Panel: Can the media help facilitate debate online?

Another week, and another panel discussion. The Innovation Forum hosted a discussion about how the media can facilitate debate online. This is just a pretty straight, albeit probably a bit rough, write up with what was said, as best as I could. The panelists were:

Nico MacDonald: chair

Andrew Calcott: Principal Lecturer in Creative Industries and Cultural Studies and Programme Leader, MA Journalism and Society, School of Social Sciences, Media and Cultural Studies, University of East London

Meg Pickard: head of communities and user experience Guardian Unlimited

Daniel Mermelstein: BBC project manager, who helped set up the online Have Your Say technology (former colleague)

Lee Bryant: co-founder of Head Shift

Olivier Crieche: EMEA head of Six Apart

Nico: The panel is about how to innovate products. The last talk was talking about how newspapers innovate. Tonight’s discussion is about best practices and how to develop products to support debate online.

Today as Tony Blair announced his departure as Prime Minister, every news site had stories, video and also comments on the story. There is an interesting disconnect between activity online and engagement offline.

What is the business model? Differences between BBC, the Guardian and Six Apart and how they generate revenue online.

Nico asked who had posted comments on a media site. About two-thirds of the audience raised their hand.

Where is this being done well?

A: The Archers discussion board. (Question as to whether this is politics, which Nico is keen to keep the focus on.)

A: BBC Football World Cup. I was travelling around Germany. The comments across England, Germany was wonderful. The amount of comments better than anything that local council would want in terms of a discussion.

I suggested that the site World without Oil, a site that aggregates pictures, audio, video and blog posts about energy conservation, peak oil and the impacts. It is a type of online game exploring the possible impacts of a declining oil supplies. As Treehugger says:

If all this sounds interesting, but slightly confusing, then don’t worry – that’s the idea. A post-oil world will be confusing.

A: The Times education message boards someone suggests. Thousands of teachers there. The person thought it was good because the discussion wasn’t that guided but let the community frame and drive the discussion.

Andrew: (Writing a book called Citizen Blog.) I think for all the frantic, dare I say, frenetic activity of promoting ‘me’ as a brand, there are quite a bit of lazy assumptions around. Disconnect is the problem of our age. The disaggregation of the political realm is the problem. Reconnect cannot be technical. Participation is not a good end in itself. I don’t think Many boosters of the global conversation tend to underestimate the changes in our times. They think we can do politics by other means. Disband the party. Do something else.

One thing that is striking about modern politics, not just constestation. We have moved into a realm of media representation. That is different than political debate in a modern sense. That difference underrated.

Most evident in insipid narcissim in MySpace and YouTube. The corporate invitation: Come on i, the participation is lovely. We’ll sell your clicks. That is what is going on. It is a long way from modern politics.

Over estimation as to how empowered a user is. People never were just readers, viewers or listeners. They expected a response. They expected a push and pull relationship. User rather than expanded personality, is a diminished personality.

There is an assumption that comment is unilaterally good, in and of its own terms. In relative terms, it is good. Comment is relatively cheap, but inquiry and reporting is relatively cheap. Many editors looking at user generated content as getting lock on readers and users. A lot of editors look at the balance sheet. Get rid of inquiry and let commentators reign free. Not just editorial managers, when in the enthusiasm that we are all users now, professional journalists say always someone know a bit more than I do. They are losing it. Since when has been finding extra bit of information been good? The point is to reorder events as they occurred to get definitive view of events. Stand outside, retell and reorder outside of immediate action and reaction.

Journalists are unravelling if they lose that sense of purpose, if we are too ready to get into bed with being embedded. Not only journalists who are losing out in trying to be objective and consider public interest. But this is about developing a coherent political position and considering the public interest. It is the stuff of democratic debate. Some would like to say that access to media is the same as democratisation.

We have the technology. We have gifted people who can develop it and design it. There are people who are journalists and academic are better tooled up today than ever before.

Meg: I am not a journalist or an academic. I’m not talking about the Guardian because I’m not qualified to talk about the Guardian. (Me: She has been at the Guardian since 19 April.) My main interest is how organisations create happier and more productive communities. I am not talking about business models, but talking about technical constraints. I am talking about some of the issues dealing with content, debate and online discussions.

