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02 Nov 08

Global Voices Online » Corporations Agree to Standards for Internet Freedom

  • The Global Network Initiative has been launched. The Initiative is a code of conduct for corporations on privacy and free speech created by a coalition of human rights, media development and research organizations, and Internet and communications companies such as Yahoo, Google, and Microsoft. Its goal: to ensure that ICT companies acknowledge their “responsibility to respect and protect the freedom of expression and privacy rights of their users.”



    The Initiative was launched as a response to corporate participation in online censorship, especially in China. It took more than two years to craft, and much of that time was spent articulating a set of principles and devising mechanisms to encourage compliance acceptable both to human rights groups and to businesses.



    Rebecca MacKinnon, one of Global Voices’ founders, participated in the working group, and writes in RConversation:




    A few people have called me asking “does this thing have any teeth” or “is this thing more than just a figleaf for companies to get congress off their backs?


    Organizations like Human Rights Watch, Human Rights in China, Human Rights First, and the Committee to Protect Journalists would not be putting their reputations behind this thing if they didn't think it was meaningful.


    That said, the initiative must prove its value in the next couple of years by implementing a meaningful and sufficiently tough process by which companies' adherence to the principles will be evaluated and benchmarked.

25 Sep 08

\\\\\\ barcamp Hong Kong 2008 //////

  • BarCamp was born in Palo Alto, California in 2005. In just three years, it has become an international network of user generated conferences — open, participatory workshop-events, whose content is provided by the attendees — often focusing on early-stage web applications, and related open source technologies, social protocols, and open data formats.


    Last year's event drew in 100 participants from all walks of the Internet in Hong Kong; budding entrepreneurs, web designers, cutting edge programmers, mobile experts, game developers & designers, academics, bloggers, social media specialists, investors and media owners.


    This year we are expecting over 200 people at the full-day event, hosted at Oxford House in Taikoo Place, on the conference floor of Turner International Asia Pacific, owner of Cartoon Networks and CNN News.


    There will be five large conference rooms, two lounge areas, a coffee room and a bar. Presentations can be on any topic you like as long as it is about the Internet and people are wiling to listen. You are free to speak in Cantonese, Putonghua or English.


    Food, drinks and free wifi will be provided.


    Anyone with something to contribute or with the desire to learn is welcome and invited to join.


    Come, speak and learn at BarCamp Hong Kong!
21 Sep 08

RConversation: Global Voices, generative media structures.. and the end of nationalism?

  • Global Voices, generative media structures.. and the end of nationalism?






    Gvsummit Byneha

    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.)

New satellite to give Google Maps unprecedented resolution

  • Google has taken the war over exclusive web content into space. Not directly, of course—the satellite that was recently launched into space on a rocket bearing the Google logo was the result of a joint venture between a commercial satellite imaging provider and the department of defense. In return for undisclosed terms, Google got two considerations: its logo on the side of the launch vehicle, and exclusive use of the mapping images that the satellite produces.



    The partnerships in the new satellite are extensive. The hardware was built by General Dynamics and put in orbit by Boeing; the funding for the project came in part from a commercial satellite imaging company, Geoeye. The rest of the funding came from the Defense Department's National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which provides map-based intelligence resources. The launch took place yesterday from the Air Force's Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

04 Sep 08

Global Voices Online » Blogger of the Week: Siniša Boljanović

  • Siniša Boljanović had never blogged when he volunteered to report on Serbian blogs for Global Voices in 2007. He read an article about Global Voices in a Serbian online magazine and was so hooked on the idea of contributing, he taught himself to write in English and to use Wordpress for the first time in spite of one additional obstacle: Siniša is blind.


    Among the topics he has blogged about in the past year are, atrocities of war in his region, the arrest of Radovan Karadžić, human rights, Serbian politics, and Kosovo's independence claims.


