Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age |  | Author: Clay Shirky Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The Category: Book
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Seller: allnewbooks Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 1,168
Media: Hardcover Pages: 256 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.7 x 1.1
ISBN: 1594202532 Dewey Decimal Number: 303.4833 EAN: 9781594202537 ASIN: 1594202532
Publication Date: June 10, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The author of the breakout hit Here Comes Everybody reveals how new technology is changing us from consumers to collaborators, unleashing a torrent of creative production that will transform our world.
For decades, technology encouraged people to squander their time and intellect as passive consumers. Today, tech has finally caught up with human potential. In Cognitive Surplus, Internet guru Clay Shirky forecasts the thrilling changes we will all enjoy as new digital technology puts our untapped resources of talent and goodwill to use at last.
Since we Americans were suburbanized and educated by the postwar boom, we've had a surfeit of intellect, energy, and time-what Shirky calls a cognitive surplus. But this abundance had little impact on the common good because television consumed the lion's share of it-and we consume TV passively, in isolation from one another. Now, for the first time, people are embracing new media that allow us to pool our efforts at vanishingly low cost. The results of this aggregated effort range from mind expanding-reference tools like Wikipedia-to lifesaving-such as Ushahidi.com, which has allowed Kenyans to sidestep government censorship and report on acts of violence in real time.
Shirky argues persuasively that this cognitive surplus-rather than being some strange new departure from normal behavior-actually returns our society to forms of collaboration that were natural to us up through the early twentieth century. He also charts the vast effects that our cognitive surplus-aided by new technologies-will have on twenty-first-century society, and how we can best exploit those effects. Shirky envisions an era of lower creative quality on average but greater innovation, an increase in transparency in all areas of society, and a dramatic rise in productivity that will transform our civilization.
The potential impact of cognitive surplus is enormous. As Shirky points out, Wikipedia was built out of roughly 1 percent of the man-hours that Americans spend watching TV every year. Wikipedia and other current products of cognitive surplus are only the iceberg's tip. Shirky shows how society and our daily lives will be improved dramatically as we learn to exploit our goodwill and free time like never before.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
Recommended as THE book to understand the fundamentals of social media collaboration June 27, 2010 M. McDonald (Chicago, IL United States) 57 out of 58 found this review helpful
Clay Shirky captured the ethos of social media with his book "Here comes everybody." He follows that book up with one that concentrates on the fundamentals of turning our cognitive surplus into value. Cognitive Surplus provides a compelling and clear description of the fundamentals of social media and collaboration as well providing principles that are guiding developments and innovation in this space.
There are many books out there that either describe the social media phenomenon or profess to provide a `recipe' for success. Neither of these approaches can provide you with the insight needed to effectively experiment and deploy social media for the simple reason that social media is changing too fast.
The book is organized into seven chapters that outline a complete way of thinking about social media.
Chapter 1: Gin, Television and Cognitive Surplus sets the context of social change and evolution of free time. This chapter sets the context for the rest of the story giving you the perspective to think through the issues.
Chapter 2: Means discusses the transition of the means of production from one of scarcity controlled by professionals to abundance and the participation of amateurs.
Chapter 3: Motive captures the essence of the reasons why people contribute their time, talent and attention to collective action. Here Shirky talks about issues of autonomy, competence, generosity and sharing.
Chapter 4: Opportunity recognizes the importance of creating ways of taking advantage of group participation. This chapter contains discussions of behavioral economics and the situations which generates group participation.
Chapter 5: Culture discusses the differences between extrinsic rewards - where people are paid to perform a task and the culture of intrinsic rewards - where compensation comes outside of a formal contracted pay.
Chapter 6: Personal, Communal, Public, Civic this chapter brings it all together giving the book a solid foundation illustrated by compelling examples.
Chapter 7: Looking for the Mouse is as meaty a chapter as any in the book. Normally the final chapter wraps up, but here Shirky discusses 11 principles associated with tapping into cognitive surplus. These principles are among the best in the book.
