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  • Öğe
    Thanatechnology and the Living Dead: New Concepts in Digital Transformation and Human-Computer Interaction
    (Mary Ann Liebert Inc., 2021) Özdemir, Vural; Springer, Simon; Yıldırım, Arif; Biçer, Şehmus; Kendirci, Aslıgül; Sardaş, Semra; Kılıç, Hakan
    In a digital society, shall we be the authors of our own experience, not only during our lifetime but also after we die? We ask this question because dying and bereavement have become even harder, and much less private, in the digital age. New big data-driven digital industries and technologies are on the rise, with promises of interactive 3D avatars and storage of digital memories of the deceased, so they can continue to exist online as the "living dead"in a digital afterlife. Famous rock and roll icons like Roy Orbison, Frank Zappa, Ronnie James Dio, and Amy Winehouse have famously been turned into holograms that can once again give "live"performances on the touring circuit, often pulling in large audiences. Death studies, dying, and grief have become virtual in the 21st century. We live in truly unprecedented times for human-computer interactions. Thanatology is the scientific study of death, dying, loss, and grief. In contrast to the biological study of biological aging (cellular senescence) and programmed cell death (apoptosis), thanatology employs multiple professional lenses, medical, psychological, physical, spiritual, ethical, descriptive, and normative. In 1997, Carla Sofka introduced the term thanatechnology as "technological mechanisms such as interactive videodiscs and computer programs that are used to access information or aid in learning about thanatology topics."Onward to 2021, the advent of social media, the Internet of Things, and sensors that digitize and archive nearly every human movement and experience are taking thanatechnology, and by extension, digital transformation, to new heights. For example, what happens to digital remains of persons once they cease to exist physically? This article offers a critical study and snapshot of this nascent field, and the "un-disciplinary"sociotechnical issues digital thanatechnologies raise in relation to big data. We also discuss how best to critically govern this new frontier in systems science and the digital society. We suggest that new policy narratives such as (1) the right to nonparticipation in relation to information and communication technologies and (2) the planetary public goods deserve further attention to democratize thanatechnology and big data. To the extent that systems science often depends on data from online platforms, for example, in times of pandemics and ecological crises, "critical thanatechnology studies,"introduced in this article, is a timely and essential field of scholarship with broad importance for systems science and planetary health.
  • Öğe
    Digital Death and Thanatechnology: New Ways of Thinking about Data (Im)Mortality and Digital Transformation
    (Mary Ann Liebert Inc., 2022) Biçer, Şehmus; Yıldırım, Arif
    Digital technologies such as the Internet of Things and artificial intelligence are changing how we live and do research, for example, the ways in which patient-reported outcomes and phenomics big data are curated and analyzed. Digital transformation is everywhere and is reshaping data (im)mortality in a wide range of sectors in medicine, engineering, journalism, and beyond. In this context, thanatechnology is a term introduced by Carla Sofka over two decades ago, referring to "any kind of technology that can be used to deal with death, dying, grief, loss, and illness."The field of thanatechnology has become relevant in the digital age as social media is full of accounts from dead individuals, whereas digital media is often harnessed as a source of data and metadata, and in times of pandemics and normalcy. Emerging macroscale analyses forecast billions of social media user accounts from deceased persons in the current century. What happens to digital remains of persons once they cease to exist physically? Digital death, or its absence in the case of deceased individuals, becomes a challenge for both data availability and veracity, and confound research and public health services. Data (im)mortality and digital death are also relevant for research on past events of significance for public health, for example, to discern the history of pandemics and ecological threats. This article examines and calls for new ways of thinking about digital death and thanatechnology as integral dimensions of digital transformation in medicine, new media studies, and society in the 21st century.
  • Öğe
    A Critical Investigation on the Issue of Digital Surveillance and Social Control during and after Covid- 19 Pandemic
    (Peter Lang AG, 2021) Eşitti, Şakir
    New communication technologies play an important role in combating the Covid- 19 pandemic. In addition, surveillance practices implemented through new communication technologies due to the pandemic also raise important concerns in the context of individual freedoms and privacy. During the Covid- 19 pandemic, operations such as location information obtained through smart phone applications, the use of social media, contact tracing applications through smart phones, tracking of a patient or a potential patient’s movements, contact tracking, data analysis in data networks and use of drones have provided greater opportunities for surveillance like never before in history. In such an atmosphere, in order to survive, individuals become voluntary participants of surveillance, while their freedom of communication and personal privacies are negatively affected. Surveillance affects not only individuals’ privacy and freedom of communication, but also it negatively effects democracy and freedom of expression. Despite this, public authorities around the world focus only on the health management benefits of surveillance, ignoring the long- term problems that surveillance practices created during the Covid- 19 pandemic. The study assesses this as a problematic and draws attention to the fact that the permanent surveillance procedures applied in the fight against the Covid- 19 pandemic may negatively affect individual freedoms, triggers internalization of surveillance. Accordingly, the potential threats of surveillance practices that increased during the Covid- 19 pandemic to personal privacy, communication, and freedom of expression were examined with a critical perspective in the context of Michel Foucault’s conceptualization of Panopticon and the phenomenon of social control. In the study, the possible consequences of data collection and surveillance practices used throughout the world during the Covid- 19 pandemic for individuals and societies were discussed, the surveillance methods used by states in combating the pandemic were determined, the consequences of the continuation of these methods in terms of privacy and democracy after the pandemic were questioned, and the importance of awareness about surveillance was emphasized.