    Siniša lives with his family in a town called Novi Sad, which is well-known for the EXIT music festival. He is a graduate of Serbian language and literature at Belgrade University. He does not have a personal blog, but is planning to create one in the future. More urgent are his plans to help start a new Lingua website, Global Voices in Serbian.


    In his spare time, Siniša likes reading books and sometimes writes short stories. Before he became blind, he liked to play tennis. These days he is a fan of Serbian tennis players Novak Djoković, Janko Tipsarević, Ana Ivanović and Jelena Janković, and also likes Roger Federer and Maria Sharapova.

30 Jul 08

Jasmina Tešanović: Who was Dragan David Dabic? - Boing Boing



  • Who was Dragan David Dabic?


    For me this incredible story is only beginning. Soon Radovan Karadzic will be safely in Hague behind bars, rambling his strident defense just like his predecessor Slobodan Milosevic.


    We here in downtown Belgrade are left with this mysterious ridiculous character, Dragan David Dabic, who will vanish like a soap opera hero. I am sincerely afraid that "Dabic," his traces, deeds and words will be cancelled, manipulated, and abused by the press, by his friends, by his enemies, by his captors. There is a lot at stake with his capture: Unpleasant truths and unanswerable questions. We lived with Dabic for 13 years, he was one of us, among us, in the shadow half-life of Serbia.


    Two war criminals lived in my own street. Biljana Plavsic, the former leader of Republika Srpska, took power after Radovan Karadzic left in 1996. She pled guilty in the Hague and is now serving her sentence in Sweden. General Pavkovic was in charge during the pogrom of Albanians in Kosovo. He is sick of cancer.


    People in Belgrade feel bewildered and betrayed. For 13 years Serbian officials have claimed Karadzic was never in Serbia. He was hiding in the mountains as an Ali Baba together with his 40 hajduks ( Robin Hoods), he was sheltered in monasteries praying to God for his country. These myths were obviously planted by the people hiding him in downtown Belgrade. There Dabic led his weird public life, while the hapless Serbian population was held hostage for the misdeeds of Karadzic.

24 Jul 08

J Stands for Jordan « Saxby’s Fifth Avenue

  • J Stands for Jordan


    April 1, 2008




    When I saw this week’s assignment, to explore the blogging culture of a country that starts with the same letter as your name, I immediately thought of Japan.  I’ve always been interested in Japanese history and culture and Japan is certainly a place people around the world identify with modern technology.  When I went to Global Voices Online, I actually only had two other choices, anyway: Jamaica and Jordan.


    Japan certainly had a lot of entries on a wide range of topics.  Some of the posts were political.  There was a post about the failure of “Second Life” in Japan.  Others focused on sports.  While there was a lot to read, nothing really stood out as being that different from what one would expect from Western bloggers. 


    When I went back to the site today, a story on GVO’s home page caught my eye.  Jordan’s Queen Rania is using YouTube to create a dialogue on differences between the Middle East and the rest of the world.  Her Majesty, who is clearly contending with the late Princesses Grace and Diana for the Hottest Royal by Marriage title, wants web users, especially young web users, to submit not only their questions about the Middle East, but to also share stereotypes about the region in the form of vlogs. Between now and August 12, i.e., International Youth Day, the queen will address the submissions with, she hopes, input from others in the online community. 

New Uses (to me) of Technology in Kenya « Shannon’s Corner

17 Jul 08

The Class (KMD Digital Journalism 2008)







  • Course: DIGITAL JOURNALISM
    Semester: Spring
    Instructor: Joi Ito
    Language: English

    Description:Journalism has been evolved around mass media, but with the rise of the Internet media, journalism is starting to drastically change, through web and blogging, as well as social networking.  This course reviews and discusses how the current mass media-based journalism changes its form to account for the emerging media infrastructure.

    The course will involve learning to use new tools for research stories, conducting interviews, photographing and recording, publishing stories and having conversations online. The students will be required to learn to use the tools and collaborate on actual works to be published during the course.

