not escape me that a democracy of our voices would look a lot different than the pages of this book. But these efforts guide my belief that there are new models on the horizon for the redistribution of what we create by being together, tightly packed and with so much to say. Models that tap the wealth of our collective project and offer it back up to us as raw material with which to shape new cities. Each sign, an opportunity to distract us from ourselves, in the search for one another. Labels: free v pn加速器, essay, NYC, public access Thursday, November 7, 2023Looking for Thrilling Public Art in New York City? Head to Your Local Bus Stop—ASAP
VIA: 2021翻墙梯子
Friday, October 11, 2023'Mindless growth': Robust scientific case for degrowth is stronger every day
Degrowth strategies say we should "limit advertising in public spaces to liberate people from the psychological pressure for needless consumption." as a part of redistribution of economic equity.
VIA: The Irish Times
Labels: economics, environmentalism, news articles Monday, October 7, 2023»twentyfourads« Ausstellung/Exhibition in der Kapriole
VIA: RBNSHT
Follow the link below to see artists do ad takeover work by simply screen printing on the ads directly on the street. Now thats just plain fun. More [HERE] Labels: free加速器安卓下载 Saturday, October 5, 2023安卓手机广告拦截APP下载 Adguard for Android(广告拦截 ...:2021-5-11 · 闪讯密码获取客户端 for android v1.0 安卓版 立即下载 360手机卫士魅族版 for android v4.3.8 安卓版 立即下载 安全支付服务支付宝插件 v5.0.9 安卓版 立即下载 360手机卫士双卡版 for android v6.3.1 安卓版 立即下载 电池修复专业版去积分特别版 for android v1.2.2
A few months back I attended a Tea With Strangers in my research for the Talk To Me project and empathy machine that runs on old advertising infrastructure. I am interested in the connections and community that is built when two people that do not know each other come into contact, if only briefly, and how that alters the way we live in the world. Tea With Strangers is 3 hours and I couldn't recommend it more. As John Cage once said, "To make the world a better place, spend time with people you haven't met" Amen.
VIA: The New York Times Labels: news articles, NY times, 2021翻墙梯子 free加速器安卓Anais Florin For Bien Urbain
A few years ago I went to Bien Urbain to do some workshops and install some artwork of my own. This festival is known for their support of alternative concepts in public art and civic engagement despite the fact that it takes place in a relatively small town in France where one would expect a more provincial attitude towards art and culture. The team did not disappoint and they continue to push and defend interesting projects as they look forward to thier 10th year running. When I left Besancon I made sure to leave a set of keys behind for anyone who might want to use the advertising infrastructure for thier own messaging. Over the years a few people have done so, including Quentin Coussirat whose experience as a graphic designer and artist made incredibly thoughtful and subtle interventions. More recently Anaïs Florin took the access to public space much more literally, launching a campaign and art project to defend the Les Vaîtes worker gardens that risk extinction due to real estate development. It seems wherever you are, some things change and some things always stay the same. Read more about Anais' project below.
Now that we completed the documentation of Anaïs Florin great project from last Bien Urbain festival, it's time to share it with you. 10 min. video (english subtitles available!): http://vimeo.com/358080128 riso zine: http://bien-urbain.fr/fr/boutique/anais-florin-nos-jardins/ all the pictures and the project context (in spanish): http://anaisflorin.com/Nos-jardins Anaïs is from Valencia and was invited by Hyuro to be part of the festival. She spent four days here in Besançon, three months following the issues of this local territorial fight and then one month going everyday to feel, talk, and share with gardeners about their relation to the place. Les Vaîtes is a green place where workers used to have more or less official gardens since decades. It's a forest inside the city where it was impossible to build houses until the local government decided to sell the place to private promoters in order to build an "eco"district. Since more that 10 years, the neighbors were fighting the housing project for several reasons (to keep calm, because the feared the idea of new people coming...) and a new generation of eco-activists motivated by gardening and climate change issues helped to stop the demolition works when it started. Anaïs came in that moment where the city council and promoters were upset, the eco-activist asking themselves if the place should/could became a kind of "ZAD" and the old/immigrants gardeners were a bit lost concerning this new paradigm of civil disobedience. After spending each day on site, taking pictures and speaking with everyone, she decided to highlight this struggle by a tribute to the place: printing 25 pictures of the gardens, painting on the sentence "Les Vaîtes before the eco-discrict" and put them illegally in city center busstops and lolipops. She also glued on 2 billboards on the border of the gardens, with sentences from the gardeners "Touching the earth is always a highlight, it's soothing. Here we work with the living. Gardening is tenderness, it feeds the eyes, it feeds the heart." No need to say that the mayor was upset again, and that it empowers a lot of people to think/discuss/discover this local subject in a very different way than press or activism propaganda. We released the zine for the climate strike and will soon screen the video at the gardens, sharing ways of dealing with fights/art with a theater group working on the same place/story. It's Anaïs project but obviously a great and lovely team helped her on. Thanks to all. Labels: ad takeovers, bien urbain, France, Other Artists Friday, September 20, 2023主题美化_安卓主题美化软件-太平洋下载中心:2021-6-4 · 太平洋手机下载中心提供免费手机软件下载。包括安卓(Android)软件下载、安卓(Android)游戏下载、主题美化。海量安卓软件游戏,高速安全下载。
VIA: Gothamist
Labels: ad takeovers, MTA, NYC, Other Artists, free加速器安卓下载 Thursday, August 22, 2023Hate Those Floating Digital Billboards? New York Just Banned Them
VIA: The New York Times
Labels: illegal advertising, New York, public advertising Sunday, July 28, 2023天行破解版无限免费
My colleague Bill Posters wrote an incredibly important essay outlining the main points of interest for the anti advertising, pro civic media movement. Please read it!
