Ego search visualizer

egosearch1.jpg

Pretty much everyone has googled themselves to see what the internet has to say about them. However, if you're particularly active on forums, blogs, twitter and so on, you'll end up with so many hits you can barely process it. A web application called Personas created by MIT doctoral student Aaron Zinman attempts to generate a visual representation of those hits, creating a bar chart breaking the subject down by interest. At the same time, the project doesn't merely create a pretty picture, it raises awareness of the capriciousness of algorithm-driven data mining.

In a world where fortunes are sought through data-mining vast information repositories, the computer is our indispensable but far from infallible assistant. Personas demonstrates the computer's uncanny insights and its inadvertent errors, such as the mischaracterizations caused by the inability to separate data from multiple owners of the same name. It is meant for the viewer to reflect on our current and future world, where digital histories are as important if not more important than oral histories, and computational methods of condensing our digital traces are opaque and socially ignorant.

Try it on personas.media.mit.edu/.

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Posted by: Zach on November 12, 2009 at 7:55 PM

One note: this runs in a Flash app which demands no less than 800x600 free screen space, and does not offer a vertical scrollbar. I cannot use it on my 1024x600px netbook screen, even when I hit F11 to send Firefox "full screen", because the browser reserves 3 or 4 pixels at the top for access to the URL bar and tab bar. Saying "everyone should have this except a 7-inch netbook" doesn't cut it for me.


Posted by: Almost_There on November 13, 2009 at 10:52 AM

Not one single thing was correct.

I tried it, watched to the end, and not one single thing was correct! Not even one.


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