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22 Oct 09

U.S. Navy CIO: Social Media Should Be Part of Military IT Standard

In a blog post this week, U.S. Navy CIO Rob Carey wrote that social media is a resource for the American military that should be used to build ...

www.readwriteweb.com/..._should_be_part_of_militar.php - Preview

MilBlogging Military social_media

27 Apr 09

Military Bases Block Official Army Tweets

  • The Army announced the other day that it would get a million or more followers on micro-messaging site Twitter, just like “Punk’d” host and social networking superstar Ashton Kutcher. But catching to Mr. Demi won’t be easy — since many Army bases block Twitter on its networks.


    It’s the latest example of the military’s schizophrenic relationship with social media.

25 Mar 09

Soldiers in the Blogosphere: Would you use "interactive" FMs?

Another idea for using new media for purposes of military knowledge formation, in this cases shortening the lessons learned, doctrine development loop.

soldierblogging.blogspot.com/...d-you-use-interactive-fms.html - Preview

MilBlogging military theory new_media

03 Mar 09

Pentagon Gets a Blogger of Its Own

DoD now has a blog, huh? Let's see: Written by a journalist, high production values, and it only serves as a cheerleader for the organization. Sorry guys, that's not a blog....not really.

blog.wired.com/...the-pentagons-i.html - Preview

milblogging social_media

  • The Pentagon couldn't beat the military bloggers, so it decided to join 'em.
  • American Forces Press Service, the Defense Department's in-house wire service, is taking a page from the bloggers and offering up a new new series of internet reports from one of its own.



    AFPS reporter Fred W. Baker III, who is currently on an extended assignment in Afghanistan, has a dedicated page on the Department of Defense website. It's a pretty slick multimedia setup that combines video, photo essays and dispatches.

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02 Mar 09

Thoughts on the “New Media” (Updated) (SWJ Blog)

There is some excellent material over at the Small Wars Journal blog about perceptions of the value of new media for the lessons learned process. I've been thinking of writing a paper on this very topic, but focused on "military knowledge formation" more generally. This post, linked PDF, and other posts that link to and comment on it, will all be great material for that.

smallwarsjournal.com/...thoughts-on-the-new-media - Preview

new_media milblogging military theory coin

  • “The New Media: Ricks cited a discussion on Small Wars Journal once and also cited some things on PlatoonLeader.org but never considered the way in which the new media has revolutionized the lessons learned process in the U.S. military. (Forget Abu Muqawama, though, because this lowly blog started around the same time as the surge.) Instead of just feeding information to the Center for Army Lessons Learned and waiting for lessons to be disseminated, junior officers are now debating what works and what doesn't on closed internet fora -- such as PlatoonLeader and CompanyCommand -- and open fora, such as the discussion threads on Small Wars Journal. The effect of the new media on the junior officers fighting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan was left curiously unexplored by Ricks, now a famous blogger himself.”
02 Feb 09

Military brass joins wired troops

  • Some of the US military’s top flag officers are becoming dedicated bloggers and attempting to change the military and extend their reach, one Facebook “friend” at a time.


    They are using the Internet and social media to reach down within their own traditionally top-down organizations – and outside them, too – to do something the military isn’t known for: creating more transparency to empower young military leaders and the public.


    Some senior officers say transforming the military means more than buying next-generation vehicles or developing new training. It’s giving more people more access to what they’re doing and thinking. That’s already happening as top officers create their own blog sites and Facebook pages in order to keep pace with the plugged-in, hyperconnected charges they lead.

  • Allen wants to make junior leaders smarter about where he is taking his organization, thus empowering them to interpret his message to act on their own. That means, in part, daily blogging on his site about his travels, his thoughts, and people he meets.
    • Allen...as in, Adm. Thad Allen, Commandant of the Coast Guard. This is interesting, because the value of blogging in this case is framed in terms of commander's intent and the promotion of initiative at lower levels. Commander's intent and initiative are not new concepts. Rather, they have been key ideas in 20th century military thought, especially among WWII-era German military thinkers and American advocates of maneuver warfare and AirLand Battle during the 1980s. These ideas continue to be widely accepted within U.S. military discourse. - on 2009-02-02
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17 Jan 09

Blogging General Reaches Out to Troops, Blows Off Security Fears

There are a couple of interesting angles to this. 1) While much of the discussion about milblogging often focuses on the civil-military or perception management aspects (i.e. communication from/about the military to/by the public), the concern here is with the use of blogs (and other social media, like chat) for internal communication, morale, and cohesion. 2) It seems that Maj. Gen. Oates has had more freedom to use social media in a war zone than he had state-side.

blog.wired.com/...tf-mountains-so.html - Preview

milblogging

  • While most of the Army is still wringing its hands trying to figure out what to do about blogs and other social media, the two-star general overseeing 19,000 U.S. soldiers scattered across 17,000 square miles of southern and central Iraq has decided to start blogging himself and holding online chats with his troops.
  • Oates doesn't seem bothered by the push-back. "I enjoy the open engagement with my soldiers. I'm interested in
    hearing their thoughts. And I have no problem with challenging them in
    an honest open fashion. I think this medium allows that," he says.
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22 Nov 08

Secretary of Army encourages MilBloggers

I had signed up to go to the 2008 MilBlog Conference but ended up, for various reasons, not going at the last minute. Sounds like there were some important interactions and developments at this year's meeting.

www.army.mil/...of-army-encourages-milbloggers - Preview

milblogging

  • Geren went on to say that the rise of bloggers who were able to influence news and make headlines made him take a closer look. And over the past year, in particular, he has looked for ways to increase the Army's knowledge of blogs and new media, and has participated in two roundtables with on-line journalists, in addition to encouraging other leaders within the Army.
  • Geren acknowledged that the Army's increased awareness of blogs is critical as it looks to reach out to 17-25 year-olds - "the heart and soul of our Army."
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A survey of blogs will be starting soon ...