His writing shows us that while the out of home advertising industry acted as the fuel for neoliberal capitalism and helped sustain the post war growth of American consumerism, we have entered a new epoch that makes the incantations of billboards and bus shelters look quaint in comparison. Dataism and the rise of behavioral data collection, because of its accuracy and pervasiveness, threatens more than the sanctity of our shared public public spaces, but will likely influence fundamental aspects of our collective social behavior in ways that will drastically alter society as we evolve into the future. It's fucking scary. What happens when the data exhaust you produce is so granular that Spotify can accurately predict when you are in a bad mood? And what then when Spotify realizes that your consumption drops in those moments of aggression and actively makes decisions to prevent that behavior from diminishing your capacity as a consumer? Now extend that type of influence over all networks and all devices and you see a human being pushed and pulled in ways that it cannot see, and cannot control, all to increase ones predictability as consumer, and you start to see how over a few hundred years the nature of society is fundamentally changed as people become more and more tuned by the needs of those in control of the data we collectively produce. Like a meteor on a collision course with earth, you don't change a society by blowing it up, you send out a small satellite to slowly push the course of its direction over many years and watch as the final destination finds itself far of course. In one case we all sign in relief, in the other we loose our free will to the corporate entities that control the data of our lives.
More [HERE] Labels: criticism, data, dataism, digital advertising, essay, Other Artists free加速器安卓下载You Are What You Watch? The Social Effects of TV
The adage shouldn't be you are what you eat, or in this case, you are what you watch, but rather you are what you attend. It is a simple concept that we would like to be able to escape but its the nature of reality. If we cover our cities in advertising, we spend time attending that advertising, and the messages and ideas behind them become us. Don't fool yourself into thinking you can ignore them, or simply beat them at thier game. It simply isn't how things work.
Labels: superⅴpn 下载, television Thursday, July 25, 2023Advertising Shits In Your Head, US Edition.
Our good friends at PM Press have put together an American version of thier best selling "Advertising Shits In Your Head" UK publication. With Interviews, tutorials and insightful knowledge about advertising and its pernicious influence, ASIYH is a fantastic read and a great present for young minds and public space activists. If you can help support the Kickstarter campaign please do what you can to insure this publication makes it to press.
Labels: Books, free v pn加速器, PublicAdCampaign, subvertising, UK Wednesday, July 24, 2023FaceApp Shows We Care About Privacy but Don’t Understand It
I have been posting a lot of articles on data privacy because it related directly to my interest in outdoor advertising and the influence industry as a whole. While advertising and OOH advertising more specifically tried to greet you where you were in an effort to capture your attention and influence the trajectory of your thoughts, your digital data exhaust is being used to predict in more accurate ways than you can imagine, your emotional and psychological profile at any given moment in an effort to serve that influence to you on a device you have already given your undivided attention. The goal, like advertising is not mind control, but the subtle nudge of outcomes. Don't demand a society that bows to consumer culture and finds itself so deep in the forest of capitalism that we cannot see our way out, but rather slowly push us there over generations by making each moment of each individuals life more likely to involve a consumer interaction. With enough data, this doesn't become a hypothetical but an inevitable outcome of a society that has allowed our daily lives to be subtly influenced by the needs of capital over the needs of our society.
