Society of the Query #2
Online Search: about 4.720.000.000 results
November 7 – 8, 2013
Main Building Amsterdam Public Library (OBA)
Amsterdam (NL)
 
This fall the Institute of Network Cultures invites you to the second Society 
of the Query conference on search and search engines, 7 and 8 November in the 
OBA (public library) in Amsterdam. Together with René König from the ITAS 
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, we are working on putting together the 
program with different sessions and discussions, that will hopefully be 
complemented with exciting workshops, an art program and a hackathon. We aim to 
give new energy to the discussion on search and search engines by bringing 
together researchers from different disciplines, with artists, programmers and 
designers. In early 2014 this will also result in the publication of the 
Society of the Query Reader. 

Preliminary program:

November 7 (afternoon):

1. Google domination
Even though it is the aim of the Society of the Query to broaden the scope of 
search beyond Google, it is nonetheless inevitable to pay attention to the 
dominance of Google in the search engine market - especially from the 
perspective of the Netherlands, where Google has a market share of around 95%. 
Despite the growing diversification of Google in terms of revenue, search is 
still its main source of income, while users still see Google as a free 
service. Lately the battlefield has shifted to search on mobile phones - could 
this change or even end Google's domination? What are the implications of the 
low resistance of the Google monopoly against PRISM? Has the time come for 
alternative, independent search engines?
With Siva Vaidhyanathan (US), Astrid Mager (AT), Dirk Lewandowski (GE)

2. Search across the border
It is little known in the west that elsewhere in the world Google is not a 
major player. Can we speak of cultural differences in the architecture of 
search technology? And in the way users search in for example the rural parts 
of India? In China there is a separate search engine domain, leading to a 
different political economy of online search - geopolitical, linguistically and 
culturally. How can we oppose this to the libertarian, North-American values of 
Google?
With Payal Arora (NL), Min Jiang (US)

3. Reflections on search
Is it possible to analyze the search engine as a cultural artifact? Does it 
have a philosophical agenda and how can we read it? Search is often overlooked 
as an important part in the fast changing field of knowledge production. It is 
only dealt with in a mathematical and statistical fashion or with a focus on 
its economic significance as a tool of corporate power. But search did not 
commence in the late 90s - it has been around for centuries. It's important to 
stress the media-archeological approach, since the history of search, digital 
or analogue, offers many insights into its cultural meaning. 
With Antoinette Rouvroy (BE), Anton Tantner (AT), Kylie Jarrett (IRE)

November 8

4. Search in context
There is a long-term cultural shift in trust happening, away from the library, 
the book store, even the school towards Google's algorithms. What does that 
mean? How are search engines used in today's classrooms and do teachers have 
enough critical understanding of what it means to hand over authority? We think 
we find more and in a faster way, while we might actually find less or useless 
information. The way we search is related to the way we see the world - how do 
we learn to operate in this context?
With Simon Knight (UK), Thomas Petzold (GE), Sanne Koevoets (NL)

5. The filter bubble show
Since Eli Pariser's influential book The Filter Bubble appeared in 2011, a 
range of researchers have empirically tried to validate or debunk the 
proposition of the filter bubble. Is it truly so that the person sitting next 
to you gets a different search result while using in the same keywords? What do 
you actually see when you type ‘9/11’ in the Google autocomplete search bar in 
Baghdad and in New York? What are the long-term effects of personalization and 
localization and their tendency to a 'relative truth'? We need to find a way to 
take our Twitter, Facebook and search engine profiles to burst the bubble and 
understand society. 
With Martin Feuz (UK), Noortje Marres (NL), Carolin Gerlitz (NL), René König 
(GE) and others

The Society of the Query project started in 2009 with a conference and research 
blog, in parallel to the Deep Search series of events, organized by the 
World-Information Institute in Vienna. While these efforts have contributed to 
a better understanding of the impact of search engines, many open questions 
remain. Moreover, dynamics in the field have led to new questions: How does the 
rise of the social web affect search engines and the practices around them? 
Which consequences do innovations like personalization, localization or 
autocomplete have? How can we re-think the established search routines?

If you have research, art projects or alternative search engines which might be 
of interest to Society of the Query, don't hesitate to let us know about it 
(contact: mir...@networkcultures.org).
Keep an eye on the website for more information: 
http://networkcultures.org/query/
You can also subscribe to the [re-search] mailing list: 
http://listcultures.org/mailman/listinfo/re-search_listcultures.org 

See you in November!

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