An Army officer, who is currently a student at the Air Command and Staff College, is doing research on milblogging. As part of that work, he is conducting what is essential a "content analysis" of milblogs. I'm glad to see this work being done. However, I'd like to see more rigorous methodology for choosing the blogs to analyze. A random sample of sites as indexed by milblogging.com would probably be best.

soldierblogging.blogspot.com/...ogs-will-be-starting-soon.html - Preview

milblogging

    • Over the coming week or so, I will be looking at a large number of milblogs for the following:

      • reasons for blogs (update friends, tell good stories, correct the record, tell another side, etc)
      • purpose of blog (journal, "war stories", opinion on current events, etc)
      • any evident bias (pro-war, anti-war, any other possible "agenda", etc)
      • any trends that I identify (changes over time, etc)
11 Sep 08

Welcome to the Blogosphere

Lt Gen Caldwell, head of CAC at Army CGSC, has orded faculty and students to start blogging.

smallwarsjournal.com/...welcome-to-the-blogosphere - Preview

milblogging

14 Apr 08

Israeli officials: Facebook is national security threat

  • Israeli defense officials say they have identified an unlikely new threat to national security -- Facebook.
    • Great. No doubt the U.S. will soon do the same. - on 2008-04-14
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01 Apr 08

Military Report: Secretly 'Recruit or Hire Bloggers'

Reports of a 2006 report written by Dorothy Denning for the Joint Special Operations University. The report poses the idea of recruiting or hiring bloggers to help spread the U.S. message, as well as the potential for using enemy blogs as intelligence or information operations resources.

blog.wired.com/...report-recruit.html - Preview

milblogging new_media

  • A study, written for U.S. Special Operations Command, suggested "clandestinely recruiting or hiring prominent bloggers."
  • This 2006 report for the Joint Special Operations University, "Blogs and Military Information Strategy," offers a third approach -- co-opting bloggers, or even putting them on the payroll. "Hiring a block of bloggers to verbally attack a specific person or promote a specific message may be worth considering," write the report's co-authors, James Kinniburgh and Dororthy Denning.
30 Oct 07

Videos no longer available at Boots In Baghdad Films

  • A soldier blogger explains why he decided to stop making his videos from Iraq publicly available.  Surprisingly, it has nothing do do with Army OPSEC regulations or DoD bans on YouTube.  Rather, it's all because of the comments of a naive sociology/psychology undergraduate named Caitlin who describes herself thus: "I am a senior HDSR major with no idea what I'm doing or where I'm going next year. And I love that!"
    - TransTracker on 2007-10-30

DoD Defends Decision to Yank YouTube

  • Pentagon officials are standing behind their decision to yank access to YouTube, MySpace and other social websites, saying the websites hog bandwidth and sometimes pose security risks.

    The Defense Department made headlines earlier this year when it blocked access to the sites from military computers. In May, YouTube officials said they were pushing the Pentagon to reconsider. But this month, Army officials said they have no plans to back down and may block even more sites.

  • Deployed troops can still get to these websites from kiosks that access the commercial Internet
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Army Milblogging Survey Announcement

  • Army Milblogging Survey Announcement

    Saturday, October 27, 2007, 06:27 AM

    Brandon Bollom and Matt Payne, two communication researchers at the University of Texas at Austin are conducting a survey about the Army’s recent OPSEC (Operations Security) rules update as it impacts the milblogging community.

    The researchers invite former and current Army-affiliated milbloggers to take a short and confidential online survey regarding their blogging practices.  To receive a link to the survey, please email your name and blog address (the URL) to these University of Texas researchers at: UTresearchers@gmail.com

    The accuracy of this project depends on the participation of the Army’s milblogging community. The researchers thank you in advance for your time and assistance. Any questions about the survey or the project can be sent to UTresearchers@gmail.com
27 Jul 07

Porphyrogenitus: One Complaint

  • That is, they seem to have been given a highly

    negative sense of the blogosphere, and were discouraging soldiers from

    posting anything that might affect anything. Which to me is sass-akwards.

    Milbloggers, in my non-humble opinion, have done more for the war effort

    and more to correct misleading reports than the entire Army Public Affairs

    Branch has (note: this is not a slam on them, but praise for the MilBlog

    community). The Army should be encouraging troops to give *more*

    information on their first-hand impressions and how things are going, not

    less. "Winning the War" begins at home - we're not going to be defeated

    here, but may have to pull out because of people's impressions at home,

    which in my opinion seem to be shaped by misleading reports of what the

    overall picture here is. (Note again - I'm writing less from my own direct

    experiences than from the impression I get second-hand, both talking to

    people who have direct experiences and reading what I consider to be

    reliable sources).



    This attitude towards soldier-bloggers, which might be

    limited to just the 4th Division, seems to be another example of the Army

    shooting itself in the foot - making it's mission harder.

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