Archive for the ‘Future of Media’ Category
An Arrival
Yesterday I arrived in Egypt with my colleague @Louis_Abelman, we are here on a new Small World News project, investigating potential partners and local support to expand and continue our http://alive.in/Egypt and /Libya projects.
It’s amazing to be here right now, the future is on everyone’s mind and it seems they are all free with their opinion. Perhaps then only thing more numerous than opinions right now are the ubiquitous Egyptian flags, on sale in the street, on display from houses, car antennas, hotels, bumper stickers, they are everywhere.
One of the most amazing things to me is to see the young guys everywhere in the street selling flags, rather than newspapers, drinks, or the many other things often found in the terrible traffic across the Middle East.
When we first arrived at the airport I was amazed that we had such an easy arrival. Although we are carrying a variety of media equipment, we were not searched, nor even asked our business. I guess the need to increase tourism these days I working in our favor to ease the heavy hand of customs and passport control.
After grabbing our bags we had to wait for our first contact to arrive and it seemed like a good time to grab a smoke. I was at first hesitant, given the crowd of official looking guys by the terminal entrance. I had the immediate assumption these guys were mukhabarat or other security services, but I should have known that was not the case. Rather than security it turned out these guys were taxi drivers, just looking to make an honest day’s pay.
Once they realized we weren’t potential customers but just waiting for a colleague, they weren’t pushy. Instead they just began offering us any advice or support they could, directions, advising us on where to find our friend at the parking lot, providing a light, etc.
Our colleague arrived shortly after this, and the only thing surprising about him was perhaps how typical was his look and demeanor. In a khaki sports coat and slacks, well-groomed, he was the perfect picture of a northeastern liberal arts college professor, Egyptian style.
This probably shouldn’t have come as a surprise given that he studied and taught at just such a Liberal arts school for several years. Hussein was talkative and very proud of Egypt, matching the stereotype you’ve no doubt heard mentioned too much in the ends given the heavy focus on Egypt in recent days.
He was an interesting guy for certain, but left me wondering whether his views adequately reflect those of less educated or less privileged Egyptians. So far not just he, but nearly everyone has asked me what I think about Egypt’s revolution and the future.
Seeing the calm, unassuming, but ever present. Soldiers and armored vehicles all over Cairo, the best thing I can say is I’ll have to wait and see, and I hope things will continue to improve.
Using Social Media to Reverse the Panopticon
Recently I brought up the possibility that Google’s goals on the internet resembled a latter-day panopticon. This is obviously a bit of a dire prediction, so I’d like to offer another, more hopeful possibility.
As social networking and the distribution of media, social or otherwise, become more and more advanced, so do the tools for reaching an audience and for gathering information about that audience. A single individual, with a well-formed strategy and access to the time to implement is gaining more and more potential to fulfill a role in society once accessible only to massive multi-million dollar media corporations.
According to wikipedia,
The Panopticon is a type of prison building designed by English philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham in 1785. The concept of the design is to allow an observer to observe (-opticon) all (pan-) prisoners without the prisoners being able to tell whether they are being watched, thereby conveying what one architect has called the “sentiment of an invisible omniscience.”
What I’d like to propose is that it may soon be possible for this situation to see a reversal of sorts. It’s seeming more and more likely that it might it soon be possible for a seemingly omniscient aggregator to gather all human knowledge in one measurable, quantifiable database. However, this brings with it another possibility, that connecting all of these users is making it more and more likely that it might someday be possible for a piece of media to at least appear, if not be, omnipresent.
Furthermore the entrance barriers for usage of these tools are collapsing, they are already nearly free in many parts of the world and will likely only continue to decrease in cost while increasing in power. In a way it is beginning to look like there may be some type of analogue to Moore’s Law within social media and the dramatically increasing capabilities of mobile devices.
What this means is that citizen media, if properly harnessed, is gaining more and more capability to have an impact, to reach an audience. In my analogy of social media as a reverse panopticon, rather than an omniscient observer/guard, aggregating all knowledge and observing and quantifying the thoughts, feelings, and actions of humanity’s “prisoners, quite the opposite happens. The access to social media, and its ever increasing potential reach means that a single “broadcaster”/storyteller, rather than “aggregator”/guard has the potential to push the images of the oppressed, the voices of the developing world, to an increasingly large audience.
In some ways, the potential omnipresence of “content” takes the place of the “guard” and the wealthy, privileged, educated, and members of the developed world, with their access to broadband and mobile data tools, might become “prisoners” of a sort, awash in the “hegemony” of the developing world’s social media onslaught.
