On this episode of Tech Won’t Save Us, Ulises A. Mejias and Nick Couldry Silicon Valley’s extractive data collection regime. Paris Marx Here's where to find podcasts from The Nation. Political talk ...
This talk introduces the speakers’ new book, The Costs of Connection: How Data Colonizes Human Life and Appropriates it for Capitalism (Stanford University Press, August 2019). Couldry and Mejias ...
The lecture will be held at the HCAS Common Room, Fabianinkatu 24A, 3rd floor on Wednesday 9.4. at 16–18. 9th of April 2025, 16–18, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies Common Room, Fabianinkatu ...
Welcome to an afternoon seminar with HSSH Visiting Professor Nick Couldry from London School of Economics and Political Science. 10.4.2025, 14–17 at HSSH Seminar room 524, Fabianinkatu 24 A, 5th floor ...
Nick Couldry has outlined with great clarity the unequal symbolic landscape within which the events of 11 September worked as communicative acts. His comments on the unevenness of the global media ...
The phrase 'the costs of connection' has abruptly taken on a new and more sinister meaning in the last couple of months, as international and domestic travel links -- vectors by which humans carried ...
Do we really know how much data we’re giving away and how it’s being used? A new book by Nick Couldry and Ulises Mejias explores the murky world of big tech and how we can fight back. Do you use ...
As a sociologist of media and culture, he approaches media and communications from the perspective of the symbolic power that has been historically concentrated in media institutions. He is interested ...
How do we create healthier and more sustainable engagement with social media? Organized by RSM Visiting Scholar Joanne Armitage and moderated by BKC Faculty Associate Nick Couldry, this event will ...
Nick Couldry and Ulises Ali Mejias trace a trend in research that focuses on how society is transformed by data extraction for profit. The idea of data colonialism offers "the most comprehensive ...
Gradually I became interested in why it is we have belief, or even trust, in media institutions, when so much important power – the power to tell the stories of what happens in the world – are rather ...