Photo by Neha Viswanathan: A small subset of the Global Voices bloggers who met in Budapest.
(Apologies in advance for the length of this post. I've decided to subject my readers to this even-longer-than-usual "brain dump" because at least a few people out there are interested in some of the ideas related to global participatory media, and I'd like feed back on some of the outstanding questions faced by Global Voices.)
At the end of last week's Global Voices Summit, one of our Middle Eastern bloggers came up to me and said: "nationalism is dead for me now." He said that ten years ago he was a strong nationalist. Being a blogger and debating issues with other people online over the past few years has greatly weakened that feeling. Now after four days hanging out with bloggers from all over the world, nationalism makes no sense to him any more.
(For full accounts of the summit, see David Sasaki's excellent overview, Ethan Z's great series of posts, our media digest, the summit blog, technorati, google blog search, Rezwan's excellent roundup of summit bloggers, etc.)


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