Facebook Knows You Better Than You Do

Purritos and Shaving Cream 

So, it had become apparent that Facebook is even more skillful at knowing my life and my interests than my friends, my boyfriend, or even myself. In the wake of controversy following the popular social networking site’s apparent ability to determine that a teen girl was pregnant before anyone else based solely on her google searches, a wide array of attention, both positive and negative, has been brought to the fact that websites actually know what you search and browse through on the internet, and use it to advertise products catered solely to your interests.

In honesty, it’s a little bit creepy, and I’m quickly realizing that my online activities really aren’t that secure. Just the other day, I was browsing Harry’s for a birthday gift for my boyfriend, an avid beard enthusiast who takes the upmost care of his facial hair, and soon enough, all of my social media profiles were flooded with ads promoting beard trimmers, razors, and shaving creme. How can they get this information from me so quickly? If they can see it, who else can? My online presence must certainly be generating a lot of interesting information, as my most frequently viewed content includes cat pictures, TV trivia, and buzzfeed quizzes, but what is that really telling them about me? That if they advertise a picture of a Purrito that I’ll go buy one? (Hint Hint: I will).

purrrrito

 

Buying habits aside, I find it creepy that the internet knows so much about my love for cats and my needless addiction to purchasing Jellcat stuffed animals. If they want to use my search history to trick me into spending my savings on needless products, then maybe I need to change my security settings (or maybe I need a better job, those Purritos are adorable).

Project Progress

As far as my project goes, I’ve found a lot of interesting items that I’m excited to analyze and share! One, in particular, is proving to be both insanely helpful and immensely overwhelming: Documents Relative to the Origin and History of the Smithsonian Institution. 

This resource is hundreds of pages long, and covers all aspects of the Smithsonian and all of its establishments, which provides a lot of great information in a vastly overwhelming package. Just finding the sections that pertain to my topic has been more than slightly difficult, and actually reading and making sense of them is another whole ordeal. That being said, I have been able to draw a lot from in it, and its given me some great information about the initial goals and plans for the zoo, which I can compare to the way the zoo exists in the present day.

Text: To Mine or Not to Mine?

After working with various text-mining tools, such as Wordle and Voyant, it has become apparent that such tools are not necessarily useful to a class of this nature. Sure, they provide wonderful representations of the more frequently used words and phrases within texts, and could be used from a historical standpoint to draw conclusions in regards to reoccurring theme seen in speeches across time periods, or something of that manner, but I personally think they’re much more useful in an English classroom. To me, history is less about the words and more about the experiences and actions. Seeing which words are used most often really tells us nothing other than the topic of some text, or that the speaker didn’t have access to a decent thesaurus.

That being said, these tools are super interesting, and I had a lot of fun using them to analyze my own work! From a fiction standpoint, they’re very helpful in drawing conclusions about reoccurring themes or motifs, and can shed a lot of light on the meanings behind a work. It’s in the realms of history and science that I find them to be much less useful.

In regards to my final project, I think I’ve finally got it all together! Sure, there are a few things I’m still a tad bit iffy about, and I’d love to further elaborate on them with a wider array of sources and artifacts, but, given the parameters of the project, I’m confident in my final product! Locating the artifacts really wasn’t the hard part, it was putting them in context with one another and creating a coherent and interesting story using such unique pieces of information from all different time periods and perspectives.

I’m really interested to see how things turn out, and what conclusions I’m ultimately able to draw from my work.