It has been pointed out perhaps countless times that we are “only limited by our capability to dream.” Margaret Atwood (correction, Mead-thanks Steve & Meghan!) said, “Never doubt that a small group of committed citizen s can change the world, indeed it is the only thing that ever has.”
Mrs. Atwood Mead and I don’t agree on that point. I would counter that although that may or may not be true, you should also add, “and men with guns.” However, the more I experience the possibilities of ICT for Development, the more I begin to believe that though it may not have been true before, it is becoming true.
Information and Communications Technology, digital media tools, and mobile computing is becoming ever more accessible in the developed world, but in much of the developing world these tools are still years away from being widely accessible to local people. It is only with the intercession of concerned, privileged citizens of the developed world, using their access to capital and agency to support the promotion and distribution of the stories of the developing world, that we can hope to assist in making a difference, possibly even staving off the collapse of fragile states.
Consider the impact that CNN and the onset of 24 hour news coverage made on the media industry and the policies of States in Iraq, Rwanda and Kosovo during the 90s. Someday soon we will have the technological capability to empower the citizens of communities in crisis, fragile states, conflict areas, thand the developing world to speak to us themselves, to tell their own stories and ensure they are seen.
I know many will consider me a dreamer, an idealist, or a naive optimist. But consider our success in Iraq, Mexico, Gaza, Iran, and Afghanistan, where we used freely available technologies to help local people tell the world the stories of their existence in dire situations, conflict, and war.
And today I am in India, working with Video Volunteers to create a rural newswire encompassing nearly every state in India. We’re going to do it, and we are in the middle of strategizing a social media plan to distribute the content far and wide, as organically as possible. We may be a few years or even decades ahead of our time, but I have no doubt that, in the proper hands social media could turn the tides of institutional complacency and apathy toward the dangers facing fragile and developing states all over the world.
A Latter Day Panopticon? *or* Is Google trying to kill privacy?
With the release of Buzz, and the much hyped privacy disaster coming so soon after rumors that Google was talking with the NSA< one has to ask whether or not Google really is trying to kill privacy.
An unfortunate thing about privacy, in the online space, is that privacy there is directly connected with access to anonymity. There is essentially no anonymity online, without taking active measures yourself to ensure anonymity. As there is no anonymity, there is little or no true privacy.
It’s probably important to understand why there is no anonymity. A brief explanation, when you are surfing the web you have a unique IP address, whether it is one address distributed to many sub addresses connected to a home or office router, or your computer connected directly. This IP address is noticed by the website you arrive at, which can now also gather the url you arrived from and the url you depart to. Utilizing “cookies” which are small pieces of text your web browser stores locally, websites can gather more information about you and your browsing habits. When you connect these with personally identifiable data like Amazon.com or Facebook, or even iGoogle accounts, you start to see how your anonymity dissipates.
It is precisely because of the need to move from more anonymous data to less anonymous data that companies like Facebook are doing so well, and companies like Google are exploring how to get into the social media game. Unfortunately for Google, they underestimated the importance of “privacy in context.”
I’m not sure I agree with Helen Nissbaum’s thesis in overall, but I do agree with this:
The nuts-and-bolts of my theory says that privacy depends on the social context of information being shared and what’s appropriate for those contexts.
What Google forgot is that, even though any n00b privacy activist will tell you that email is not private without encryption, people feel anonymous and feel private with their email. Just as an individual might be empowered by wearing a mask, that same individual can be empowered by email to engage in activities they wouldn’t otherwise.
The question of anonymity online, full anonymity, is rarely considered by many outside of threatened human rights activists and privacyphiles. The feeling of anonymity or privacy however is taken for granted.
When first Facebook, and then Google Buzz suddenly began broadcasting information about users to the world, in Facebook’s case to everyone and in Google’s case “following” everyone you email or chat with regularly based on some unknown algorithm known only to them, these users came face to face with the latter-day Panopticon.
Some readers may think I’m at risk of drifting into histrionics here about the rise of a security state or the NSA tracking your computers location via internet latency measurements, or the FBI wanting access to your browser history. This is not what I am attempting to suggest. I see the Google Buzz accident as an event that demonstrates the desire of Google to eliminate the idea of privacy, so that we become not just happy existing in a digital panopticon, but so that we recognize its there, and then forget.
Under such a lens it makes sense that Google would ask the NSA for help, or that they would so greatly underestimate the potential backlash from Google Buzz.
