
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


"If you open a hole on the internet," UCLA professor Sarah T. Roberts tells us, "it gets filled with sh*t."
The tragic death of Megan Meier was a turning point for MySpace. As the first social media company to operate on a massive scale, MySpace and its users were forced to grapple with the consequences of that scale.
In this episode, Joanne is joined by Thomas Kadri of the University of Georgia School of Law to discuss how our legal system was ill-equipped to deal with the social media era. UCLA professor and author Sarah T. Roberts chronicles the early days of content moderation. And Bridget Todd and Scott Zakarin are back to talk about bullying in the MySpace era.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By iHeartPodcasts3.9
6666 ratings
"If you open a hole on the internet," UCLA professor Sarah T. Roberts tells us, "it gets filled with sh*t."
The tragic death of Megan Meier was a turning point for MySpace. As the first social media company to operate on a massive scale, MySpace and its users were forced to grapple with the consequences of that scale.
In this episode, Joanne is joined by Thomas Kadri of the University of Georgia School of Law to discuss how our legal system was ill-equipped to deal with the social media era. UCLA professor and author Sarah T. Roberts chronicles the early days of content moderation. And Bridget Todd and Scott Zakarin are back to talk about bullying in the MySpace era.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

4,706 Listeners

248 Listeners

8 Listeners

8 Listeners

350 Listeners

63 Listeners

249 Listeners

142 Listeners

238 Listeners

1,550 Listeners

839 Listeners

63 Listeners

277 Listeners

159 Listeners

1,045 Listeners

18 Listeners

191 Listeners

59 Listeners

34 Listeners

30 Listeners