A big part of this is commenting activity. Washington Post had to shut down their comments for a while. (Me: CBS just had to shut down their comments on articles about 2008 US presidential candidate Barack Obama.) People want to engage in lively debates. It is a good thing, but we at the Guardian and every where else have suffered from racist, sexist or abusive comments directed at other readers, writers and in all kinds of crazy directions. People descending into direction. This is the same problem dogged Wikipedia, LA Wikitorial, blogs and all kinds of sites.

People see that we’re offering a platform as a place to lash out and not a place to construct a community. People who interact online don’t always feel like they are part of a community. We construct the community. Negative posts written by only a small number of people, but it doesn’t feel that way. How often do threads descend into treatise on Middle East or debate on race?

It is not necessarily as bad as it seems. Even though it feels bad or uncomfortable. We did some internal research, of vast number of comments, very small percentage had to be deleted. Conversation is a lot more positive. Broken as a user experrience and community experience.

Three types of appraoches:

1) Human solutions. Moderation resources. Processes. Policies. We treat everyone the same way. It will get you quite far, but it will not heal a broken community experience. Whack a mole, or rather a whack a troll approach. It is much more than moderation. I call this the ‘naughty step’, but all ‘naughty step’ but no ice cream is not a good position. What kind of a message does that give on how you get attention on the site? We should be encouraging and rewarding good behaviour.

2) Technical solutions. But what really helps moderators do their job is that they must have a comprehensive moderation platform. They must be able to look at things in granular way. and get users involved in moderating their own comments. Media organisations need to realise they need to move on from ‘tell us, tell us, have your say’ to ‘help us moderate this community and move the conversation forward’. It needs to be more of a converstion. Allow users to have responsibility to take over health of their community. Digg is a good example. (Meg explains. People can promote what they like and push what they don’t like off of the home page. But she adds it can be gamed.)

There is big value in aggregating distributed activity either on site or off site. A person’s reputation can be constructed across the site. Comments from Sport blog or Comment is Free all aggregated. People may feel like their comments are disappearing into a black hole. No, it makes me a creator instead of a reactor, and aggregated identity becomes valuable. Like eBay, earn reputation points.

3) Editorial solutions: Propositions, tone of voice and reward. Response by organisation and interaction by people in the organisation themselves.

(Meg responds to Andrew.) We shouldn’t be throwing comments at the bottom of every article. You can’t just put comments there and expect everything to go swimmingly. Blogs and articles should be treated differently. (She quotes me.) News stories are supposed to tie up threads, but blog posts should leave some threads open to be discussed.

Is it top down, or bottom up? Top down creates a power imbalance. It is obvious to journalists (sometime they like it that way, she says) and the users (who don’t like it, she adds).

How you set up the debate? (She quotes me) Blog posts get the comments they deserve.

Authors need to think about engaging in the debate they have created.

Some authors need to learn a new way of reading. They need to learn how to respond to comments they receive. Have your say, or what is your view? Is the person commenting back at the author? Is it digital graffiti? Are they responding to debate?

Social is not the same as community. Could be one plus one solution instead of one on one solution.

Mainstream media are experiencing this cultural shift from objective reporting and commentary to learn different kinds of journalism. It is not blog post or conversation instead of an inquiry piece.

Olivier: I am supposed to be tool making guy, but I’m pretty much the least technical person in this room. We make 75% of our revenues from businesses. Half of those businesses are in the media industry. We encounter projects working with press and radio.

Over the last five years, we created tools to meet the needs of our users. We started building weblog tools for individuals. Media was initially not interested. But then journalists got interested. In the UK, not many newspapers providing blogging tools for their users. In Italy, Spain or France, that is widespread. Discussion is now moving on and optimising what they have, moving from pure blogging to CMS and more refined ways of using tools for readers, not only journalists.

In press, it is used to talk about a lot of issues. Politics one of hot topics. In 2006 and early 2007 with presidential election (in France), it was really time for blogging as a tool. It was the first time political parties were actively using them. Every important political party used blogging tools. Look at Sarkozy, he used one of our tools to give weblogs to fan. Giving you weapons to occupy the territory. Six hundred activists took tools. (Loic Le Meur has a good run down of his role in the Sarkozy campaign, and the role of the internet in Sarkozy’s campaign.)