    The Teams
        1Ds
        Kyah!
        OCTOPAS
        Sandwich
14 Jul 08

Teaching Writing Using Blogs, Wikis... - As readers of this book, we hope that...

  • Welcome to the Digital Writing wiki


     


    This wiki is designed to support the book, Teaching Writing Using Blogs, Wikis, and other Digital Tools, by Richard Beach, Chris Anson, Lee-Ann Breuch, and Thom Swiss, to published by Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc., in 2008.


     


    Within each chapter you will find references to topics on this wiki signaled by @ = Topic. To access these topics, click on the chapter topic on the sidebar and you will find these topics listed.


     


    As readers of this book, we hope that you will add your own material related to the topics in this wikibook: links, references, files, descriptions of teaching activities, or student work. To add material, click on edit, enter the password: digwriting, and insert text or links.

  • references
  • 2 more annotations...

teachingmedialiteracy wiki - Welcome to the Teaching Media Literac...

Russell Gordon Archive on Serbianna.com | Front Page


  • Russell Gordon

    <!--Views & Analysis 150 160 200 [ 96A0C8]-->



    <!--Views & Analysis 150 160 200 [ 96A0C8]-->

    Christopher DelisoBiography
    | email author

    Russell Gordon is a journalist and photographer specializing in Yugoslavia
    and Mexico. He was a Mexico correspondent and has worked in more than two
    dozen countries and covered four armed conflicts. He covered civil wars
    and armed conflicts in Afghanistan, Cambodia, Yugoslavia and the Bosnian
    Serb Republic, ethnic hostilities in Burundi, and the Zapatista rebellion
    in Mexico. Former Latin Trade contributor and staff photographer at La
    Nacion Daily in Argentina, Russell Gordon plans to relocate to Serbia in
    2006 to continue his reporting.

    His website is: http://russellgordon.net

    <script src="gordon.js" language="JavaScript"></script>Russell Gordon Archive

    Behind Kosovo's Façade
    October 23, 2006

    Dividing the Pannonian Sea
    July 19, 2006

    Missed Chances
    March 14, 2006

    Serbia: Time to Just Say No
    March 4, 2006

10 Jul 08

Group Brilliance — Getting More from More: How Groups Can Successfully Innovate

  • Kill the Killer Phrases


    July 9th, 2008<!-- by geoffrey --> · No Comments



    <!--StartFragment-->


    In America, the National Rifle Association is fond of saying, “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people.” A debatable point to be sure. A variation on this is, “ideas don’t kill people, people kill people.” Ideas may not kill, but they can certainly add fuel to the ideological fires that consume countless human lives.


    In developing ideas, attitudes destroy the creative process. These attitudes find expression in killer phrases. Creativity in the initial stages is quite delicate and must be handled with care, like a baby. As ideas and concepts grow stronger through development, they can withstand criticism, but at the beginning don’t put your ideas into the middle of a football game. They won’t come out looking very good.

Welcome to the IdeaFactory - BrainStore.com - Industrial IdeaProduction

  • Welcome to the IdeaFactory

    The IdeaFactory BrainStore develops ideas using an industrial process.
    For companies, organisations and private people. Reliably, and in record time.

Morningside Analytics

  • Analytics and Mapping

    <!--- <p>Morningside Analytics applies groundbreaking research methods to discover, measure and monitor emergent online communities of individuals and organizations focused on particular issues, products, and trends.    We call these informal communities "Attentive Clusters."

    <p>We map online groups that thrive around things people care about: politics, parenting, health, technology, social issues, business, personal identity, professions, products, sports, hobbies, entertainment and more. Once mapped, we provide powerful methods for monitoring these communities and the information flowing through them.

