Quello Center Video Catalog
The following Quello Center videos, listed within general categories, are available free online through the designated links. The Quello Center hopes they will help support your research and teaching. Please post any comments you may have on this blog. We welcome your thoughts, and hope you enjoy whatever video presentations are of interest to your work.
Take your pick,
Bill Dutton, Director of the Quello Center
Videos
Big Data
Use of Big Data By States: China & India
By Muzammil Hussain
Cable and Satellite
Comparing Cable TV in Korea and the USA: Major Differences
By Sung Wook Ji
Communication, Media and Information Policy
Communication in the Modern Age
Interview with Bill Dutton and Dr. Sung Hee Kim
Communication Policy Processes in the US
By Johannes Bauer
Regulating the Internet: What is ‘Special Access’ and Why is it so Important?
By Aleks Yankelevich
Delivering Media Content in a New Technological Environment: An Explanation of Policy Implications
By Steve Wildman
Cybersecurity and Cybercrime
Cybercrime Offending and Victimization
By Tom Holt
Digital Inequalities
Center For Digital Inclusion
By Jon Gant
Unlocking Potential: New Frontiers in Digital Inequality Research
By Bibi Reisdorf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gzkf4lfYuhM&noredirect=1
Economic Development
Social Media & Development
Rob Ackland
ICT For Development in Agricultural Sectors
With Charles Steinfield
Internet Policy, Regulation and Governance
The Destabilization of Internet Governance
By Laura DeNardis
Trashed: A Comparative Exploration of Law’s Relevance to Online Reputation
By Elizabeth Kirley
Racism, Sexism, and Video Games: Social Justice Campaigns and the Struggle for Gamer Identity
By Lisa Nakamura
Anatomy of the FCC’s Network Neutrality Rules (Webcast)
By Adam Candeub
Domination in Search Markets: Why? How? & How to Respond?
By Steve Wildman
Regulating the Internet: What is ‘Special Access’ and Why is it so Important?
By Aleks Yankelevich
Management
The Importance of Public Service #ChangeAgents in Exponential Times
By David Bray
Talk – https://vimeo.com/140513826
Discussion – https://vimeo.com/140513867
Internet, Open Data, and Civic Engagement in Detroit
By Garlin Gilchrist II
Enterprise Social Media: Implications for Business Collaboration and Knowledge Management
By Charles Steinfield
New Business Models for New Media
By Dr. Constantinos K. Coursaris
Public Service
Millennials, Public Media and The Future of Civil Discourse
By Alexander Heffner
Internet, Open Data, and Civic Engagement in Detroit
By Garlin Gilchrist II
Use of Big Data By States: China & India
By Muzammil Hussain
Social Media and Society
Crowdsourced and Community Maintained
By Caroline Haythornthwaite
Trashed: A Comparative Exploration of Law’s Relevance to Online Reputation
By Elizabeth Kirley
Racism, Sexism, and Video Games: Social Justice Campaigns and the Struggle for Gamer Identity
By Lisa Nakamura
I Change My City – Through the Internet
By Venkatesh Kannaiah
I Paid a Bribe
By Venkatesh Kannaiah
Society Meets Social Media: Canaries at the Coal Face of the Internet
By William Dutton
Watch video
Food Safety in Online Issue Networks
By Annie Waldherr
Comprehension Models in Text and Audiovisual Processing
By Dave Ewoldsen
Telecommunication and the Internet in Community and Urban Development
I Change My City – Through the Internet
By Venkatesh Kannaiah
Internet, Open Data, and Civic Engagement in Detroit
By Garlin Gilchrist II
Persistent and Pervasive Community
By Keith Hampton
Communication Technology and Urban Community: Stories From Seoul
By Yong-Chan Kim
Tributes, Awards, Memorials
Cable Hall of Fame 2016 Recognition of John Evans
By John Evans
Tribute to Steve Wildman on his Retirement
By Professors Johannes Bauer & Prabu David
Tribute to Quello Center Founding Director, Steve Wildman
Created by Gary Reid & WKAR
https://vimeo.com/126388921
Memorial to Mark Levy: Past Chair and Professor of Media and Information and Quello Colleague
Dear Bill and colleagues – many thanks for sharing this valuable resource. But all the videos look pretty compelling and I can’t watch more than a couple! It would be more valuable still if you could add links to whatever related materials are available – abstracts, transcripts, slide packs, working papers to name a few – to help the busy (or overstretched, or plain lazy) among us, like me, to choose.
Claire,
Fair point. Nearly all of the talks are also listed on our events page. But I will certainly consider your suggestion – and in the meantime, I am delighted you find a number of interest.
Regards,
Bill