Designing for the social: Avoiding anti-social networks: Miles Rochford - Thursday 24th April 2008
Designing for the social: Avoiding anti-social networks
This presentation considers the role of traditional social networks and the role of IAs in addressing the challenges that arise when designing and using online social networks.
The presentation discusses philosophical approaches to sharing the self, how this relates to offline social networks and human interactions in different contexts, and provides guidance on how online social networking tools can be designed to support these relationships.
It also covers ethical issues, including privacy, and how these can conflict with business needs. A range of examples illustrate the impact of these drivers and how design decisions can lead to the creation of anti-social networks.
Finally, it considers the design role which IAs play, and how recognising the impact of business needs, philosophy and ethics can help deliver better social networks. It also considers how the IA community generally could influence and improve social network design.
The presentation is aimed at IAs who are designing, building or using social networks, who also recognise that their design choices, philosophy and ethical background have a fundamental impact on user experience.
Participants will learn about different approaches to social network design, and how online social networks relate to traditional ways of viewing human interactions. They will also gain some practical advice on the different issues which should be considered when designing and using social networks.
This is a version of the presentation that will be made at IA Summit
Miles Rochford is a Design Specialist at Nokia Design, based in London, England.
He has been an information architect and user experience specialist for more than six years, working on a range of projects for government, non-profit, corporate and startup clients based in the United States, Europe and Australia.
He has experience in a range of different areas, including interaction design, spatial data, health informatics, social networking, media sharing, mobile devices, and service delivery.
Meeting date: Thursday 24th April 2008
Time: 6.30pm for 6.45pm.
Venue: LBi, 1 Naoroji Street, London WC1X 0JD
Map
For UPA members the event is free. For non-members the cost is £10, and for student non-members £5 - payable at the door
You can register on Eventbrite
