From the monthly archives:

April 2007

What is a blog?

April 30, 2007

a publication? a tool? a social tool? a conversation? a community space? guess again —- it’s a person! Jeremy Wagstaff makes a simple statement on blogs:

“A blog isn’t a publication. It’s a person”


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Special on Youth and the Internet

April 27, 2007

Here’s an excerpt from an article I did for Tehelka’s special on youth and the internet, on much urging from Shivam, who put an apt title to it – The Mirror of Change – This is Who We are Becoming.

“For those completely
immersed in virtual worlds such as Second Life, the seduction of intimacy
combined with anonymity does not mean they do not share the joys and
sorrows of their real worlds. My bet is that they do. “Pet”,
a very close friend and a colleague who worked with a team of online
volunteers when the tsunami struck in December 2004, got me looking
at Second Life with new eyes. He had been feeling trapped in his body
for a long time, and when he got onto Second Life, it helped him become
more comfortable with his feelings that he was a woman trapped in a
man’s body. The beauty is that Second Life was a tool for “Pet”to figure out who she really is and how to work it out for real. Today,
she has friends not only in Second Life, but also in her physical world
with whom she can be herself. “Pet” has shared so much of
her period of transition and angst with me, that I feel I know her intimately.
Being a geek, she also helps me with my websites. I trust her as she
trusts me. I know she is very real – there is nothing ‘virtual’
about her, even though I have never met her.

While I may never
have seen or met “Pet”, there is depth in our friendship,
and solidity. I know, for some people, that is hard to accept. I’m
often asked questions like, how can you feel connected to someone you’ve
never met? How can you trust someone you’ve never seen? These
concerns are understandable given the newness of this medium and the
flow that determines these sorts of relationships. Oh there are dangers
too – the pretence borne out of anonymity, the addictions, the
spam and scams, the paedophiles, the pornography. And still, when I
meet up with blog buddies all over the world, how can I explain the
amazing level of comfort I feel!

I single out blogs
here as throwing up a whole different social system than do virtual
worlds and social networking sites. Detractors say, online you can be
whoever you want to be and nobody cares. That may be correct, yet, if
you try and fake things too hard, you most always are found out, and
can be verbally beaten. My belief is that people tend to act more like
themselves online than they like to admit. It is much more difficult
to hide away who you are when you are blogging. I’ve found myself
revealing things on my blog about myself that I would find difficult
to talk about face-to-face. Ugly things too.
A picture named tehel.jpg

And yet, I found
myself trusting myself as I began trusting people I met through this
medium. There is a fine line between the public, private and secret
self, and the boundaries blur sometimes. At others there is a conscious
effort to keep them apart. In a physical world, our lives are compartmentalized,
you have different sets of friends for different needs, and meet in
different physical spaces as a result. My blog is one space where
I connect with friends, potential clients, strangers, acquaintances,
even spammers and trolls. It is entirely up to me what I want to share
of me and when, at my blog. And, I have found, the more I share,
the more others do. It’s just an extension of basic human needs
for connection and community.”

This issue is carrying a special on youth and the internet. I see some bloggers I know like Dilip, Rashmi, Neha, Patrix and Shivam of course, who have made some neat contributions there – and as I glanced through the articles, I felt Shivam’s done a good job of getting a mix that does not perpetuate stereotypes the media usually portrays netizens to be.

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Map Your Name on mapmyname

April 27, 2007

MapMyName is a project started by a couple of students, who are aiming to assess how many people use the internet all over the world. They hope to achieve this within a month by spreading the mapmyname meme. Brave attempt!!

Currently, I’m the only user from Mumbai listed on there – and I think the only one from India too.

Spread the word by clicking here to map your name! Link via Euan who tweeted about it on Twitter.

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Paper Works

April 25, 2007

Sachi and Lee LeFever are doing a series of “paperworks” educational videos. From Lee’s email:

“In my opinion,
RSS has been too geeky for too long. I have friends who use the web as much as I do and have no clue about RSS. It’s a minor travesty. To help remedy this situation, Sachi and I created a video called “RSS in Plain English” that is
aimed at turning-on the non-geeks of the world. It’s in a format we
call “paperwork” – I think you’ll see what that means. We’re just
getting started and hoping that you can help spread the word (it just
went live couple of hours ago). Obviously, there is room for
improvement – any feedback is welcome. We’re planning to do more
paperwork videos as part of The Common Craft Show.”

And it is! Even my mum would get it. Watch it here.

I’d love to see
something similar on ROI of blogging – its a concept I find most
difficult to communicate to organizations and I do believe a Paperworks
demo will be great!

