Morning Seminar Sessions - Day Two

Here is a write-up of the events of this morning's seminar sessions...

Web 2.0 in China

There is more to Chinese Web use than traditional surveillance or game playing.

Examples of Web use in China have been violent, evident in the responses to Western and Tibetan criticism of the government’s handling of the recent protests in Tibet.

Chinese people believe that expression online should be more controlled or validated by an overarching authority. If someone doesn’t think they are an expert in a subject, they will simply not post. This is seen all over the world and is not particular to China.

The net is a place for everyone to exchange. The web is a good thing but there are people who don’t think that one should change their minds via active discussion. They believe that people’s opinions are static and should not be challenged.

Self-censorship and the Rise of Cyber-collectives

Censorship systems in China: technologies, laws, hierarchical administration. Government doesn’t need internet police as censorship is self-serving. People censor themselves in anticipation of government intervention. However, the government targets ISPs and other organisations. In this way, self-censorship is a social safety-valve.

Final Panel Sessions - 4.00 - 5.30

Agenda-setting Research: An Exploratory Study of Spanish News Websites and Mename

Users of social news site, Meneame (http://meneame.net/) used traditional news site more than non-traditional. However, it was seen that there was far greater news coverage on Meneame than that covered by the mainstream Spanish news sources such as La Vanguardia, El Pais and El Mundo.

There was a difference between news values of the viewers of Meneame and those given by mainstream journalists.

Meneame shows more transparency on how the public agenda is manifested.

Politics and Usual? The Use of Facebook in Danish Parliamentar Election Campaigning.

Social network supporters tend to be the same as offline political supporters – there is little interaction sought by voters online

There is also little integration using other digital means. These findings suggest that web 2.0 has not heavily influenced the political process in Denmark.

Politics is not only about education and voting, it is also about entertainment. Entertainment matters and this is seen in the amount of music videos etc that are being seen in current campaigns. More political parties need to think about incorporating entertainment in their political campaigns in order to gain the trust and support of the voters.

Key Note Speeches from Micah Sifry and Michael Turk

Micah Sifry – Personal Democracy Forum

The Revolution will be networked. How open source politics is emerging in America.

Open Source politics – an analogy of open source software and politics. Letting competing actors evaluate the value of your plans.

What we are seeing is a changing of the way in which people are co-creators of the political process. They are making their contributions salient be converging into networks and it is these networks which are the key.

Voter can make and disseminate messages better than political parties and traditional media actors.

How has the game changed?

There are all sorts of examples of movements on social networking sites of campaigning gaining significant numbers of voters. The million strong campaign against Hillary Clinton on Facebook, Barack Obama’s MySpace Page.

The Ron Paul campaign updates the public of donors to the site on real time – www.ronpaulgraphs.com -

There is more space online for more content and this is beginning to challenge the sound bite society created by the mainstream media. There is a counter to the sound bite society and this is the sound-blast society, where users are hungry for content – emphasised by the amount of people who are viewing campaign videos on YouTube.

Obama campaign is telling us that the value of the network is more important than a list compiled by a traditional political / power source. Clinton campaign misunderstood the network effect and focused more on compiling traditional lists.

Networks are resilient but they are not nimble – you cannot get networks to get the message of the day.

Campaigns are still not ready to devolve authority, they only want to devolve projects. This force is only going to grow but the question will be what happens to these networks when the campaign finishes? Sifry doesn’t believe that they are going away.

www.personaldemocracy.com www.techpresident.com

The Side Effect – Michael Turk

“The thought that he’ll be President is a side-effect. This campaign is about allowing people to come together to tell their life stories” – comment on the Howard Dean campaign.

The Bush campaign attempted to get its supporters to tell the story of the campaign, be messengers, to their friends and extended networks. This is because the Republican supporters are dispersed over a very large space. They wanted to remove the role of the campaign away from the traditional field organiser – the tools enabling people to vote or become supporters were released in order for people to do something with the latent energy that was being fostered. There was a concern that these tools would be abused by certain groups of people but most of the usage of tools has been constructive and the nefarious use of the net for campaigns has been limited to a few bespoke individuals.

Questions: Who owns the data being generated?

Sifry: There will become an issue of who controls the data from these networks. No-one is conscious yet of the loss of privacy that is being experienced during these campaigns.

Turk: campaigns rely on this consumer database – they map profiles of what constitutes a certain speaker. If this data were used correctly for education about the types of voter under consideration then there would be a very large turnout of voters.

Q: Is the war room model of campaigning being reinvented? Or is it dead?

