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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Oslo:20250509T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Oslo:20250509T140000
DTSTAMP:20260510T200839
CREATED:20250505T074036Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250505T074129Z
UID:20888-1746788400-1746799200@mediafutures.no
SUMMARY:MIX Innovation Day 2025
DESCRIPTION:Teklab from the Infomedia department in UiB invites to its yearly MIX Innovation Days. Happening in Media City Bergen on Friday May 9th at 11 o’clock\, the final year students in media and interaction design (MIX) will pitch their design prototypes and value propositions at a lively event with co-students\, university colleagues and industry partners. \nThe MIX Innovation Day has been held for several years\, and is a vibrant arena where bachelor and master students in MIX present their design solutions and prototypes. A jury evaluates the prototypes and hands out the MVP Award – the Minimum Viable Proptotype Award. \nAt the MIX Innovation Day 2025 you can learn more about seventeen different designs created to tackle real-world challenges across a range of industries\, including computer games\, apps and  web sites for partners as diverse as the Media Cluster Norway\, Bergen Bysykkel and Parkinsonforbundet. \nSIGN UP HERE\nProgram\nThe event takes place in the Atrium at Media City Bergen\, Lars Hilles gate 30\, next to the Bergen Light Rail station Nygård. \n11:00 – 11.05. Welcome. \nOur master of ceremony Joao Ribeiro will introduce the event. \n11.05 – 12:00: Bachelor webdesign projects. \nThe five bachelor projects will be presented in a series of pitches with comments from the jury. Read all about the projects below. \n12:00 – 13:30: Master safari and lunch. \nThe twelve master projects will be presented simultaneously at a “safari” where the audience walk from stand to stand and talk with the students and discuss the projects’ merits. Read all about the projects below. \nYou will also be able to enjoy your free lunch during this session. \n13:30 – 13.40. Launch of “Håndbok i innovasjon for studenter”. \nTekLab recently published the free online book “Håndbok i innovasjon for studenter” and today it will be officially launched. The TekLab project has spent several years writing it\, and a large numer of students and teachers have been involved in the project. \n13.40 – 14:00: Awards ceremony. \nThe jury will announce the winners of the MVP Award for the bachelor and master projects. \nThe MVP Award\nA jury of professional designers will evaluate the projects and give the students valuable  feedback. The jury will hand out the MVP award to the project that has the best chance of becoming a real product in the media industry\, hence the name “minimum viable product” (MVP). There are separate prizes for the bachelor and master programs. The prize has been awarded for several years in a row\, and you can read about the winners from 2024 and the winner from 2023. \nThe jury is: \n\nPrecilia Isaksen is a UX consultant at Bouvet. She was named Designer of the Week by UX Norway in 2024. Precilia is a former MIX student and has previously worked at TV 2.\nSofija Ivanova is a service designer at Youwell\, a patient and health technology company. She is a board member of IxDA Bergen and has worked at several design agencies.\nIselin Kornli holds an MSc in innovation and entrepreneurship and has spent the past nine years leading innovation projects\, coaching cross-functional teams\, and helping to establish innovation environments in several major companies.\n\nWe are really grateful that Precilia\, Sofija and Iselin will join us as jury members. \nOrganization\nThe event is organized by The department of information science and media studies at UiB in collaboration with Agenda Vestlandet. Agenda Vestlandet was established by Sparebanken Vest to drive the green transition in Vestlandet\, and it supports research\, innovation\, and dialogue around regional challenges and opportunities. \nThe event is prepared and managed by MIX master students Anine Glenne Arnesen and Julie Teilstad Østby  in collaboration with Joao Ribeiro\, lead open innovation manager at GALP and a teacher at UiB\, and professor Lars Nyre.
