This is where we take our headphones off. Noise has value. It communicates location, proximity, and depth. It
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
tests the limits of our individual perception, and binds us together in shared time. Why shouldn’t it want to be expensive
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
record purchased in a store is rarely heard just once. It is relatively expensive and will likely be listened to accordingly: on different occasions, with different people, for different reasons
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
However, Facebook sorts those posts using algorithms to determine which it considers signal—bringing those to our attention—and screening out those that are, in its estimation, noise
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
We are each an isolated signal to social media, just as its algorithms deliver us nothing but isolated signals
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
What was built in their wake is social media. Facebook launched in 2004; Twitter in 2006; Instagram in 2010
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
noise conveys information we use for a full perception of sound, including its location, proximity, and context
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
But to benefit from that savings, you had to accept Napster’s definition of music as the signal conveyed by a digital sound file.
Do you
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
The signal of a book was redefined as title, author, and price. The rest was noise, to paraphrase Shakespeare via Alex Ross
Roberto Garzahas quoted4 years ago
In digital media, signal alone is treated as information, and noise is eliminated. This represents a loss of information—the information communicated by noise.