After we learned about information organization from Weinberger we then applied it to Jenkin's Convergence Culture. Jenkins talked about the way our culture is adapting to the technologies that Weinberger mentioned and the way they are forcing us to develop a new way of communicating. The adaptation of technology in a ubiquitous culture forces us to focus on convergence in a completely new way.
Finally, we moved on to Lessig's Remix. Combining some of the notions from the previous books Lessig teaches us about copyright and creative commons culture. He talks about the fact that in such a culture where technology is forcing these new levels of interaction and learning techniques, that existing copyright laws are irrelevant and outdated.
After reading all of these books we finally get a chance to see the entire picture. All of these combine to form the complete technological revolution that is currently taking place and is laying ground for future use of technology. When Weinberger points out the organization of information and how we are rewriting the way in which information is shared, it really strikes a strong cord with the me. He seems to nail it right on the head that this is one of the pivotal points in the revolution. What was once considered a norm is now a completely outdated thing. Once we can accept this we can than realize that Jenkins and Lessigs points are really helping create a new culture. They are fighting for the technological revolution that is smart, well thought out, and relevant to our growing technologies. If Jenkins ideas on convergence can be applied to weinbergers organization and then applied to the laws that restrict the sharing community, we may be able to find a common ground for future copyright laws. This is not to say that the main point is copyright laws or even creative commons. These are just points that are important. What is most important here is learning to adapt to technology in a way that is fast paced, relevant, and understanding of the changes that are taking place. It seems that all of these authors are arguing along the same premise and are therefore on the right side of the revolution. The question is, what are we doing to aid this revolution?

The summaries themselves could have used a bit more "why this matters and for whom" BUT your connections section is incredibly well done. I really like the ways in which you describe the resonances between the authors. I also think you're on point with the question "what are we doing to aid this revolution?" Good question indeed.
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