Clay
Shirky
Mr.
Shirky divides his time between consulting,
teaching, and writing on the social
and economic effects of Internet technologies.
His consulting practice is focused
on the rise of decentralized technologies
such as peer-to-peer, web services,
and wireless networks that provide
alternatives to the wired client/server
infrastructure that characterizes
the Web. Current clients include Nokia,
GBN, the Library of Congress, the
Highlands Forum, the Markle Foundation,
and the BBC.
In
addition to his consulting work, Mr.
Shirky is an adjunct professor in
NYU's graduate Interactive Telecommunications
Program (ITP), where he teaches courses
on the interrelated effects of social
and technological network topology
-- how our networks shape culture
and vice-versa. His current course,
Social Weather, examines the cues
we use to understand group dynamics
in online spaces and the possible
ways of improving user interaction
by redesigning our social software
to better reflect the emergent properties
of groups.
Mr.
Shirky has written extensively about
the internet since 1996. Over the
years, he has had regular columns
in Business 2.0, FEED, OpenP2P.com
and ACM Net_Worker, and his writings
have appeared in the New York Times,
the Wall Street Journal, the Harvard
Business Review, Wired, Release 1.0,
Computerworld, and IEEE Computer.
He has been interviewed by Slashdot,
Red Herring, Media Life, and the Economist's
Ebusiness Forum. He has written about
biotechnology in his "After Darwin"
column in FEED magazine, and serves
as a technical reviewer for O'Reilly's
bioinformatics series. He helps program
the "Biological Models of Computation"
track for O'Reilly's Emerging Technology
conferences.
Mr.
Shirky frequently speaks on emerging
technologies at a variety of forums
and organizations, including PC Forum,
the Internet Society, the Department
of Defense, the BBC, the American
Museum of the Moving Image, the Highlands
Forum, the Economist Group, Storewidth,
the World Technology Network, and
several O'Reilly conferences on Peer-to-Peer,
Open Source, and Emerging Technology.
Prior
to his appointment at NYU, Mr. Shirky
was a Partner at the investment firm
The Accelerator Group in 1999-2001,
an international investment group
with offices in New York, Los Angeles,
and London. The Accelerator Group
was focused on early stage firms,
and Mr. Shirky's role was technological
due diligence and product strategy.
Mr.
Shirky was the original Professor
of New Media in the Media Studies
department at Hunter College, where
he created the department's first
undergraduate and graduate offerings
in new media, and helped design the
current MFA in Integrated Media Arts
program.
Prior
to his appointment at Hunter, he was
the Chief Technology Officer of the
NYC-based Web media and design firm
Site Specific, where he created the
company's media tracking database
and server log analysis software.
Site Specific was later acquired by
CKS Group, where he was promoted to
VP Technology, Eastern Region.
Before
there was a Web, he was Vice-President
of the New York chapter of the EFF,
and wrote technology guides for Ziff-Davis,
including a guide to email-accessible
internet resources, and a guide to
the culture of the internet. He appeared
as an expert witness on internet culture
in Shea vs. Reno, a case cited in
the Supreme Court's decision to strike
down the Communications Decency Act
in 1996.
Mr.
Shirky graduated from Yale College
with a degree in art, and prior to
falling in love with the internet,
he worked as a theater director and
designer in New York. His company,
Hard Place Theater, staged "non-fiction
theater", theatrical collages
of found documents.
Mr.
Shirky's writings are archived at
shirky.com, and he currently runs
the N.E.C. mailing list for his writings
on networks, economics, and culture. |
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