Segolene Royal was more in a centralised, discussion mode. She was asking people to tell her what they think. A lot of people used these tools to enter into dialogue. This was first time. Newspapers and media talk about this, possibly more than the real size (of what was going on). But it made an impact.

During campaign, we saw how one single person publishing one single item could have impact. Segolene Royal was in meeting, only about 40 people. She was talking about the 35 hour work week, said all teachers should work at least 35 hours. Implied that they weren’t working that hard. Phone camera video of that. (Guardian News blog post about the incident and the anger it provoked.) Teachers biggest voting bloc for socialists. It had a big impact.

From now on politicians look out more for what they are saying. Maybe not a good thing. Politicians become even more cautious. About 32% of French internet users have looked at candidates blogs, and 13% participated in online discussions. And 10% sending e-mails supporting candidate. People want to get involved in, and these tools help.

If you look at audience in the end, the publishers did well. Audience grew with 63% looking at main websites where only 8% look at blogs of journalists. War of blogs versus media is over. A few personal observations from talking to media organisations and what they hope to do. Most people are lazy and have no particular talent for writing. We should not expect our readers to be great debaters. Just because you have 1m readers, not 1m talented writers.

It may not be great idea to give audience sophisticed tool when all they want to do is grunt. We’re seeing a shift where newspapers give readers bloggers to give readers ability some time create content but not whole blog. It takes time. Most people want to interact. Comments. Profiles. Voting. Ranking. It is not so demanding for user.

Used to see newspaper site on one end and blogging site on other end. CMS tools are getting closer, and newspaper want to experiment with their content. Agree, not every item should be commentable, but newspapers are experimenting with this.

Throughout Europe, we’re seeing smaller media companies, online companies. They are journalistic but they make a big marketing drive and say that they are new media because they are all about participation. They are finding business models. The advertisers like them. New experiment with former journalists at Libération. They thought Libération were not moving forward fast enough.

Last one want to stress, it doesn’t happen by itself. We see many organisations purchase technology and think that they will have second YouTube. The technology helps, but it is not the main thing. What may work for sports newspaper may not work for political newspaper. To manage a community, it does not take the same skills as it takes to be a journalist. Think about objective and whether the management has the right objective.

One client that we used to have in France, Le Monde. Not about making it big but making it good. They have created weblogs for some of their journalists, but on a voluntary basis and did training. They offer weblogs to users but on a subscription basis. They have hired moderators. They are recognised as being very effective.

Lee: I’ve worked in online community development and social networks for 10 years. It’s an extremely hard and delicate thing to create space for meaningful, or at least polite, debate to occur. I’m very optimistic, but I’m also something of an old sceptic. I think some of what we’re doing is overblown. Contribution is largely an individual motivation. In the real world, community means something very different. Guardian, BBC online not communities in any real sense.

There was no spam in Samzidat. What they were doing filled a very important need. These were very real communities with real constraints. They created a wealth of writing and interaction amongst people not represented.

Comment is Free is a good example of the problems with these online media sites (a paraphrase of what Lee said). Almost nothing meaningful is happening on Comment is Free. Someone pointed me to article on Comment is Free, said something very controversial about Kosovo. There was a discussion for 120 comments based on no real knowledge. Another article by a Russian activist (didn’t catch the name). It was a well constructed article but only three abusive comments from Serb nationalists. I think limits for open sites like Comment is Free.

Constraints, barriers and intimacy are best for political debate. I have been involved with RIAA debates closed on Chatham house rules. We have got to get beyond idea of mass, open spaces. They bring out the lowest common denominator of abusive, often male spaces. I’m writing about an online Bosnian community that was almost totally wiped physically. Very heated debates, but there is enough social capital. No drive by commenting. “You suck. What? Are you deaf, I said you suck.”

We need to create communities, just big enough to create a space for debates. Grow them. You don’t start with big open spaces. People are too scared. You can’t have a political debate in these large, open spaces.

