From: David Murakami Wood <[email protected]> Alice Marwick tops our first survey of Surveillance & Society's most read recent articles (2010-2013*) (views / year):
1. Alice Marwick (2012) The Public Domain: Surveillance in Everyday Life (3558) 2. danah boyd (2012) Networked Privacy (1152) 3. Kenneth Farrell (2012) Online Collectivism, Individualism and Anonymity in East Asia (858) 4. Christian Fuchs (2011) Web 2.0, Prosumption, and Surveillance (777.33) 5. Lorna Muir (2012) ‘Control Space?: Cinematic Representations of Surveillance Space between Discipline and Control’ (688) 6. Milton Mueller, Andreas Kuehn, Stephanie Michelle Santoso (2012) Policing the Network: Using DPI for Copyright Enforcement (686.5) 7. Jonathan Finn (2012) Surveillance Studies and Visual Art: An Examination of Jill Magid's Evidence Locker (629) 8. David M Bozzini (2011) Low-tech surveillance and the despotic state in Eritrea (587.33) 9. Katherine Barnard-Wills, David Barnard-Wills (2012) Invisible Surveillance in Visual Art (545) 10. Ilse van Liempt, Irina van Aalst (2012) Urban Surveillance and the Struggle between Safe and Exciting Nightlife Districts (503.5) *since we moved to Queen's university servers. Before that, we did not have such convenient download statistics. The figures are only for direct downloads from this site or on-site views of the full article, and do not include any other method of reading or downloading (for example, from other open access repositories). Again, this just for fun... More here with links: http://library.queensu.ca/ojs/index.php/surveillance-and-society/announcement/view/78 David MW. Editor-in-Chief Surveillance & Society http://www.surveillance-and-society.org
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