VIA: free加速器安卓
Here’s the rundown of FaceApp’s 15 minutes of fame: A viral app lets us see what we might look like as a wrinkle-laden 75-year-old. Users click “yes” on the terms of service without looking, and start snapping and uploading pictures. More [HERE] Labels: superⅴpn 下载, digital, digital advertising, news articles, NY times 比特加速安卓Anaïs Florin – “Les Vaîtes avant l’écoquartier” #1
A few years ago I participated in Bien Urbain in Besancon France. After installing a bunch of pieces around town, I then held a workshop. Participants of the workshop made thier own posters and then as a group, we went out and put them up together without permission from the city. The basic idea was that you had to put up your own poster so that you broke that barrier between you and your shared public environment. With the entire group watching, there was a sense of safety in numbers that made it much easier for people break the rules, not to mention you didn't want to be the one person in the group that decided to chicken out in front of your peers. It was a really fantastic experience and everyone came away with a grin from ear to ear and plans to do more actions in the future. I left a set of hi vph加速器下载 keys for the Bien Urbain team and since then there have been several projects that have taken advantage of them. Quentin Cousirrat recently made me aware of a project by artist Anais Florin who made the advertising space around Besancon integral to her participation in Bien Urbain this year. Unauthorized civic media production seems to be a small but vibrant part of the Besancon public life.
Leaving keys in cities and then years later seeing them still in use makes me incredibly happy. While I do enjoy making the keys, it can sometimes seem like a chore. When I run out of keys I spend several days restocking them by hand cutting, milling and welding all of the parts until I have enough to last another year, or sometimes just a few months. People purchase the keys for between 25 and 30 dollars, which seems like a lot, but after materials comes out to between 10 and 15 dollars for what can be several hours of work depending on which key. I don't really exhibit these functional sculptures, they just go out in the mail and I never see them again. What I do see are projects like this, which make all the time behind the drill press, boring out the centers of 6mm Hex bar, well worth the effort.
For the 9th edition of Bien Urbain, she intervened in the Vaîtes district by meeting the gardeners who defend this place. Her first work, “Les Vaîtes avant l’écoquartier” (“The Vaîtes before the ecodistrict”) was a collection of 25 photographs put in billboards and bus shelters in the city center and the tram line linking it to the Vaîtes district. More [HERE] Labels: ad takeovers, besancon, bien urbain, free加速器安卓下载, environmentalism, France, Other Artists, public access Wednesday, July 10, 2023free v pn加速器
While I love the idea of reclaiming public space for the artwork and other civic media platforms, I have a hard time with projects like this. Basically the idea is to buy up as much advertising space using crowdfunding and private funds in order to display more appropriate content for our shared public spaces. But why would we pay for something that is inherently ours and somehow has ended up through no fault of our own in the possession of a private corporation? Seems like paying to get your lunch back from the schoolyard bully.
Labels: billboards, cologne, superⅴpn 下载 Monday, July 8, 2023Opinion | I Used Google Ads for Social Engineering. It Worked.
While I love this project and it's goals, redirect ads are still redirect ads that dupe you into seeing content you weren't looking for, placed there by someone who paid to influence your opinion. It may seem like a callous thing to say but I'd prefer we keep people from pursuing extremist lives by nurturing our citizenry with racial equality, economic fairness, and social justice that creates a sense that we are all in this together. I think the fair distribution of the immense wealth created by the human project would go a long way to combatting outsiderness. I believe it would inevitably come with racial and social justice as distribution would require us to face inequality. Some say that the competition which capitalism creates is what fuels our creative impulse and pushes society forward. The ingenious of humanity tied to the need to work harder and beat out your fellow man. I think that logic is a not so veiled attempt to hide the greed that undermines our social contract in its current form. While I am all for redirecting the suicidal to prevention, or extremist behavior towards the true costs of such pursuits, I wish we didn't have to do it by paying to manipulate the populous, because most manipulations just aren't that altruistic.
VIA: The NY Times
“One sentence could have stopped me,” Kevin wrote. “Had any one of the hundreds of passers-by engaged with me, it would … potentially have showed me that I had the ability to choose life.” More [HERE] Labels: data, news articles, 2021翻墙梯子, free加速器安卓 superⅴpn 下载Selling Your Private Information Is a Terrible Idea
As the tools of manipulation become more heavily driven by the data we create through our online, social, and physical interaction with the digitized world, its incumbent on us all to think about not only our ownership of that data, but how inalienable it is to our own being.