Key words. Intimacy. Scale. Common behaviour. Look at ways of self regulation. I don’t think we’re there yet. Think of social architecture. How can you map behaviours onto this system? The reason I am keen, self-protection is very important. To touch back on politics, we have to touch on the participation. We are getting to the end of a regime built off of comments by the Sun and the Daily Mail. It helped create the media obsession of New Labour. Health Minister spends one million pounds for very staged media event. They have overdone consultation. They think participation is being allowed into the doors of our institutions for 10 minutes but then pushed out for machinery of government to work.

He thinks there has to be a mutual space for politics and the people (badly paraphrasing here). Otherwise, we’ll be left with YouTube comments or Comment is Free.

I’m a big user of Flickr. Very successful at creating online culture. Very polite culture. Where was the critical mass? These questions are in mind about turning around failing online communities. Apologies for sounding so old fashioned.

Daniel: I will keep this short. I’m with Lee on a lot of this. I was reading the introduction by Nico. Have Your Say only one of vast community offerings by the BBC. News website produce 300 stories a day. Our users do provide value. They can correct mistakes. We have a fantastic user base. The challenge was to harness all of this and build something usable and scalable but also not break the bank with moderation costs.

We kept it very simple because we didn’t want this vociferous minority taking over. Most of our users only read comments not post them. We don’t let users create debates. We thought hard about distributed moderated function. We allowed users to tell us which comments were good. This was not a complex recommendation system. If you like this comment, recommend. If you don’t, ignore it. We thought the more you create these things, the more you encourage users to game these things.

Users don’t have to register to comment. We introduced a flexible moderation system. Some could be pre-moderated, and some could be reactively moderated. We had quite a bit of internal debate. This is the only place on the whole BBC website where user can put something on the site without any editorial oversight. Pre-moderated debate about Israeli-Palestinian debate or an unmoderated debate about your favourite Abba song. But how long before unmoderated debate about Abba becomes nasty debate about Israeli-Palestine? How long? Not very. We limited the number of comments people could post on unmoderated debates. They accuse you of censorship, and they are right. It’s a no win situation.

This isn’t about technical fixes or design. There is a fundamental problem. My hunch is that people don’t understand netiquette, anonymity and scale. In the BBC, we think we do have a role to promote debate, not just a role but a duty. With things like Have Your Say, you can provide tools, but they will always be a bit of a compromise.

There are other places. We can link out to these places rather than be this uncomfortable host for these debates that never feels quite right.

Question and answer, which actually was more of a comment and statement period. I didn’t catch the name of most of the commenters. I only provide identification for those people who commented and who I know.

Comment: The more I listen I wonder why we favour these pub discussion forums. A lot of speakers express uneasiness about holding these discussions back. Lee, I agree with you. Guardian or BBC, trying to promote populist debate, but you are unsatisfied. What is the Guardian or the BBC get out of this exercise?

Political will is needed to increase participation.

Comment: Richard Sambrook, BBC head of global news division: I agree with what Meg and others saying, there is a difference between online discussion and community. Community is very different thing. Big media approach was get people to site and try to lock people in. You can’t force community. You have to find where people want to gather and go there. One of most successful community sites the BBC has is 606, (a football discussion site). Also, it may not always go on in your house.

I wanted to throw out there. Maybe the political debate is informed by our consumerism. We only vote once every five years. We can’t influence global issues. But in the consumer world, we have so much choice. Maybe this is out of frustration.

Comment: By me: I didn’t want to respond directly to Lee’s criticism of Comment is Free because I’m not the editor of Comment is Free, Georgina Henry is. And I wouldn’t want to talk out of place. An upsum of what I said is that we as media organisations realise that we have to care for these spaces that we have created. I also think that the challenge is, as Tim O’Reilly says, to stay small as we grow big.

The Guardian’s Games blog is a great place where the commenters feel a real sense of ownership. Last week, we had someone posting large chunks of text, and people got very upset. But I explained to them in a post that we didn’t want to just ban someone, and they were very happy that someone was listening.

