new media

The Passion

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I have gotten a lot of questions lately on my passion.

There are stories out there which deserve to get heard and moreover understood. These voices are all around the globe. Constantly present. These voices regardless of where they are from and in whatever form get lost in the incredible information noise of this modern world. If they despite this incredible noise make it, the context is usually lost or become too distorted in it’s delivered package to really make sense. These voices should get heard in the right context, so that people around the world can listen and understand them. This is the key: Most people don’t listen to the voices because they cannot interpret them. It is about simple communication and connection between people, or in more direct words, a way to create human respect between people.

These personal stories and accounts give perspectives on events around us. You see the context in which the events happen in, and see the relations between the stories and even between the events. The frustration among people in war zones is tremendous. People are tired of the fighting and the wars, especially in the Middle East. The attention the blog I put up during the conflict in Lebanon for people to share their experiences clearly points this out. People don’t feel they have a mean to tell their side of the story. The result is boiling pot of emotions, frustration, and desperation for ways to tell their side of the story. When you have seen your mother, brothers and sisters die in a carbomb or smart bomb, seen the enemy soldiers rape your mother and sister, the rational decisions seem very far away. The anger, frustration and helplessness are overwhelming to anyone, and can easily be directed in the wrong direction. I do not and will never accept violence and terror, yet the root of the problem can and must be understood. This is not a political statement. It is a human statement of freedom of speech and openness about opinions. You could even claim it as a human right of freedom of choice.

It is not about reading one story, getting the comfortable perspective on things. For sure it is easier that way. It is about listening to people, understanding the context of their experiences, seeing the real context of events around you if you so choose. Feeling their emotions, getting the colors of the story. Getting the true citizen media, the true user stories. Real people telling their unedited experiences. Most people however need help to see and grasp the context and it needs to be packaged so that it easy and quick to digest but they also need to feel part of that process regardless whether they are consumers or contributors.

The absolute right or wrong about any event doesn’t exist. It is easier and more comfortable looking at the world in black and white, and being in a mode of on or off. Seeing the real context is something necessary and essential for our future. That is why you will need user contributed media, and that is why I am passionate about inthefieldONLINE.net where we provide tools today and continue to further develop the concept and create the proper framework for it.

To provide make this seamless and easy for consumers as well as contributors you will need advanced technology. Yet technology is secondary (even though necessary for scalability) and secondary it will be for a long time. It is all about giving people a vehicle to tell their stories in the right context. Technology is the tool and framework, nothing else.

Necessary, yes. The driving force, certainly not.

… and now for the skeptics. Please explain me this to me. Why is there an enormous difference between feeling the closeness of another person and watching that same person on video? What will it take to change that? A lot right?

Let us put the human aspect of technology into the business again. It will be so much more fun.

Most of all: This is the path to the true citizen media.

Ethics of bloggers

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Nicholas Carr is writing about the ethics of blogging in a way I haven’t thought of that much before. I think his post is excellent, and brings up some issues which need to be discussed in the blogosphere. I have for a long time been firm on stating that we need “some” structure and praxis in the blogosphere, and I have discussed similar issues when talking about The Future of the New Improved Media.

The post at RoughType you will find here:
http://www.roughtype.com/archives/2006/10/a_glass_house.php

Google buys YouTube… Hmmm…

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I guess it is a great thing…

I spoke to a friend Thursday when the rumor just started. We concluded that the acquisition is all about getting the biggest chunk of the market, or to some extent the whole market. I do not think it has anything to do with what YouTube is actually doing. This is purely a corporate strategy from Google to secure its position as the number one player on the user-contributed video market. I haven’t seen any arguments so far that that market is worth that kind of money, but then again no one has really shown me the numbers.

Is the market that big? I have no idea. I doubt it, at least as of today’s form. It is big in the sense that everyone is talking about it, so the acquisition is probably correct from short-term perspective.

User-contributed media is the flavor of this year. I admit I am doing my fair share of it in my work on inthefieldONLINE.net and Ajgar.com. But what is it all about really? Think of it as the IT software business reality show. It is purely based on the entertainment value. Will it change? I think so. It has to. I do not think it is sane to continue down the track, especially as this kind of media is moving towards news. Today’s form of user contributed media contains a lot of child deceases which needs to be cured in order for it to be really useful for media companies. Reputation systems, copyrights and costs are all topics that are too quickly discarded. We will see more and more substantial content, and the same development as the blogosphere went through, the total sphere of user-contributed media will have to go through. This especially requires new business models as such SixApart changed the business model of blogging. i have previously written a lot of entries on the topic:

Back to YouTube. Is YouTube today worth $1.6 billion? Maybe, maybe not. I think the question is as simple as that. You need to look at the bigger picture, but also have a more conceptual discussion of where we are heading with this whole sphere. YouTube are worth $1.6 billion for Google and almost that to Yahoo in their positioning game here in the valley. More importantly, it is a sign that Google is turning into the same strategy as Microsoft have been accused of.

Definitely, the game will be about Facebook. What a ridiculous acquisition price will we see then… The stakes just got bigger… maybe David Hornik will be right after all – The Bubble 2.0 is coming. The acquisition prices are not really sane anymore.

I now hope that the fortune wheel of the valley doesn’t start to spin too fast…

Note: The Swedish company bubblare.se is an excellent example of how to still compete in this saturated market with a focus in the business. They apparently have some statistics showing they are really a good competitor on the market in Sweden. It is also an example of the importance of language modulisation in the local market. Even in big market such as Japan language plays an essential role. I spoke to a Japanese friend the other day, who told me that Japanese kids generally cannot read English well so they prefer Japanese sites. Give them web/mobile search in their native language as well as the interface. This is especially important for user-contributed media sites. How good will they be able to do if they can’t search for the content nor understand how to submit? Even better is that you can do this via cellphones now as of NeoKeys. I met them a few weeks ago and they really have a cool product. It is really cool and the right as well as the necessary way for the future.

Oops, the traditional media did it again… ;)

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It is only about a month ago since a Reuters photographer got revealed tampering pictures when covering the events in Lebanon and Israel. Now it is BBC’s turn to create some bad publicity due to employees’ extremely poor judgments. It just gets worse when these things happen inside big news organizations such as Reuters and BBC. Neither of them is bad, but some of the employees’ seem to think they can to whatever they please to. Incredible.

I discussed this matter when the Mohammed sketches when they were published and I will stick to the same opinion as I said then. I am for freedom of speech and freedom and press and so forth. I am not saying that freedom of speech shouldn’t/couldn’t be applied to jokes, but hey. There is a difference between what you “can” and should joke about. Why do you need to proove your point about freedom of speech by marking and insulting people who are enough harrassed throughout the world? Yes, I know there are people out there falsely doing things in the name of religion that are unforgivable, but the majority are innocent yet today treated as guilty.

Today, it is five years since the tragic events in New York and even though the video was made some time ago they should have known better. This is not the time, nor the place to make such jokes. It just feels so unnecessary.

And about the film…

I think it is a piece of crap. It is not well-done and has some incredible poor singing. I get the feeling that we have a bunch of Monthy Python wannabies with very poor execution skills. Combine that with a very questionable sarcasm and you want to start looking for a dumpster to throw it in.

The story and video can be found at Is this the way to Al Jazeera?

(A bit more national to Sweden. This is a discussion that should be had in Sweden on this topic. I agree with Göran Lambertz that there should be room for some thought on this topic. It is a tough matter and it should be treated as such. Using the new media we can have it all and finally we have a control mechanism to the traditional media. )