Exciting news this morning (at least to me!) my new website at www.allisonfine.com is up and running! A. Fine Blog is now housed there. Please reset your RSS feed.
Thanks and I look forward to seeing you there!
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Posted by Allison Fine on February 8, 2011
Exciting news this morning (at least to me!) my new website at www.allisonfine.com is up and running! A. Fine Blog is now housed there. Please reset your RSS feed.
Thanks and I look forward to seeing you there!
Posted in Social Media | Tagged: A. Fine Blog | 11 Comments »
Posted by Allison Fine on February 3, 2011
Malcolm Gladwell has done it again. Last summer he wrote, I thought rather flippantly, about the ineffectiveness of social media in generating and sustaining social protests.
And now he has followed with a post on the New Yorker blog. (An irony-free zone for Gladwell who apparently doesn’t believe that this blog is a social media tool, and for him it isn’t as he appears to pay no mind to the comments.) He writes, “People protested and brought down governments before Facebook was invented. They did it before the Internet came along.”
Of course they did. We had a revolution in 1776 that wasn’t tweeted, pinged or posted. It doesn’t mean that the same recipe for organizing and sustaining the protests, and sharing them with the world, is the same as it was a decade or a century or two centuries ago.
The advent of social media provides three critical resources for protesters today:
As I wrote the other day, the only drawback to a reliance on social media at this time is the ability of governments, including ours that pressured companies to deny service to Wikileaks recently, to shut down service and cause a blackout for social media users in country and out. As we’re seeing in Egypt, resourceful individuals, citizens, reporters (see Nick Kristof’s powerful tweets here), news agencies, are finding a way to share the news of what’s happening in Egypt and around the world.
Social media aren’t causing revolutions, they are aiding them. Gladwell can sarcastically imagine Mao using Twitter while missing the point entirely that Mao never needed a vehicle or a voice, but the people of China certainly do. We will never know how the protests in Tiananmen Square might have been different with social media, but we’re seeing in Egypt the power that side-to-side communications can have in starting and stirring protests.
Posted in Social Media | Tagged: Egypt, Malcolm Gladwell, New Yorker, Tianammen Square | 18 Comments »