Comment: I want to stick up for Comment is Free. I think Comment is Free is one of the few places where you get that array of opinion. Some of it, I fervently disagree with and some fervently agree. Nothing about technology, it is what that debate means in the offline world. You do see that on Comment is Free, you see that. You come across the germ of a comment that shows that commenter really thought about this. If you have ideas that really matter, you have to put this out there.

Comment: On the internet, isn’t it just more distributed? I follow debate but it’s more distributed. Community is not about people congregating anywhere to much more process of aggregation, people making contact with each other because of shared ideas. You only have to see how young people have online presence. It is a much more distributed idea.

Comment: Chris Vallance of the BBC: I am concerned about audience and participation. Often mass participation is a turn off for audiences. Sometimes the very best ideas and quality comes from very corners that you don’t expect. You spread net wide enough to get best content. Casting the net wide, you get that. Open it wide enough, you get Israel-Palestine debate and that turns people off.

At this point, my iBook ran out of battery, and Suw and I had to get something to eat or pass out.

links for 2007-05-10

links for 2007-05-09

Frontline Club: Politics and blogging

Last night, Suw and I went to a discussion on World Press Freedom Day at the Frontline Club here in London. I’ve tidied up my liveblog notes and added a little commentary as well as tried to link out to the sources that were mentioned.

The moderator, Richard Gizbet of Al Jazeera English’s Listening Post, started off this evening: “We’re here to talk aboout the blogosphere and the MSM: What it is good at and what it’s not good at.”

The panel:

Ben Hammersley, former multimedia correspondent at the Guardian

Kevin Marsh, BBC College of Journalism and former editor of the Today programme at Radio 4.

Ethan Zuckerman, with Global Voices Online, OpenNet Initiative (Ethan let me know that while he lends a hand at ONI, that he’s not actually on the project team).

Alaa Abd El-Fatah, Egyptian blogger at Manal and Alla’s bit bucket

Richard first talked about his fascination with the Egyptian blogosphere. It’s one of the least covered but most active in the Middle East. Alaa has used technology to help empower activists. More on that later.

Richard: I do a broadcast at Al Jazeera called the Listening Post. In the 18 months before we pitched this and we got on air, we had an idea of what this would look like. We thought it would be a multimedia look at the newspapers around the world. That has all changed, in large part what is going on in the blogosphere. They are pushing, pushing mainstream media.

Ben: Difficult to know where to start this. Key thing to talk about over the next half hour is the results of this revolution. Free tools to express yourself. For every blogger, there is a different style of blogging. There is not one blogging, there are 50,000 different kinds of blogging. There are free or cheap tools on the internet. There is no such thing as blogging (in the sense that there is one thing called blogging, not to put words in Ben’s mouth but to try to interpret), just blogging tools and lots of people are using them.

Kevin Marsh: I think if there is one point that I really want to emphasise this evening are the claims that are being made in mature democracies on its behalf of blogging to mend politics and mend political journalism. Those aims are unachievable. It is wrong to say that blogging fixes what is broken in politics and what is wrong with political journalism. It would be wrong on World Press Freedom day to say that people shouldn’t have freedom speech, but I don’t think blogging reconnects the political disconnect that exists in mature democracies. Politics and political journalism is broken, but I don’t think that blogging will fix that.

Ethan: One of the things that we’re interested in at Global Voices doesn’t address Kevin’s concerns about mature democracies, but it is about providing views and opinions from developing nations. In a lot of countries, the blogosphere is a lot less constrained than the press or the broadcast media. If you are in Zimbabwe, you can’t really get free views from the press or broadcast media that you can get from bloggers, some blogging anonymously. The openness in this space is closing quite rapidly. The number of countries filtering the internet is expanding.

Richard: Go to Alla in a few minutes This week there was another casualty in the Egyptian blogosphere. One of the bloggers, Sand Monkey, has decided to pack it in.

Sand Monkey said that he thought security was closing in on him and that soon his anonymity would be blown.

Alaa: Sand Monkey had some complaint with others in the blogosphere. It looks grim. There are two bloggers in jail. There have been several bloggers taken by security. This is not new. This is normal. It happens to journalists all the time. It happens to activitists all the time. We are now worried that the government is attacking the medium itself. With the religious taboos, there are many who are looking to limit freedom of speech. We see people who are being sent to jail. It is difficult to say if this is a trend that will continue. It is having a chilling effect at the moment.