Turk: campaigns realise that it is all about winning, it is not about improving the lives of the electorate. This is the reason why the war-room model is still in place today, because it is effective.

Sifry: Groups such as MoveOn are viable because they are niche organisations and delegate actionable projects that people can do on a local level. Taking advance of a small amount of people doing the heavy lifting in politics. This is an example of a super-activist group although it is not clear whether it is entirely effective.

The Obama campaign realises that the more sharing of information – such as Yes We Can video – is better in generating more support for the project.

Morning Seminar Sessions

Here's a run down of the morning seminar sessions. I'll update soon with the final keynote speech of the conference.

Power and the Blogosphere

Blogger claims that the Right will control everything on the web

The political blogosphere – 24% campaign news in the US is sourced from blogs, an increase of 13% from 2004

These figures are dominated by traditional media sources. Generally, blogs are not read by the general public. A lot of people don’t know what blogs are. It is not how many people who read blogs which is important, but who is reading them. If a blogger has an audience then they are generally politically active. In the early stages of the blog there was a distinct Conservative bias – a right wing dominance. The left did not consider blogging to have the same potential as the main stream media.

From the perspective of the US 2004 election, the netroots campaign was seen as a failure. The right wing was much more successful in mobilising people. Now in the Obama campaign we can see that the web is being more effective in mobilising the grand swathes of media. Reason for the shift in the balance of power – progressive and activist sites and blogs were built from the ground up. Conservative were built from the top down. Top tier bloggers were driven by talk radio model, they were uninterested in building up networks.

Is the right wing blogosphere dead? Progressive netroots should maintain the activist fundraising advantage for the future. 2008 election should prove more amenable to the right wing bloggers than 2006.

Political Subjectivation on Issue Publics on Facebook.

Facebook suggests that there is a kind of democratic and assimilative power structure on the platform. This is seen in the amount of wide ranging groups and issue specific discussions and organisations which proliferate on the site. However, it is also apparent that Facebook also facilitates the discussion of marginalised issues, the ones which the media would not touch. Facebook is not a neutral platform, because it offers a limited set of communicative platforms. There is no way of accessing the inner data of Facebook, you can only access the information available though your profile. The public is only actualised in the now, it does not have access to the historical discussion data and therefore the architecture on Facebook is difficult in actualising real democratic debate. If you act as a public citizen on Facebook the same blindness applies. Facebook should be understood as a node in a greater network of public activism.

Feeding Congress to the Web.

Metavid is an open archive. It is open to citizens, bloggers, mashup composers, platform developers and media producers. However it is closed to certain groups of people, for example those who speak different languages.

Metavid is open in the sense of open house – people are welcome to come have a look at the vids.

For bloggers, Metavid is open in the sense of open mic. People can comment on videos, embed the videos on their own pages,

Day Two...

Ok, here I go with day 2 coverage. I'll be liveblogging from a number of seminars and the only keynote speech today. I also have my camera with me so there'll be photos and/or videos.

 

Stay tuned.... 

Late night blogging on a conference night

I'm on a three line whip to be up bright and early tomorrow morning (that despite a hearty conference dinner tonight...). But after a long day listening to some great papers, I do feel the need to chill out for a bit. So I'm off to watch the latest episode of the Apprentice on the BBC's iPlayer. I've also just tried to check some blogs and get some sense of the buzz that has come from last night's debate. By the far the most comic I found was this though, which comes from a fully fledged website.

Second Keynote Speeches

Second keynote address

Practice of democratic citizenship

In the face of political threats such as terrorism etc, democracy is approached in a managerial kind of way. This is evinced in the way that OFCOM is over regulating publical communications commons. Public communication appears to be boring, opaque to the masses. This is seen in the kind of management speak by politicians which turns people off rather than on. What then does it mean to be a citizen when there is such little space in the communications space.

The public opinion is shaped through mediation. The era dominated by international broadcasting has redefined what it means to be a citizen. Citizen participation can no longer be accorded through spurious calls to action by politicians.

Will web 2 help or hinder citizen participation? This question is a misnomer because citizenship does not consist of a certain list of actions. It is constructed through structure and agency. How has web 2 emerged as a discourse to alter the questions of citizenship. The mashup is the archetype of the type of society that does not seek to reach a conclusion but is a continuous process of alteration and not dogmatic fundamentalist absolutism

This is the same as Wikipedia and YouTube and MySociety which are continually seeking to develop information

Web 2 approach to citizenship is away from established media sources but from the self-informed citizen. They refuse to accept discourses of plain and seriousness

Web 2 opens up spaces for the public to realise itself. Democratic processes require commons as well as established sources of information.