This book gives you a way to thinking about how people contribute their time, attention and knowledge and therefore how you can think about social media. In my opinion, this is THE BOOK to read if you are new to the subject of mass collaboration, social media, Web 2.0 etc. Here is why:
Strengths
Shirky provides a comprehensive discussion of the fundamentals of cognitive surplus and how those fundamentals have changed over time. This provides the reader with a solid foundation to translate their experiences and understanding into a new media.
The book does not talk about specific technologies. I do not think I read the term blog or wiki too often. This is strength, because frankly the technology is changing is too fast. Shirky does discuss the reasons why applications like Napster met with such success.
The book has a gentle blend of academic and journalistic writing. There is real depth of thinking in the book. One example is the discussion about the fallacy of Gen X being different or irrational. At the same time the writing is clean, well organized and easy to read.
The book provides a thoughtful discussion of the principles that drive social media and give the reader a framework that they can apply to their own situation. A word of warning, you will have to think about your situation and these ideas
Challenges
Readers looking for a recipe will be somewhat disappointed as Shirky recognizes that social media solutions will continue to depend on design principles more than detailed processes.
The book occasionally falls back into a policy mode as it describes social trends and societal implications. This can draw you off the main argument from time to time.
This book is dense with great insight and thinking. I list this as a challenge for people who are looking for quick read. You will get more than a simple 12-step process from reading this book.
Overall
Overall recommended for anyone who wants to understand the social media and mass collaboration phenomenon. This book is strongly recommended as a first book to start reading about social media.
Business executives reading the book can gain a deeper understanding of social media that will help them avoid the - we're on Facebook so therefore we are social solution.
Technologists will initially be disappointed as this is not a technical book, but I ask them to read the book carefully and think about how technologies create the means to bring collaboration together. After all, successful social collaboration involves a unique blend of social and technical systems. The technical piece is significantly more straightforward than getting the right social systems and this is what this book is all about.
Use Social Connectivity to Change the World June 29, 2010 Alyson (Flagstaff, Azerbaijan) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
My TIVO hates Clay Shirky. In his piercing new book Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age Shirky asserts that the technological revolution has enabled us to work together to conquer challenges big and small, if we'd just watch less TV and commit to participating in something other than our own mental decay.
TV watching on a per capita basis has increased for 50 years in a row, and that staggering amount of time has come largely at the expense of human connectedness and innovation. Before TV we entertained ourselves by interacting, making and doing, whether it was paper airplanes, a game of Yahtzee, or family harmonica night.
But at least in places with electricity, we've largely retreated into our heads, with the flicker of TV as the endless soundtrack.
But all is not lost, if you just commit to turning away from Starsky & Hutch, and toward the opportunities for greater good.
In this meticulously researched book, Shirky suggests that the historical barriers to collaboration (principally time, expense, and the ability to easily find like-minded people) have been largely stripped away, enabling us to make better use of the unused brain cells (our cognitive surplus) made dormant by TV addiction.
The book includes several compelling examples of groups creating and maintaining impressive online collaborations, without a profit motive in sight. Harnessing the power of the collective (crowdsourcing for social change) is a thread woven throughout Cognitive Surplus, and its viability requires two of Shirky's assertions to be accurate.
First, that our default state as a species is to create and share and collaborate, and we are just now moving back toward normalcy, aided by the vast increase in content creation and sharing mechanisms. Second, that making collaboration more convenient will inexorably cause it to become more commonplace.
Shirky makes a great case for it to be so, citing LOLCats as an example of widespread human collaboration and creation - albeit devoid of the type of society-enhancing mission and outcomes he hopes is the eventual result of this movement.
"Many of our behaviors...(are) held in place not be desire but by inconvenience, and they're quick to disappear when the inconvenience does. Getting news from a piece of paper, having to be physically near a television at a certain time to see a certain show, keeping our vacation pictures to ourselves as if they were some big secret - not one of these behaviors made a lick of sense. We did those things for decades or even centuries, but they were only as stable as the accidents that caused them. And when the accidents went away, so did the behaviors."
Shirky is realistic in his assessment of collaborations strengths and weaknesses. His chronicle of an online study group at Ryerson University is a perfect example of the ramifications of widespread interconnectivity that society will be wrestling with into the future.