Ethan: Let me jump in on this chilling effect. There are two ways gov’ts can constrain access. They can limit access technically. China, Ethiopia and Pakistan limiting access to blogger.com. The other way is to intimidate people to tell them that they are under surveillance. When you see Sand Monkey stop blogging, you see a chilling effect.

By threatening to arrest a few people, you can silence hundreds or thousands of people.

Ben: It’s very interesting to ask yourself, these gov’ts not technically sophisticated. Why is the blogosphere being targetted as bad speech? Bloggers are the ultimate boogeyman for authoritarian governments. It’s like the moral majority in the US or UK blaming video games for violence. Is it because bloggers so efficient at spreading political ideas or just because they are new?

Alaa: We are seeing a general crackdown. It affects bloggers less than mainstream media. Bloggers use the medium for journalism but also for activism. There is media interest.You hear more about bloggers being arrested than journalists being arrested.

Ethan: I think that governments being interested in controlling information that blogging is very interesting for activism. One thing that freaks out gov’ts is that this is an international space. Ethiopia is worried about what is being said by Ethiopians abroad. They are more strident than if they lived in Ethiopian. The internet is more open than other media.

Media enthusiasm can’t be discounted. Bloggers are arrested and they blog from jail, as Alaa did. Activists can get their message out to a wider audience. If bloggers can do this, it is not just for local activists but to get the message out to the rest of the world.

Richard: Broaden this out to Virginia Tech shootings. There was the discussion about the appropriateness of using video, but this was the first time mainstream media turned to blogosphere. Students blogging in real time on Live Journal, MySpace and Facebook. They were upset. Called it digital doorstepping. In the Guardian, Patrick Barkham said that bloggers didn’t understand the public space they were in. He said they need to grow up. (The full discussion on the Media Guardian between Patrick and blogger Jeff Jarvis) Kevin, is if fair for journalists to go there?

Kevin Marsh: I might be one of the few people who think it isn’t right to go there. It’s right to say that people who were filing stuff to MySpace or whatever that they should have known the rules. You go back to people uploading stuff, it wasn’t their intention that the media …

(I have to interrupt the liveblogging with a bit of a postscript: He compared it to someone who had written something in a diary. He said that a diary because it is written is now public. I couldn’t disagree with this analogy more strongly. I have a paper journal in addition to the blogs I write. When I die, I have instructed friends that my journals are to be burnt. Just because I wrote them on paper, I do not want them public under any circumstances. These are my private thoughts, my private musings, and I do not want them ever made public. Everyone compares blogging to keeping a diary. Yes, most people blog about their personal experiences, but I have levels of what I want public and private. I think this analogy stands up very poorly, and I do not consider my personal diaries as public record or in the public domain in any way. As a journalist, I reject the idea that my personal diaries are public in any way whatsoever.)

Kevin Marsh: At the first time in history, we have the ability to build up the richest picture in history. It makes me uneasy. I do wonder if there should have been a pause button. Where is the common humanity? Is it true that they filed to the globe that that was their intention?

Richard: Any thoughts from Cairo or US on digital doorsteping?

Ethan: Most bloggers most of the time are writing for a tiny audience. Most on LiveJournal are writing in public but only writing for a dozen people. But the same is true for most bloggers. What happened for Virginia Tech, they were writing for a very small group but what they were writing was interesting to a very large audience. People find themselves committing acts of journalism. What got tricky with Virginia Tech, they didn’t embrace that identity. They found themselves writing for a much larger audience. Journalists need to be sensitive that people may be writing in public but writing for a much smaller group of people.

Alaa: Most journalists assume that bloggers want to be journalists. Most bloggers don’t want to be journalists. Sometimes when journalists are telling your story or quoting you, you are being put in a different context. It is very common in Egypt that newspaper use comments from the blog. People are angry are about it. There is this idea that you are writing to smaller public and a public online. I don’t know what can be done. It is bound to happen.

