Archive for the ‘Web 2.0’ Category

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Internet Radio 101

Nice overview from Businessweek.

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Yummy…

Great link off Micropersuasion to this handy guide on how to get the most out of del.cio.us. This is a great example of revolutionary social networking technologies. I’ve been using Blink for years – but this is free…

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Under Attack

Our rights are under attack. We all seem so preoccupied with figuring out how to enjoy, play in, and monetize the blogosphere that the issue of free speech isn’t getting the play it deserves. Gillmor says it all:

Apple Computer’s disgusting attack on three online journalism sites, in a witch hunt to find out who (if anyone) inside the company leaked information about allegedly upcoming products, has taken a nasty turn. Too bad it’s not surprising — and journalists of all kinds should be paying attention.

A judge in California has decided that the sites don’t qualify as "journalism" (AP) under state law and/or the First Amendment. By his bizarre and dangerous standard, I apparently stopped being a journalist the day I left my newspaper job after a quarter-century of writing for newspapers. (Note: At the request of lawyers for the sites, I’ve filed declarations — here (104k PDF) and here (1MB PDF) — saying that in my opinion these sites are performing a journalistic function. I haven’t been paid to do so.)

Not just journalists but PR people and citizens. The notion that we should not undertake activities such as reporting or analysis on the basis that only professionals can do that is ludicrous. Suddenly we are faced with a very ominous situation in which the Government, companies and big media don’t just get to control what we see and say – but also who gets to say it and when.

BusinessWeek also chimes in saying:

If the ruling holds, it will set a precedent certain to reverberate through the blogosphere because this means under the law bloggers aren’t considered journalists.

Problem is, we don’t want to be considered journalists – at least not me – all we want is the same right to responsible free speech (we still get sued for libel and fired for stupidity, just like everyone else). But for those sites publishing, or functioning, as media outlets – why shouldn’t they be subject to the same laws – or afforded the same rights – as Big Media?

Kevin Bankston of the EFF says:

"They’re people who gather news, and they do so with the intent to disseminate that news to the public. The only distinction to be made between these people and professional journalists at The New York Times is that they’re online only."

I’m not sure this works in terms of the entire blogosphere – and in all fairness he is speaking to the specific issue of blog media sites. We don’t fact-check like they do. We’re far more imperfect. We’re into the conversation less than the transmission. While Kevin’s argument is a good one I come at it from a slightly different direction.

And that is, implicit in the right to free speech is the right to report and when governments and corporations start medling in that, we all need to be very, very worried. Secondarily, they should also stay away from medling in what defines media and what doesn’t. It’s the fact that we’re not reporters or big media outlets, or, in print – that makes this such a revoultionary medium.

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Quoted

"[The] Blog People (or their subclass who are interested in computers and the glorification of information) have a fanatical belief in the transforming power of digitization and a consequent horror of, and contempt for, heretics who do not share that belief … Given the quality of the writing in the blogs I have seen, I doubt that many of the Blog People are in the habit of sustained reading of complex texts. It is entirely possible that their intellectual needs are met by an accumulation of random facts and paragraphs.’"

— American Library Association president Michael Gorman’s bid to become the blogging community’s next whipping boy. Care of Good Morning Silicon Valley, Friday Feb 25, 2005.

He goes on to say… "A blog is a species of interactive electronic diary by means of which the unpublishable, untrammeled by editors or the rules of grammar, can communicate their thoughts via the web. (Though it sounds like something you would find stuck in a drain, the ugly neologism blog is a contraction of "web log.") Until recently, I had not spent much time thinking about blogs or Blog People."

As they say in NZ… "yeah, right mate…"

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About time…

So if syncronized swimming is still in.. if soccer is in… if volleyball is in… then Rugby had better become an Olympic sport. They have my vote…