According to NYT, Sergey Brin of Google said that by offering social communications, Buzz would help bridge the gap between work and leisure.
In the same article, something perhaps more blatantly reminiscent of a Panopticon comes from Facebook:
“We don’t aspire to be just a Web site where people connect and share with friends,” said Ethan Beard, director of the Facebook developer network and a former Google executive. “We want to be the underlying technology people use to connect with friends wherever they are on the Web.”
Google wants to kill anonymity. So does Facebook. Their business models depend on it. They want to kill anonymity more than privacy, but if they continue to kill privacy context, people will continue to be up in arms.
Unfortunately, you should be more worried about access to anonymity and the increasing interconnection of your everyday actions with a searchable, aggregatable, quantifiable database that is the Internet.
Jeremy Bentham could perhaps not have imagined a world where closed circuit cameras turned “public space” into its own panopticon, where shoppers and citizens alike could never know who was watching them, monitoring their movements, keeping an eye whether they were acting for good or ill. Such power could surely only be reserved for an omniscient/omnipresent being the threat of whose observations, lets be honest, were the actual precursor to the Panopticon.
The increase in sociality some have begun talking about also tends toward the potential for increasing the reach and capabilities of the State. It’s yet another reason that we should continue to push for access to anonymity online. If privacy is effectively killed, and your every online habit can be broadcast to an infinite number of “guards” sitting at their own little “observation posts” ie web browsers, it won’t be long until most of us begin to ignore the internet Panopticon as much as we do the one at Walmart, our office job, or the local shopping mall.
That’s not a future I’m anxious to see. What are your thoughts? Please comment!
Some Things I’ve learned about Indian Media
First a caveat, this is in no way a scientific or well-researched commentary on the state of the Indian media. This is a post based on what I’ve heard from Indians, Indian media professionals, and what I’ve experienced firsthand after living in India for one month.
During my first week here I met VK Shashikumar from newsX and we discussed the state of Indian media, as well as how the national “stringer network” works with most national TV news outlets. First of all, his contention, supported by several other Indians I’ve met, is that some 70-75% of the news cycle is dedicated to Delhi/northern India-centric stories.
The stories that are not Delhi-centric are provided via a stringer network throughout India. The reality of this network is that it is primarily Brahmins, which means the majority of India is not represented properly, due to the caste/class system in India. Furthermore, these stringers are tasked primarily with selling subscriptions and advertising, which is clearly a conflict of interest with their role as “independent journalist.”
It is in this climate that Video Volunteers will endeavor to create a network of “community producers” activists turned journalists who will be producing stories from their communities about life in India. The focus will be on life and issues that affect these communities directly, but with an attempt to frame the content for an international audience.
I feel we can say that Vividh will be the first “truly” national news agency because our focus is on telling the stories of *all* Indians, not only the privileged Indians, Brahmins, or Indians considered to be important or whose stories are easy to sell advertisements against. If we can produce stories from a local context, that have watchability, I think our success is assured.
India’s First Truly National News Agency
I came to India with my family just over one month ago, to work on an exciting new program with Video Volunteers. The program, currently being called “Vividh” is a network of locals trained to be “community producers” producing issue-based journalism of a community nature, which will be shared internationally via the internet, and eventually television, and terrestrially via partnerships with Indian TV networks and possibly a variety of other venues still being explored.
Today, at long last, we have announced our list of accepted fellows. We have taken on 36 fellows from all over India, from the extrme south of the country in Tamil Nadu, to the north in Jammu & Kashmir, and covering territory from the east in Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh, to the west in Rajasthan and Gujarat.
In March we will hold a two-week training camp with all of the Community Producers, after which they will begin the process of gathering stories and shooting videos in their communities, we will be building on the previous success of Alive in Baghdad, Alive in Mexico, and, in India, Swajana, producing local stories with the intention of an international audience. I’m working on the design for a new section of the Video Volunteers website that will promote new video daily, as well as create a space for the audience to interact directly with producers in the field who have very low internet connectivity.
Sometimes their posts may be done via phone or email-to-blog. They should also be posting short updates or microblogs via SMS, which will be shared on Twitter, Facebook, and the main site. This is an exciting time for me as we look forward to what’s possible with micro camcorders, sms, and even voice updates. By leveraging technology and training, we should soon have India’s first truly national news agency. I say “truly” because while there are national stringer systems in place, our research has shown that these “stringers” by and large are not focused on story-gathering, nor do their stories represent the majority of the local community.
I’ll write more soon with the impressions and stories of the Indian media scene I’ve gathered over the last month.