caitopp

my face today
I live in Brooklyn, NY and have a lot of interests.

caitlinoppermann@gmail.com
caitlinoppermann.com
photo
listening to
going to
twitter

I used to work at College Humor and helped put together things called Original Videos. Now I go to Pratt Institute in Brooklyn to study photography.

I also have a blog of
mobile photos.

David Trawin and I created Sorry I'm An Asshole.

My friends have
blogs, too:
Morgan Pearse
Julia Heffernan
Dave Trawin
Justin Ouellette
Jake Hurwitz
Vince Peone
Amir Cohen
Andrew Pile
Sarah Schneider
Kate Heffernan
David Cho
Jakob Lodwick
Ted Roden
Noah Kalina
Amanda Ferri
Sam Reich
Casey Pugh
Patrick Moberg
Jen Dunlap
Jeff Rubin
Eric Lodwick
Mareen Fischinger


Archive

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May
8th
Fri
permalink
rarrmi:

davidtrawin:

zachklein:

It’s not the infographics on the page that interest me, rather it’s the trend of emphasizing a user’s popularity on the network. Lamentably, I think this metric will come to define the experience for the next generation of social networks. I fear that the internet’s utility for many people will equate to constant awareness of one’s value, and the play of meaningless games to increase the sum. This in turn will render many networks impersonal and irrelevant. Like a candidate’s bid speech for high school class presidency, I fear my Tumblr dashboard will become padded with ‘popular stuff’ sure to garner votes rather than the intimate, vulnerable and quirky bits that I’ve enjoyed, and define Tumblr’s personality.
I’m disappointed by Tumblarity, and Ashton’s follower count for the same reasons. I liked the Internet better when it was nebulous, and now I’m depressed that it shaping up to be a social pyramid.


Agreed. Measuring someone’s “worth” isn’t as simple as counting how many assholes have read your “deep” quote.

I wholeheartedly agree.  I think this is a move in the wrong direction.  

rarrmi:

davidtrawin:

zachklein:

It’s not the infographics on the page that interest me, rather it’s the trend of emphasizing a user’s popularity on the network. Lamentably, I think this metric will come to define the experience for the next generation of social networks. I fear that the internet’s utility for many people will equate to constant awareness of one’s value, and the play of meaningless games to increase the sum. This in turn will render many networks impersonal and irrelevant. Like a candidate’s bid speech for high school class presidency, I fear my Tumblr dashboard will become padded with ‘popular stuff’ sure to garner votes rather than the intimate, vulnerable and quirky bits that I’ve enjoyed, and define Tumblr’s personality.

I’m disappointed by Tumblarity, and Ashton’s follower count for the same reasons. I liked the Internet better when it was nebulous, and now I’m depressed that it shaping up to be a social pyramid.

Agreed. Measuring someone’s “worth” isn’t as simple as counting how many assholes have read your “deep” quote.

I wholeheartedly agree.  I think this is a move in the wrong direction.  

4.10 pm - May 8, 2009