URL:https://mediafutures.no/event/mix-innovation-day-2025/
LOCATION:Media City Bergen\, Atrium
CATEGORIES:Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mediafutures.no/wp-content/uploads/Skjermbilde_5-5-2025_93957_teklab.uib_.no_.jpeg
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Oslo:20250519T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Oslo:20250519T160000
DTSTAMP:20260510T200839
CREATED:20250506T080622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250506T080622Z
UID:20902-1747652400-1747670400@mediafutures.no
SUMMARY:Trust and trustworthiness: The Rhetorical History of Trust in the Nordics
DESCRIPTION:With talks by some of the best national and international researchers in trust and trustworthiness\, this seminar explores trust as a historical\, societal\, and rhetorical phenomenon. \nWhat is trust and trustworthiness in a rhetorical perspective? Can we talk about cultures of trust? What is a culture of trust? How does trust develop historically\, and how do digital cultures influence trust and trustworthiness? Furthermore\, how may we theoretically account for rhetorical trust and methodologically explore it? \nThis open and free seminar explores such questions. The seminar is organized by the research project “Trustworthiness: The Rhetorical History of Trust in the Nordics”. \nThe project examines why the Nordics are consistently among the world’s most trusting countries and explores how this trust is used to explain the stability\, prosperity\, and even happiness of the citizens in the Nordic countries. \nToday\, however\, a wide range of factors threaten to overturn Nordic people’s propensity to trust each other\, including an increasingly fragmented media landscape\, as well as a more conflictual political atmosphere. \nThe renowned speakers in this open and free seminar addressees such issues of trust and trustworthiness. \nProgram\n11.00-11.05: Welcome \n11.05-11.25: The working group on Trustworthiness in the Nordic Countries: “Rhetorical trust” \n11:25-12.25: Ute Frevert (Max Planck Institute): “Rhetorics and Politics of Trust in Modern Societies – A Historian’s Perspective” \nThe talk asks why modern societies care about trusting relations? What do they need trust for? What kind of work does trust do? Is trust synonymous with calculativeness\, or does it go beyond an instrumental attitude? How do political systems – democratic and non-democratic handle trust? \n12.25-13.00: Lunch \n13.00-14.00: Helge Skirbekk (Oslo Met): “The historical development of Trust in Norway” \nNorway is still characterised by high levels of trust\, both in general and in public institutions. Why is this so\, and why did it become so? In what is referred to as the Nordic model\, there are several things that distinguish Norway from other Western countries. Among these are the high degree of labour organisation\, the relatively small income differences\, and the large extent of the public sector and the high level of taxes. But the high levels of trust cannot be understood without examining the relatively peaceful historical interactions between elites and population. Belonging to networks built on civic engagement can strengthen norms of mutual trust. I will investigate the emergence of unions and lay organisations\, and their interplay with political elites in order to find an answer to this question. \n14.00-14.45: Dag Wollebæk (Institute of Social Research): “Trust as sacred rhetoric” \nIn Norway\, trust has become a foundational element of the national self-image. In public discourse\, trust is often framed not merely as a strength\, but as a sacred value: a non-negotiable\, inviolable resource that must be protected at all costs. Drawing on the concept of sacred rhetoric (Marietta\, 2008)\, I argue that the way we talk about trust affects political debate and institutional accountability in profound ways. Sacred rhetoric shifts public argumentation from the weighing of evidence and compromise to the invocation of moral absolutes\, the discouragement of criticism\, and the protection of power. While this rhetoric may encourage compliance and cooperation\, it undermines deliberation and weakens critical vigilance. In this keynote\, I examine how the rhetorical sacralization of trust affects democratic discourse in Norway. I argue that desacralizing the rhetoric of trust and shifting the focus from preserving trust to deserving trust would be desirable — to cultivate a political culture where institutions are not shielded by sacred narratives\, but held accountable through reasoned scrutiny. \n14.45-15.00 Break \n15.00-15.30: Esther Oluffa Pedersen (Roskilde University): The Digital Society and Trust \nIncreasing digitalization raises the question how digital technologies influence relations of trust. This calls for an empirical and conceptual approach. Conceptually I argue that trust evolves between humans but is anchored within the individuals encountering each other with either trust or distrust. Affective and epistemic attitudes of trust or distrust are influenced by the individual’s prior experiences (e.g. betrayals of trust) and future goals (e.g. goals’ dependency on collaboration). Besides interpersonal relations trust also unfolds in institutional trust\, trust in oneself and trust in technology. Thriving interpersonal and institutional trust are characterized by mutual assessments of trustworthiness and thus by reciprocity. Trust in technology is different as the non-agential technology does not reciprocate. Many argue that we do not trust but simply rely on technology. It is\, however\, an empirical fact that the other trust relations are influenced by digital technologies. I will exemplify this with the case of the Danish tax authorities’ fully automated property assessments. The property assessments were digitalized with the explicit ambition to recreate trust in the system of property taxation. Besides exceeding the budget\, and as until now not completely implemented\, the system has also been sending erroneous assessments out to the citizens. \n15.30-16.00: Panel with presenters: How to study trust rhetorically and historically. \nWould you to attend the seminar? Please send an email to: Olivia.Akerholm@student.uib.no
URL:https://mediafutures.no/event/trust-and-trustworthiness-the-rhetorical-history-of-trust-in-the-nordics/
LOCATION:University of Bergen\, Lauritz Meltzers hus (SV-bygget)\, Room: Vesletinget (Floor 2)
CATEGORIES:Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://mediafutures.no/wp-content/uploads/5621681458_cfc43b0191_o_1.jpg
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