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This book is the first general social analysis that seriously
considers the daily experience of information disruption and
software failure within contemporary Western society. Through an
investigation of informationalism, defined as a contemporary form
of capitalism, it describes the social processes producing
informational disorder. While most social theory sees disorder as
secondary, pathological or uninteresting, this book takes
disordering processes as central to social life. The book engages
with theories of information society which privilege information
order, offering a strong counterpoint centred on "disinformation."
Disorder and the Disinformation Society offers a practical agenda,
arguing that difficulties in producing software are both inherent
to the process of developing software and in the social dynamics of
informationalism. It outlines the dynamics of software failure as
they impinge on of information workers and on daily life, explores
why computerized finance has become inherently self-disruptive,
asks how digital enclosure and intellectual property create
conflicts over cultural creativity and disrupt informational
accuracy and scholarship, and reveals how social media can extend,
but also distort, the development of social movements.
This book is the first general social analysis that seriously
considers the daily experience of information disruption and
software failure within contemporary Western society. Through an
investigation of informationalism, defined as a contemporary form
of capitalism, it describes the social processes producing
informational disorder. While most social theory sees disorder as
secondary, pathological or uninteresting, this book takes
disordering processes as central to social life. The book engages
with theories of information society which privilege information
order, offering a strong counterpoint centred on "disinformation."
Disorder and the Disinformation Society offers a practical agenda,
arguing that difficulties in producing software are both inherent
to the process of developing software and in the social dynamics of
informationalism. It outlines the dynamics of software failure as
they impinge on of information workers and on daily life, explores
why computerized finance has become inherently self-disruptive,
asks how digital enclosure and intellectual property create
conflicts over cultural creativity and disrupt informational
accuracy and scholarship, and reveals how social media can extend,
but also distort, the development of social movements.
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