From NERD to One to Watch
Microsoft's renowned social media researcher danah boyd (yes, the lower case is intentional) is in the news again since Fortune magazine announced her as One to Watch.
danah is currently off doing fieldwork, so we decided to run our Microspotting interview with her from early 2009 - shortly after she started working for Microsoft.
How's it going getting settled into NERD, aka Microsoft's New England Research & Development center?
I haven't done enough nesting yet, but so far, so good. mostly, it's a crash course in setting up computers, balancing meetings, figuring out hierarchies, learning the intranet … a radical change from the last six months of never leaving my couch just writing, writing, writing.
Right: you're not only transitioning into a new job and new city -- but also out of dissertation mode. How's that going?
Yup. New city, new job, far far far far far more human interaction. I mean, in the last six months of my dissertation, i really didn't see anyone but my partner. I was a COMPLETE hermit. Mandatory isolation is required training to be an academic.
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I'm super curious about your decision to come to Microsoft -- especially given the fact that some in the social media industry have been known to hate on Microsoft ...
I wrote a rant on my blog about why i chose this lab. I don't really care about what the industry has to say about MSFT. I’m here because it’s the most interesting place i could be at.
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What I really care about is that the company values research. Microsoft Research is hands down the most impressive research institution i’ve seen. Even though my research has product implications, i’m not a product person, but i love being in a place where my work funnels into products. I also think a lot of folks underestimate the role that MSFT plays in shaping policy, both explicitly and implicitly. I hope my research also shapes policy going forward.
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Mostly, i've been puzzling about boundaries, especially around the notions of public/private and how people manage tensions of audiences online. Everyone's up in arms saying that the kids don't get privacy. And of course there's the old battle cry that privacy is dead. But i think that both are dead wrong. I think that privacy is playing out in new ways that are connected to the dynamics of social media. So, i want to explore that. In the short-term, it'll mostly mean looking at things like Twitter and Facebook Status Updates and whatnot, but i’m more into the bigger issues than those particular technologies.