View Source: Reading the Hidden Texts of the Web Thompson Jeff Stevens Institute of Technology, United States of America mail@jeffreythompson.org 2014-12-19T13:50:00Z Maciej Eder, Pedagogical University in Krakow Jan Rybicki, Jagiellonian University
Institute of Polish Studies Pedagogical University ul. Podchorazych 2 30-084 Krakow, Poland maciej.eder@ijp-pan.krakow.pl

Converted from a Word document

Paper Pre-Conference Workshop and Tutorial internet reading HTML JavaScript archives, repositories, sustainability and preservation corpora and corpus activities information retrieval text analysis internet / world wide web concording and indexing content analysis hypertext interdisciplinary collaboration programming cultural infrastructure media studies data mining / text mining English

When discussing the web, the two layers of online experience we most often talk about are interactions and their underlying technology. We unpack the conversations and transactions happening online (anti-feminist rhetoric, how Twitter differs from Medium), and we discuss how algorithms shape those experiences (Facebook’s decisions about what is in your feed, A/B testing). But at an intermediary level, an entire corpus is being written in Javascript variables and HTML comments , standardized but hidden files, and even the structure of websites themselves. This workshop will investigate these intermediary layers from a critical, exploratory point of view.

This workshop will use a hackathon-like methodology of play and exploration to maximize breadth and depth – the goal is creative and critical investigation rather than technical. After some short, fairly low-tech tutorials to introduce tools and methodologies, participants will spend the remainder of the workshop digging across the web and presenting their findings. All levels of technical expertise will be encouraged, as will ad hoc collaboration. Those with prior experience using the tools introduced are encouraged to dig deeper.

Workshop Leader Jeff Thompson an artist, teacher, hacker, and writer whose work investigates the poetics of technology, how its functionality can provide access points for meaningful exploration, the agency of increasingly self-aware systems, and the physicalization of otherwise invisible processes. He is currently Assistant Professor and Program Director of Visual Arts and Technology at Stevens Institute of Technology.

Questions about this workshop: jeff.thompson@stevens.edu

Tech requirements Participants should bring:

A laptop with WiFi access An up-to-date version of Firefox installed (mozilla.org/firefox) Sublime Text text editor (free version is fine, sublimetext.com) If possible, please install wget (gnu.org/software/wget) Other text-mining/web tools of your choice