Home

Advertisement

Twitter: A Trail of Transparent Breadcrumbs

  • Jun. 20th, 2009 at 10:15 PM
brenda

I have been thinking about transparency, social media, and government accountability for a while.  At the FiRe conference in San Diego, I ran into fellow sf writer and contrarian, David Brin, who authored  the non-fiction book, The Transparent Society.  This book made a difference in the way I think about government and life, and has made me a firm believer in the idea that transparency begets accountability. 

As a futurist, I knew a long time ago that the Internet would be the doorway to the future.  I just didn’t know how that doorway would open.  Ten years ago I felt the insemination of Twitter and YouTube and FaceBook, but I could not have told you what they’d look like.  I might have guessed a few of the features of FaceBook, but Twitter has been a true wildcard.  Instead of simply providing hyperlinks between the static bits of information, the overlapping concentric circles of followers that tweet and re-tweet are linking human hearts and minds across the globe.  

That’s a powerful thing.

The current obvious example is the unrest in Iran.   Anyone in the world with an interest has been able to easily discover events that would have been fairly easily kept far more secret ten or twenty years ago, and in realtime.   Video is linked to as soon as it is posted, and retweets its way around the globe in what looks like minutes.  The tweets coming from and about Iran (primarily #iranelection, but many more) are helping to force accountability on the regime in Iran.  It’s too early to tell how this story will play out, but it is clear that social media has been a player.

Before we leave the subject of Iran, right after the protests started in Iran, many twitterers put pressure on CNN to provide coverage (see #CNNfail).  That’s the pressure of the popular stream on a third estate company. 

Some of our largest retailers have had the transparent breadcrumbs of Twitter work against them as well.    Or Take the #amazonfail slapping-about that happened within hours of people discovering that sales rankings on GLBT books were being dropped.  Amazon is being fussed at on social media networks as I write this because it appears that  a book from Amazon can only be re-downloaded a set (and smallish) number of times.  But we have to re-download every time we see it on a different device or even update our kindle technology.  My guess?  That will change.  Amazon will have to answer for the consequences whether intended or not, and it will choose a more consumer-friendly business practice.

I just gave a talk in Memphis Tenessee.  The topic got away from me a little - shifting from the future to social networking.  Everyone (me included) appears to be fascinated by that topic.  After the talk, a photographer came up to me and said that social networks have built his business, and that he hoped the people would take what I had said to heart.   I have sold stories on Twitter, to be distributed by Twitter, and even for print magazines because I was toe–deep in the stream of Twitter at the right moment. 

I’ve been trying to figure out a better government model for our times (I’m an sf writer - my mind does weird things).  I think giving all of the people a way to talk immediately to anyone else who wants to listen may be a lynchpin setting tool for stories as I work this out in my head.

Twitter does not appear to have a traditional business model.  But maybe a primary value of social networks is in the peace, properity, and accountability they bring to the world.  Maybe its in the trail of transparent breadcrumbs we drop for each other across cyberspace in 140 character bursts.

Mirrored from Brenda Cooper.

The Power of the Net

  • Jun. 16th, 2009 at 6:15 AM
brenda

If you’re not on twitter watching the #iranelection or just searching for “iran” which will catch it all, you’ve missed a worldwide conversation.  A worldwide emotional reaction.   This morning, I feel connected to the people in Iran.  I’m glad they have this tool, which was missing from Tiananmen square.  It may or may not be enough, but it has changed the game.  And I feel like I’ve been part of it.

  • I have engaged a tiny bit in moving it along (by passing along information)
  • I’ve got a green face on twitter now
  • I’m wearing green

This isn’t all about me.  It’s about the thousands or hundreds of thousands of people watching and listening and sending on information.  It’s about enough pressure on Twitter to postpone maintenance because it is the most effective tool in the hands of Iranian protesters. It’s about people using green icons on twitter to show support.  And that the people who aren’t interested, are talking about other things that are important.  Some of us are talking about multiple topics.  It’s an active multi-threaded critical conversation that just might change the world.

Reading about the protests on Iran as they occur (and watching almost real-time video on YouTube) on the streaming web, I’m fascinated and connected and curious.  I hear and see anger and support, love and fear, hatred and hope.  Mostly in 140 character bursts.  Who woulda thought?

Yes, there is undoubtedly information and mis-information, chaos, and even danger in this conversation.  There is disagreement.

But that’s what it is to be human.  A few years ago, I read David Brin’s nonfiction book “The Transparent Society.”  It changed how I look at a lot of things.   Since then, I’ve been lucky enough to actually get to know David.  He’s irascible and brilliant and often right.  He characterizes us (humans) as brilliant, optimistic, capable, and brave.   The last few days show that. They also show a central theme of Brin’s book, which is that transparency and a lack of privacy, while scary to many of us, create freedom and accountability.  The more we know about others, the more we know they are us.

Mirrored from Brenda Cooper.

Profile

brenda
[info]bjcooper
Brenda Cooper
Website

Latest Month

December 2009
S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Tags

Syndicate

RSS Atom
Powered by LiveJournal.com
Designed by Tiffany Chow