Rachel Gibson – University of Manchester – Institute of Social Change

Trickle-up Politics? The impact of web 2.0 technologies on political communication and citizen participation

There is a new trend or type of politics called trickle-up politics. It refers to the wider space in which politics is currently taking place. Deregulated political space – Web 2.0 – is allowing more users to work independently and this is leading to new ways in which citizens perform politics. What is the nature of this new politics?

Politics Before the Web

It was direct, localised and face-to-face. It had a live quality. The emphasis was on parties structuring voters’ choices. Political communication was party produced through newsletters and pamphlets.

Post WW2 through to 1990s: Politics becomes a more indirect medium – parties begin to lose their traditional importance. Media begins to assert itself. Personality based rather than party based. The role of editors and political elites in shaping political opinion. There was a growing sentiment that something rotten was festering within the body politic.

Politics and Web 1.0 1990-2004

Consequence of web for political communication was increased speed, increased volume, targeting/narrowcasting, decentralised control structure, interactivity, multi-media formats

Web 2.0 came along and is defined by social and participatory software being applied to the many. Web 2.0 is a conceptual frame rather than a technological term in that it has changed the way that many people do politics.

What does it mean for politics?

New methods of data acquisition are needed to show how and why people are using technology

The web is becoming an environment or context

It is having its greatest effect on young people and is changing the culture of participation

Web 2 trends – blurring of boundaries between users and producers – amateurisation of politics

Speeding up of politics – pushbutton politics and the quickening of responses

Blurring of boundaries between public/private – informalising of politics

Trickle up Politics

Diffused and decentralised

Individualistic – micro networks

Continuous / daily

Citizen based

Niche audiences

Web 1.0 receive/read mode

Web 2.0 send write mode

Web 3.0 more immersive mode – create speak act?

Virtual world may challenge some more of the freedoms and paradigms that we have come to associate with Web 2.0

Politics: Web 2.0 conference live blog by Lawrence Ampofo - Opening Keynote Speeches

The Politics: Web 2.0: An International Conference is being held in order to shed light on whether there has there been a shift in the political use of the internet and digital new media – a new web 2.0 politics based on participatory values? How do broader social, cultural and economic shifts towards web 2.0 impact, if at all, on the contexts, the organisational structures and the communication of politics and policy?

Keynote Speeches:

Robin Mansell – The Light and Dark Sides of Web 2-0

Good and Bad Aspects of Web 2.0

Web 2.0 is very ambiguous and it has been argued that it is leading us to a collective intelligence and will result in a form of new democratisation.

There is too much talk of technical possibility on one end and social change on the other. There needs to be better consideration of the two aspects to gain a more valuable insight into the possible impacts of Web 2.0.

One thing that needs further deconstruction in considerations of Web 2.0 is that all actors are being moulded into this collective intelligence. There are various actors competing in the Web 2.0 market, such as BT Thompson and Tesco. There are other intermediary entrepreneurs – Google, Amazon eBay. Finally, there are cooperating / sharing communities – such as MySpace and Facebook

There two sides to the Web, a “Light” and a “Dark” side, of which the latter could be emphasised by activists who are “wired and confrontational”. Others would say that the web is bringing people together as it has been remarked that “…[internet and Web] addiction leads to more time on the web and a greater humanness”. However, a dark side of internet addiction could be increased amounts of physiological disorders such as internet addiction disorder.

Web 2.0 facilitates the use of active audiences and users – bloggers, email, global networks. It has been assumed that this use of the net by various actors compresses both time and space and assumes that there is an equality of network connections.

A light side of this increase in participants is that people can create their own environments, conservative, monolithic institutions are breaking down, citizens are now more able to join groups and protest on issues affecting society. However, a dark side to this is that there is an increasing competition for information from corporate actors in particular, leading to questionable information flows, such as adverts being mixed with editorial content

Both positive and negative claims for web 2.0 need to be based on empirical evidence, for example, shifts in power are felt locally historically and are not normally implemented on a global scale.

In addition, there is an ambiguity concerning the positive aspects of mass collaboration – users of social networks tend to be more inward looking as they interact with people in their own circle rather than continually forging new connections.

Charles Leadbitter is positive about the creative possibilities of web 2.0 having a positive aspect in the political sphere, however there is widespread confusion amongst the general public over data management as it takes people a long time to access information.

If profits are to be made then there will have to be a scarcity of information and data in order to allow people to manage vast sources of information more easily.

Technical tools for document management are lagging far behind the requirements of consumers and their abilities to use the software. This leads us to believe that as people become more collaborative they have to service their time and their information better.