Ben: One of the things that we have to deal with is the rapidly changing standards of media literacy. We’ve only had the internet for 10 years. We’ve only had blogging as a mass phenomenon for three or four years. I think it’s very interesting what Kevin was saying with LiveJournal stuff. If you say that you can’t use found letters, then documentarians would be out of a business. Ken Burns couldn’t have made the Civil War. The British Library said that they were starting to collect e-mails.

Richard: Too bad, we can’t get the White House to do the same.

Ben: We haven’t made the rules, but we have the old rules. The idea that it was written this morning and not hundreds of years ago. Does it really change anything?

Richard: When we were first confronted by the power of the idea, it was seeing as a panacea.

Kevin Marsh: You still see it. You go to a politician’s blog site. They say it is all about engaging with the public. But it’s no more engaging with the public than knocking on doors. David Milliband quite interesting guy because we thought he was standing for leadership. When he says he isn’t running, he doesn’t do it on his blog, it goes into the Observer. It is difficult to differentiate between Boris Johnson writing on his blog and Boris Johnson writing on his blog. He has links to his articles on the blog.

In order to pass first base, you have to have a civil conversation. It’s very humbling when you look at political journalism in the last 25 years. You see the political journalism and it’s very easy for bloggers or anyone to do it better. Political blogging in the States is more or less a running commentary on the failings of political journalism. Here, it is more or less political journalism. Guido Fawkes, it’s rumour. It’s supposition. It’s the same thing that alienates people from political journalism. There is nothing special about putting Tony Blair on YouTube.

(Again, I have to interrupt. In holding up David Milliband, Boris Johnson and Tony Blair’s laughable efforts to publish content in an interactive space, I have to ask this questions: Is it a failing of blogging or vlogging, or a failure of politicians to grasp the idea, the opportunity that they could interact directly with their constituents in a new way? This is not a failure of blogging. This is a failure of mainstream politicians to truly engage, and I would say not only to engage via blogging but even through more traditional methods of political engagement. Later, Kevin Marsh will talk about authenticity. The problem with politicians moving into this space is similar to the failings of traditional media often in this space, they simply use a new tool in a traditional way. They use blogs as broadcast and publishing and forget the return channel. That’s not a failure of the technology. It’s a failure of vision and a failure to understand not only the technology of engagement, but engagement itself.)

Richard: I wondered why British political blogosphere such a quiter space. I think the blogosphere fills a vacuum where ever it is. It’s different in Belarus. The British blogopshere represents a tribute to mainstream British journalism. You felt like there were voices that spoke to you.

(I would disagree here as well. I think it’s a success in mainstream British journalism to marginalise voices that they find threatening. I think it’s a shame, not something that should be celebrated. I find unanimity, homogeneity and predicatability in the mediated conversation.

I also find a contradiction. The media here mourns a lack of civic participation, but then as some choose to participate via blogs, they attack and belittle bloggers’ contributions. And the only bloggers that get to play in the media space are those that are familiar and fit in current political alignments.

The US media is no better, using bloggers to reinforce a traditional political agenda. They highlight bloggers to perpetuate the right-left shouting match that has debased popular political discourse and leaves most people disinclined to participate out of frustration and alienation.)

Ben: The thing with the American blogosphere was that it was not to fill a void. It was to find a scapegoat. It rose with election of George Bush. America woke up day after election and recoiled up in horror at the other 50% of their country. They all blamed the media. left said Fox. Right said Hollywood. It became a meta conversation about the media.

Ethan: I am going to respectfully disagree with Ben on issue of timing. I saw a rise of political blogosphere in the lead up to ’04, not a follow up. People were desperately finding a way to participate. What came out of that was the Howard Dean campaign. It is very easy to get Americans active in online medium, but very difficult to get them helpful.

Bloggers very effective at raising money but what was less clear whether we created policy dialogue. It was the laziness of people wanting to be active without leaving their machines but feeling that things are quite off kilter in our country.

Kevin Marsh: I think that is really important. What is the most disappointing thing is seeing video of Joe Trippi on PrezVid. What did that achieve other than to campaign online? It ended no where. What was really disappointing, it was the relish Joe Trippi had that social networking sites would reveal more Macaca moments. What disturbed me was the relish he had in delivering more Macaca moments. That was the problem with traditional moment finding off guarded moment.

