After reading Burbules, sit and thinks about links for exactly one minute. Then answer this: How do links act to conceal and reveal and why is this important? Provide two examples that show links behaving as Burbules describes.
Links act to conceal and reveal information in a given text, as the author chooses what additional information he/she wants to provide to the public, while leaving out information he/she feels is unimportant to the subject. This is important, because links provide additional information that can either be related or non-related to the subject at hand. It is up to the reader to understand the authors intention of adding a links in a text. Some information may be credible, and some information may not be credible, what-so-ever. The author may simply be using links to associate other information to his argument. Links can be used in many different ways, according to Burbules.
Burbules states, "I want to show links as rhetorical moves that can be evaluated and questioned for their relevance. They imply choices; they reveal assumptions; they have effects--whether intentionally or inadvertently. Judging links, then, is a crucial part of developing a broader critical orientation to hyperreading: not simply to follow the links laid out for us, but to interpret their meaning and asses their appropriateness (Burbules p. 117).
I believe it is up to the "hyperreaders" to analyze, and question what message the author is providing, as well as the links, and also analyze what information the author might be withholding.
I googled a topic on teen sexting, and was reading an article that a grandfather had written (supposedly), and came across a link in the article that said "click here to get it" once I followed the link it lead me to a site promoting "POWERFUL cell-phone monitoring technology!". It asked if I could really trust my husband, employee, or child? Wow! The stories on this site got me thinking about a whole array of other issues besides teen sexting. This company is really trying to make a person paranoid so they'll buy their product.
teenagesexting.net
mouchette.org is an old website, but has a bunch of links that the author wants the viewer to chose from, in order to navigate to a page of the authors choice.