The rise and role of the "non-professional" is another very interesting concept in the book, as an increase in participation naturally leads to an explosion in content created by people that haven't been vetted by the traditional means of degrees, apprenticeships, or ownership of a broadcasting license. Shirky points out that consumer-powered review sites like Yelp are just as valid as a critique from a professional restaurant reviewer, although perhaps for different reasons based on the collective knowledge and biases of each source.
As I see it, the recipe for improving the world through collaboration has three steps:
1. More people making stuff (100 million bloggers can't be wrong)
2. More people sharing the stuff that they make (3 billion photos per month uploaded to Facebook)
3. People that make and share coming together to tackle larger initiatives
I'd say we're somewhere between steps two and three, and Cognitive Surplus provides many examples of success at each stage of the process.
In a sea of "me too" books about social media, Cognitive Surplus stands out as about so much more. Who we are. Who we want to be. And who we could be if we put down the remote and worked together, with technology as the enabler.
I'm a bit of a change addict. I'd go to a different restaurant every day, if it was viable. I almost never read a book twice, but Cognitive Surplus will be an exception. It's the rare book that captures where we are and where we're going, while making you think and still being accessible.
Bravo, Clay.
Reorganizing what is possible June 13, 2010 Chaos Pilot (New York, NY USA) 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
This book caused me to rethink what is possible, as very large numbers of people begin using their free time in different ways.
The simple math of huge numbers of people choosing to spend free time in new ways, is hard to get your head around, but Shirky provides plenty of examples to bridge the gap between broad concepts and specific outcomes.
Shirky does offer some thoughts on how we might benefit from cognitive surplus, but in my opinion, he does something more important which is challenge underlying assumptions about what people can and will do amid a shifting emphasis from consumption to production and participation.
Essential reading for understanding the impact of social media June 22, 2010 Neil Wehrle (Brooklyn, NY USA) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Clay Shirky's "Cognitive Surplus" is an excellent followup to "Here Comes Everybody". The title comes from the notion that we, as a society, have a surplus of engagement ability that we've been wasting watching sitcoms. He describes a growing movement of collaboration and sharing enabled by free (or freely accesible) online tools. Shirky paints a diverse landscape of motivations, actors and groups succeeding in ways (and importantly, scales) not possible a generation ago. He's very clear that social media is not a utopia, that it will in fact breed its own set of problems. This revolution is by no means guaranteed, either, since corporate and government institutions can still quash many aspects of it. But the possibility of a massive increase in civic engagement that only demands a small diversion of attention is too amazing to overlook.
Often, when we think about the future, we imagine the tools we will use, but rarely the impact those will have on social structures. Shirky doesn't attempt to predict the future, but he makes the case that a third way of civic engagement is emerging, distinct from what has been historically corporate and government-driven. I think the fact that Shirky can summon so many compelling examples even at this early stage, speaks to the significance of what he's writing about.
Shirky's writing is lively and engaging, and uses relevant anecdotes and humor to make his points accessible, but each point is significant and worth reflection. It can be skimmed like a popular business book, but anyone who does a closer read is rewarded with a lot more to think about here, especially perusing the endnotes.
A new framework for understanding social media July 15, 2010 John Gibbs (Melbourne, Australia) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
"One thing that makes the current age remarkable is that we can now treat free time as a general social asset that can be harnessed for large, communally created projects, rather than as a set of individual minutes to be whiled away one person at a time," according to Clay Shirky in this book. The time which people are no longer spending passively watching television can now become what the author calls "cognitive surplus".
People who used to spend most of their free time consuming are now voluntarily making and sharing things. Most of the "user-generated content" that they are making and sharing is of low quality, but this is the start of a "participatory culture" rather than a passive culture. The means for this change is provided by social media tools; the motivation is people's intrinsic need for autonomy and competence; and the opportunity is created by the patterns of our lives as social creatures.
The book provides a very interesting explanation for the successes of Wikipedia, open-source software and similar things which rely on careful co-ordination of large-scale volunteer efforts. I found the chapters on motives and opportunity less interesting because much of the material has already been covered in other books on behavioural economics. On the whole, though, I think that the book does provide a valuable framework for understanding the new age of social media.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
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