    <p>Until now, policy analysts, campaign managers and communications professionals have had little insight into how to interpret "what's going on" in the fastest-growing form of online communication, weblogs (more commonly blogs).  We help our clients go beyond counting “hits" or ranking blogs on an imaginary measure of “authority.” We show who has authority about what among whom. We monitor trends and shifts in Attentive Clusters over days, weeks and months.  -->





    Morningside Analytics discovers and monitors online networks that form around particular ideas and identifies thought leaders with standing in these audiences.


    M.A.’s focus is blogs (short for weblogs), the Internet’s fastest growing information source.

Mapping Iran’s Online Public: Politics and Culture in the Persian Blogosphere | Berkman Center

  • Authored by John Kelly, Bruce Etling, Internet and Democracy


    Download PDF







    This case study is part of a series produced by the Internet and Democracy project. The initial studies include three of the most frequently cited examples of the Internet’s influence on democracy. The first case looks at the user-generated news site, OhmyNews, and its impact on the 2002 Presidential elections in South Korea. The second documents nontraditional media and the use of cell phone technologies for information sharing and organization of protesters during Ukraine’s Orange Revolution. This third case analyzes the composition of the Iranian blogosphere and its possible impact on political and democratic processes. The objectives of these studies are to write a narrative description of the events and the technology used in each case, to draw initial conclusions about the actual impact of technology on democratic events and processes, and to identify questions for further research.



    Abstract

Joi Ito's Web

  • We just wrapped up the Global Voices Summit in Budapest. I unfortunately missed the first public half of the Summit, but participated in the meeting afterwords for the authors, editors and the staff. It was amazing to see so many countries and regions discussing issues face to face in combinations that only the UN would come close to. It was a really great meeting everyone and the last session was tear-jerking, listening to everyone's stories.



    Since the first Global Voices meeting in 2004, I've been peripherally involved, most recently as a board member. I'd seen the site growing and growing, but the scale, quality and commitment of the community involved in running this multi-national, multi-lingual blogging effort really hit me after attending this conference and I'm even prouder than ever to be able to part of this movement.

…My heart’s in Accra » Global Voices and collective decisionmaking

  • Global Voices and collective decisionmaking



    Filed under: Global Voices — Ethan @ 9:00 am
    <!-- end META -->





    How do 70 opinionated people from around the world make up their collective minds?


    Easy. They use an opinion spectrometer.


    After a day-long brainstorming meeting about human rights issues online and a two-day conference, the Citizen Media Summitt, we’re now spending two more days discussing the future of our collective project. That means passionate, difficult conversations about big issues, like whether Global Voices editors and authors should be permitted to express strong personal opinions in their articles on the site.


    IMG_0037.JPG

    The opinion spectrometer in use at the Global Voices 2008 Summit


    We were introduced to the opinion spectrometer by Allen Gunn of Aspiration, though our deployment of the technique may be slightly different. If you’re interested in deploying the technology, we offer the technical description below:

08 Jul 08

Google Public Policy Blog: Global Voices speak to the opportunities and risks of online speech

  • Global Voices speak to the opportunities and risks of online speech



    Monday, July 7, 2008
    at
    8:52 AM




    We are passionate about protecting the Internet as a platform for free expression, and recently we helped send thirteen bloggers and activists from around the world to a forum where they discussed how they put their belief in freedom of expression into practice on a daily basis.

    The Global Voices Citizen Media Summit in Budapest, Hungary was a chance for 200 of these prominent bloggers, citizen journalists and NGO activists to share their experiences promoting transparency and political reform, and to discuss crucial topics like internet filtering, censorship, the role of social media and the multilingual web. I was lucky enough to join the dialogue and was moved by many of the voices and stories I heard throughout the Summit.

    These bloggers are critical to the promotion of free expression and transparency on the internet. They engage in political debate and expose issues often ignored by more traditional information sources in their countries. Sometimes this entails great risks. In Egypt, for example, blogger Wael Abbas, one of the recipients of Google's travel scholarship, was harassed after exposing police corruption on YouTube. Oiwan Lam, another recipient, may face a fine and jail term for displaying nudity in art on her blog.
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