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Industry proclaims Social Media is not a fad

April 16, 2007

According to a report by Accenture, the media and entertainment industry feels user-generated content is the top threat to their businesses:

“NEW YORK; April 16, 2007 -Media and
entertainment executives see the growing ability and eagerness of
individuals to create their own content as one of the biggest threats
to their business, according to results of a survey released today by
Accenture (NYSE: ACN).

In
its annual survey of senior executives in the media and entertainment
industry, Accenture examined the growth strategies of companies across
the landscape of advertising, film, music, publishing, radio, the
Internet, videogames and television.

More
than half (57 percent) of the respondents identified the rapid growth
of user-generated content – which includes amateur digital videos,
podcasts, mobile phone photography, wikis and social-media blogs — as
one of the top three challenges they face today. In addition, more
than two-thirds (70 percent) of respondents said they believe that
social media, one of the largest segments of user-generated content,
will continue to grow, compared with only 3 percent of respondents who
said they view social media as a fad.

“This
is just the beginning for a rapidly changing landscape where the media
content environment grows more fractious and the user gains more
control and power,” said Gavin Mann, digital media lead for Accenture’s
Media & Entertainment practice. “Traditional,
established content providers will have to adapt and develop new
business and monetization models in order to keep revenue streams
flowing. The key to success will be identifying new forms of content that can complement their traditional strengths.”

The
new landscape offers opportunities as well as challenges, according to
the study, as two-thirds (68 percent) of the respondents said they
believe that within three years their businesses will be making money
on user-generated content. Sixty-two percent said they believe their
companies will make money through advertising and sponsorships of
social media. Other sources of profits cited were subscriptions (21
percent) and pay-per-play offerings (18 percent). However, a quarter
(24 percent) of respondents said they do not yet know how their
businesses will profit from user-generated content.

The
study included interviews with industry giants like Roger Faxon, chief
executive of EMI Music Publishing; Leslie Moonves, chief executive of
CBS; Doug Neil, senior vice president of digital marketing for
Universal Studios; and Sir Martin Sorrell, chief executive of WPP Group
PLC.”


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Bloggers Code of Conduct – Please NO!

April 1, 2007

Heh .. Johnnie .. I’m with you in feeling ranty! As a response to this, a stopcyberbullying community is nice, comments policies and guidelines are ok if you believe you need them, but a Bloggers Code of Conduct???

What will it achieve – perhaps nothing. What will you do if someone violates the bloggers code of conduct
- delete their comments, report them – that’s something you can do
without such a formal code isn’t it? Who will enforce this Code of
Conduct across blogs? Will bloggers that do not share this ‘code of
conduct’ be
ostracized? Will not this ‘moral’ responsibility grow to have legal
ramifications?
Will spammers and trolls and death threat issuers from non-US countries
be prosecuted? Will you be able to stop them? Will you only encourage
people to look for different and more sophisticated ways of piling on
their vile – it
is after all a human condition, and not a blog condition.

It seems to me, culturally, it is a very North-American thing to think up.
Don’t get me wrong, I absolutely love some aspects of North America and
have met some of the finest folks there – but this operating out of ‘fear’
is
one aspect I have written about earlier, that I find goes beyond
protection. Perhaps it’s the phrasing of it that gets to me – ‘Code of
Conduct’ implies rules and regulations, implicit in this is that there
is only one way ahead. I don’t like that.
It will make us guard our words. It will give credence
to the power games played out in the blogworld by providing yet another
weapon to divide those who have it and those who don’t. It will foster
a culture of fear. In the worst case, it will breed litigation,
insurance, liability.


Why
formalize something we’re doing anyways – if you’re proud of your space
(your blog in this case) you’ll protect it the way you feel best.
Banning anonymous comments for instance, is a personal choice – in my
case, I have deleted comments that are vulgar, lewd and allude to
physical threats. The others, I prefer to debate with. If others do not
wish to, ignore them or take the ‘fight’ to your space, or theirs.
There is a strong self-regulating aspect to this medium, and the recent
events are proof, with different angles and facets to the story emerging.

My
biggest fear in having a ‘formal’ code of conduct is it will take some
of the ‘human’ out of the blog. It will raise entry barriers to
participate in blog conversations, where few exist. It may even force
more bloggers to shut down all conversations in comments, because a few
are violating their freedom to comment. It will defeat the
self-regulatory and self-correcting nature of this medium. One of the
delights of blogging is it so reflects human behaviour – it gives us
the space to share freely our humility, our pride and our
infallibilities, our opinions and counterpoints, our failures and
successes, our rituals and dreams, our conflicts and resolutions. It
lets us debate and converse with others freely and intuitively. It may
reflect our professional views, but it is as far from
‘corporatization’ as any medium is today. Will not shared standards
and practice bring about ‘corporatization’ in some form or other?

There’s my long rant! Unlike Johnnie’s pithy post.


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