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limn

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About

Limn is an experiment in outlining.

It combines the collaborative focus of a special issue of a journal with the spontaneity and interactivity of new media. Limn focuses on reconstruction and recomposition of concepts in contemporary culture. Limn is modeled on the convivial and critical features of a studio in art, architecture or design. Each episode differs from the last-different curators bring different problems and approaches to the basic concepts and tools developed in and through the process.

Issue cover

Articles

Mapping the Social World: From Aggregates to Individual

Can data be liberal or conservative? Alain Desrosières excavates the curious story of 'correspondence analysis' and its rise to fame.

Occupy Sourcing

Amira Pettus diagrams how Occupy recreates the structures and organization of collectives.

Top Needs of Occupy Sites

J.R. Baldwin collects the top needs of Occupy sites across the nation.

Microworking the Crowd

How do you turn millions of people into a CPU? Lilly Irani unravels the mysteries of human-as-computation in Amazon Mechanical Turk

Engineering Collectives: Technology From the Coop

Engineers make the world, but not just as they please. Chris Csikszentmihályi recounts how engineers come to be part of one collective or another.

Am I Anonymous?

Learning how Anonymous works means learning to be one. Gabriella Coleman narrates her experience of being in between worlds.

Algorithmic Recommendations and Synaptic Functions

Personalized recommendation is the new marketing. Nick Seaver explains how ‘collaborative filtering’ de- fines people through their purchases.

Public Safety and Wall Street

Compstat and the Real Time Crime Center are at the epicenter of Bloomberg’s New York. Emmanuel Didier explores how they are turning public safety into a commodity for Wall Street.

The Weakness of Crowds

Why can’t crowds defend themselves? Alek Felstiner explores how the power of crowds to decide is also a weakness when it comes to organizing.

Can an Algorithm be Wrong?

How do we know if we are where it’s at? Tarleton Gillespie explores the controversy over Twitter Trends and the algorithmic ‘censorship’ of #occupywallstreet.

Crowd funding and its Challenges

Micro-lending plus crowd-sourcing creates its own problems. Roma Jhaveri explains how to keep crowds happy.

Crowds and Collectivities in Networked Electoral Politics

What happens when a crowd decides to think for it- self? Daniel Kreiss explores the answer in the 2008 Obama campaign.

The Touch-point Collective: Crowd Contouring on the Casino Floor

Women under thirty and retired men might have surprisingly similar tastes for gambling. Natasha Dow Schüll explains how casinos have created a new kind of crowd.

  • 2 supplemental videos

Everywhere and Nowhere: Focus Groups as All-Purpose Devices

Can a focus group be all of us? Rebecca Lemov explores how the box of donuts and the one-way mirror have become essential features of our self-understanding.

Romans or Barbarians? Political Campaigns and Social Media in Colombia

Elections are still about shaking hands and kissing babies, for the time being. Maria Vidart explores the first experience with social media campaigning in Colombia.