VIA: The NY Times More [HERE] Labels: 天行破解版无限免费, 天行破解版无限免费, hi vph加速器下载, surveillance capitalism 快喵Ⅴpnfree v pn加速器
VIA: The New York Times
Imagine you are shopping in your favorite grocery store. As you approach the dairy aisle, you are sent a push notification in your phone: “10 percent off your favorite yogurt! Click here to redeem your coupon.” You considered buying yogurt on your last trip to the store, but you decided against it. How did your phone know? More [HERE] Labels: digital advertising, NY times, tracking free加速器安卓下载Proposed State Law Could Put LED Billboard Boat Company Under Water
VIA: Gothamist
Labels: billboards, digital advertising, Gothamist, illegal advertising, NYC Thursday, June 13, 2023A Fake Zuckerberg Video Challenges Facebook’s Rules
VIA: The New York Times
Labels: bill posters, brandalism, superⅴpn 下载, video Wednesday, May 29, 2023云帆永久免费
VIA: VOX EU
Chloé Michel, Michelle Sovinsky, Eugenio Proto, Andrew Oswald 27 May 2023 Although the negative impact of conspicuous consumption has been discussed for more than a century, the link between advertising and individual is not well understood. This column uses longitudinal data for 27 countries in Europe linking change in life satisfaction to variation in advertising spend. The results show a large negative correlation that cannot be attributed to the business cycle or individual characteristics. More [HERE] Labels: academics Wednesday, May 22, 2023A MARKETING CAMPAIGN AGAINST ADVERTISING
Below is a wonderful essay by RJ Rushmore for Monument Lab. Im not sure how much RJ is aware of the writing of Jeff Ferrell but his sentiments echo a lot of Jeff's criminological research. Pigeon holed by the anti advertising title, most anti advertising activists are actually trying to imagine what might replace the commercial images that surround us if given the chance. RJ is well aware of this and like a lot of us, trying to figure out how to recontextualize what he is doing so that it broadens his demands and has more potential to change not only our streets, but fundamental ways in which we interact and exist with one another. Fantastic.
VIA: Monument Lab Labels: ad takeovers, criticism, Philadelphia, RJ Rushmore Wednesday, May 8, 20232021翻墙梯子
VIA: Philly Magazine
Labels: Philadelphia, 云帆永久免费 Tuesday, May 7, 2023Payphone-Replacing LinkNYC Kiosks Not Generating Projected Revenue
Intersection seems to be loosing money on their LINK NYC project by failing to meet projected ad revenue targets and essentially having to pay the city to operate a public infrastructure. This yearly loss doesn't even account the initial installation cost of development and hardware. It would seem like this business deal was a bad idea. And yet, Intersection continues to rapidly expand into other markets like London, Newark, and Philadelphia. What this article fails to mention is LINK NYC was never about the ad revenue but rather the data collection and Google's long term interest in harvesting the digital exhaust produced by cities. New York and most other cities aren't foolish enough to go all hi vph加速器下载 and render Google ground up control, so Intersection is going at it piecemeal. If the LINK NYC towers loose a few million on advertising, that is a small price to pay for the access to NYC's streets and the behavioral data that can be collected at scale with such a massive public infrastructure deployment. And dont think that traditional advertising is the only revenue source. The sale and use of behavioral data is incredibly lucrative and probably the main source of projected income as traditional forms of consumer manipulation give way to softer forms of quiet influence that leave us wanting without a clue where the wanting came from.
VIA: Gotham Gazette
Labels: free加速器安卓, NYC, free加速器安卓下载 Wednesday, May 1, 2023New York Bans Alcohol Ads on Most City Property
Advertising through repetition makes more likely that you will do something. It is an exercise of soft power that tips the scale one way in favor of those doing the advertising. Like the house at a casino. They don't win all the time, but the odds are in their favor. Advertising doesn't make you do something, but it makes it more likely. Considering alcohol has it's own addictive pull, we probably shouldn't give it any more advantages.
VIA: The NY Times
Labels: Bus Shelters, news articles, NY times, NYC 比特加速安卓The War on Messaging: Advertising and the Fight for Your Attention
Very Excited to be on a panel with my colleagues and good friends RJ Rushmore and Katherine Lorimer, Moderated by Josh McPhee on May 2nd at 7pm. We will talk briefly about our individual projects and relationship to the ad takeover world and then open it up to Josh and the audience to delve deeper into the efficacy and motivations of ad takeover work. Please come out and support our work and the Moniker fair which has been kind enough to host us.
Labels: activism, free v pn加速器, 快喵Ⅴpn, Luna Park, RJ Rushmore Sunday, April 28, 2023
VIA: Places Journal, Sam Bloch
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