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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. 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.
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.

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