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Christoph Glauser

Christoph Glauser (born October 9, 1964 in Bern) is a Swiss social scientist and Internet entrepreneur.

Christoph Glauser attended primary school and high school in Bern. After studying history, political science and media science in Bern and law in Geneva, he received his doctorate from the University of Bern in 1994. He was a lecturer in media science at Swiss universities as well as a research assistant and lecturer at the ETH Zurich and the University of Zurich. At ETH, he led a research program on expert communication on biotechnology in the public and in the media. In 1997/98 he was an assistant professor at the Communication School at the University of Washington in Seattle. During this time he was a lecturer at online research universities in Switzerland and Europe, such as the universities of Bern, Zurich and Monaco, where he taught media studies and digital impact research. Since 1991 he has headed the Institute for Basic Research in Computer-Aided Content Analysis and the Institute for Applied Argument Research IFAA in Bern.

One of the main focuses of Christoph Glauser's work is research into the impact of digital content. He founded the company ArgYou in 2001. It analyzes the content of websites and campaigns using indicators and operates a finding engine that can be used to independently measure internet relevance. Christoph Glauser is involved in various EU projects: digital democracy, e-participation, e-government, hydrogen as an energy source, artificial intelligence AI.[1] He is a member of the think tank Reimagine Europe[2] and co-signatory of the Declaration of Rome on the relationship between media and democracy in Europe.[3] The method he developed measures search queries on all Swiss channels across all platforms. The result cannot therefore be manipulated, but is cross-validated as a “direct, current reflection of digital popularity”.[4]

Christoph Glauser found in a study published in 2023 that practically the entire active population in Switzerland uses the Internet. The digital divide is no longer an issue in industrialized countries. However, users differ in their risk perception: While one group is very afraid of new technologies, another group sees them as an opportunity. The study authors therefore see a new cyber divide between risk- or opportunity-oriented users.[5]

Revision as of 08:56, 30 April 2024

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