Overall, there is a mixed picture regarding the impacts of Web 2.0 which needs more empirical research. There needs to be a turn to greater governance of communicative spaces in order to encourage more “active passivity” from users to get the most from the Web. We need to achieve more control over data and information management.

If we have no time because of the swarms of information then we have no time for engaging with our creativity or greater political thought. We need more time.

There is a dark side to the Web where its good aspects are being subsumed by negative ones. The effects of networks and greater connections are not neutral for the economy or democratization.

Helen Margetts – Digital-era Governance, Co-creation and the Future of Government

Relationship between web 2.0 and public administration.

The role of the web in public administration has been underestimated in the short and long term. The UK government in particular believes that the Web is not relevant to it.

The next era of government will be related to better and more pervasive use of the Web and the internet.

Three themes are being replaced in new conceptions of public management: Disaggregation - the splitting up of large bureaucracies

Competition – alternative suppliers via mandatory competition, outsourcing etc etc

Incentivisation – privatisation, performance related pay

Digital era government will be defined by:

Reintegration – reversing fragmentation, new central processes, simplification

Needs-based holisim – client focused structures, end to end redesign

Digitalisation – electronic delivery, centralised procurement, new automation, web 2.0 for government

These are trends which are flourishing but they are not established yet. The Web-based provision for e-government in the UK lags behind e-commerce

e-government in the UK ranks in the middle of a recent survey of its use amongst EU countries – Ireland ranked first and Sweden is second. If there was a table recording the quantity of businesses communicating with government online the UK would outrank all those countries.

Conclusions –

The quality of government sites has improved little since 2002 – there are few Web 2.0 features, too text heavy. Central government agencies have very weak information on the usage and costs of online provision and lack channel strategies.

The government will embark on its new “supersite” strategy, closing 2,500 approx sites and force people to use one or two sites. However this is not well known and many people do not know of the sites or interact well with them. Users are more likely to use non-governmental sites and do not become aware of the governmental alternative.

Digital governance is not a u-turn. It is more of a right-angled change. There are backlash risks for e-government, such as;

Digitsation could reinforce the digital super-state non-participatory model. The surveillance society could become more of a factor in the lives of people where ID Cards and CCTV cameras do not allow active civic participation.

Another scenario is feeble implementation causes chaotic and haphazard sites and e-government projects.

Solutions – information analysis should be disaggregated with control – a contrast to targets based culture

There should more of a customer –focused orientation being adopted by the UK governments in the same way as business interacts with customers.

Citizen Culture for Digital-era government.

Isocratic government – citizens are more autonomous, and adopt processes seen on sites such as e-Bay. It should be possible to see the same systems in government –and this will enable it to generate information it never had before.

Digital government in contrast to non-participatory model – this will see the simplification of government.

Web 2.0 for government would include rich information and content – podcasts, video etc etc

Highly specific deep search

Strong customer segmentation

Involving a wide range of organizations.

Web 2.0 for health is an example of this where there could be freely available information for performance data.

Managers to become more customer orientated.

Direct voices for patients – like NHS Choices but more interactive

Part-authenticated information – such as Darfur Mash-up by UN

Risks of not doing this –you ignore young people at your peril as internet change is lead by them.

People will go where they want to go leading to the loss of visibility of the government

The most amazing thing you'll encounter online today

I've been a bit fixated on electoral politics in my blog posts recently (although, to be fair, that reflects an every waking moment, getting near the end of my thesis fixation with electoral politics in my non-virtual life). But it is also cool to remember that the Internet does other great stuff too. One thing I love about it is its ability to give people access to things they would never have been able to see or hear before, or at least been able to access easily.

The BBC have just launched an amazing Titanic archive site. The absolute highlight of this is a 1936 interview with Charles Lightoller who, as the second officer on the ship, was the highest ranked crew member to survive the fateful maiden voyage. It's a bit strange listening to him talk about the sinking because, for obvious reasons, we are all so familiar with it. Some bits of the description are just as we might imagine, in particular the piece about the ship rearing up or the sixty tonne funnel falling into the water (although, interestingly some elements of the account flatly contradict moments in Cameron's film: there was, according to Lightoller, no panic among the passengers or attempts by people to force their way onto lifeboats. Additionally, he claims all the available lifeboats were successfully launched by a brave and efficient crew). 

But this is better than any film. It is simply incredible to think, listening to this man's voice, that he was actually there, at that time, on that spot of ocean, when the event was taking place. Through this old recording, it is almost possible to reach out and touch that moment. This is quite simply the best thing you'll hear on the Internet today.