hearsay culture
Diese Sendung lief bei uns bis zum 31. August 2017 im Programm.
Der Podcast 'Hearsayculture' beschäftigt sich mit Themen wie Technologie und Internet und versucht, ein breites Publikum zu adressieren. Alle Sendungen werden auf KZSU-FM (Stanford University) erstausgestrahlt und sind auf dem zugehörigen Blog unter Creative-Commons-Lizenz (BY-SA) verfügbar.
David Levine, der Verantwortliche der Sendereihe, ist Assistant Professor of Law an der Elon University School of Law und Non-Residential Fellow am Center for Internet and Society (CIS) der Stanford Law School.
From the show description on the website:
Hearsay Culture is a KZSU-FM (Stanford University) radio interview show and podcast, hosted by Dave Levine, an Assistant Professor of Law at Elon University School of Law and a Non-Residential Fellow at the Center for Internet and Society (CIS) at Stanford Law School. In sum, each 50-55 minute show is designed to cover modern technology/Internet issues, but not from a purely law or geek perspective.
The name ‘Hearsay Culture‘ derives from the notion that technology particularly the Internet requires that humans filter information and decide how much weight is given to it. In United States law, ‘hearsay evidence‘ is generally defined as ‘a statement made out of court and not under oath and offered in evidence as proof that what is stated is true.‘ In that way, we live in a ‘hearsay culture‘ the massive amount of information that people who interact with technology confront must be filtered with the consideration that it, too, might be hearsay.
MacherIn: David Levine
Speziell zur Sendung am
Donnerstag, den 03. April 2014:
Show #205 Prof. Susan Sell on international relations and transparency February 26, 2014
Im pleased to post Show #205, February 26, my interview with Prof. Susan Sell of the Elliott School of International Affairs at The George Washington University on international relations and transparency. Susan is one of the leading experts on the processes and conditions that allow for international relations and negotiations to operate effectively and openly. As a scholar with years of experience observing and writing about the nuances of negotiation and diplomacy, her insights with regard to the recent and ongoing battles over the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations are key to our collective understanding of the state of international relations today. We discussed a variety of issues related to the current state of the TPP negotiations and international diplomacy generally. As a huge fan of her work, I greatly enjoyed our discussion.
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