Alaa: I don’t know any about what you guys are talking about. If we think about blogging and fill a gap in journalism, in Egypt, we have not seen any coverage of local issues of local stories. When I looked at Lebanon, the way that bloggers see the world, it was very different than mainstream media sees the world. There is very little political blogging than goes beyond sectarian debates. There are black spots that aren’t being covered by bloggers as being covered by mainstream media.

Suw Charman: Why focus so tightly on political commentary bloggers? There are bloggers that talk about issues but not in a political world. There are bloggers talking about the ambulance service or NHS, or like the NGO I founded to talk about digital rights.

(Suw makes an excellent point, and I think one of the problems is that most people relate to governance and policy differently than politician and journalists.)

Richard: To be fair, Alaa not replicating political commentary

Kevin Marsh: The distinction of civic conversation what is connection behind sites that you are talking. What I don’t see is connection between that conversation and the political parties. I don’t see that connection. Political groups say look at all this conversation going on.

Ben: Massive class of blogs written by ambulance drivers, teachers and soldiers saying that this is broken.Their’s isn’t the failure. The failure is the political class. That is where poltics is broken. Used to say, politicians never meet nurse. If you’re in politics and dealing with health care why should you wait for Polly Toynbee to tell you that the health care system is broken.

In America, they are trying to ban military bloggers. It absolutely shows that it is broken, because you’re not listening to people you are serving. (Talked about here on Captain’s Quarters, here on Black Five or on Wired.)

Journalist with Japanese online newspaper: In Japan blogging is so huge, grown out of alternative media. Is there distrust of blogging in Britain?

Ben: Certainly, there was a distrust. Ben outs me as the Guardian blogs editor, as he says that it is entering the mainstream.

Ethan: I want to respond to Suw. I do think that we limit when we just talk about the political blogs. We show you the blogs talking about life and everyday issues. What are the issues of everyday life in Cambodia? I think that Ben’s point on milbloggers is spot on. What life is like for a soldier in Ramadi is critical for us. Bloggers that are taking a specific journalistic function.

Kevin Marsh: The trust element. The mainstream media is finding in blogs something difficult to find: Authenticity. Not out for out and out verification, but trying to find authentic voice. There is another thing. The BBC reported a story about riots two years ago. Thought it came out of nowhere. Look at Where I Live sites on the BBC, you could see tensions between West Indian and Asian communities. The precise elements pulling out there.

Ben: World Press Freedom day. Censorship doesn’t work. All of insurgents in Iraq are blogging themselves themselves silly. If you want to see US soldiers being shot, go to YouTube, on al Qaeda blogs. For Department of Defence to shut their side of the story down is silly.

Richard: The Department of Defence is outposting Iraqi bloggers 10 to 1. They are not stopping.

Ethan: This is the same mistake that the US government made with Radio Sawa. US government sees that YouTube is being used and think that to have US government video on YouTube is the answer.

Jonathan Charles, BBC Correspodent: While I think that this provides a slice of life, but I wonder whether bloggers’ lack of restraint harms their own case. Watch news, and I see that it is dissected by right and left. It is still a cacophony of voices. Do they discount themselves by their lack of restraint?

Kevin Marsh: I think it’s hard to talk about standards. I think you have to live with it. It feels a bit like journalism.

Jonathan Charles: Let me give you an example. I received an e-mail by someone. I responded and then it was posted on someone’s blog.

Alaa: It is precisely not a mature conversation not following norms and laws that it is important. If we chose to follow libel laws in Egypt, we would not be unable to talk about torture, unable to talk about corruption. You remove barriers that journalists have been unable to break through.

Member of audience: Blogs change standards of media literacy. I do question pilfering comments on MySpace for Virginia Tech. The second question is most influential political blogs. Philadelphia, Dan Rubin, Blink blog, tackles politics in very dispasssionate way.

Ben: The question about media literacy and privacy on MySpace answers itself. The social norms in MySpace and Live Journal are really only understand by people under 25. If you are the AP national reporter who discovered Google a couple of months ago, then they don’t understand the medium. We have to wait for everybody to catch up.

In US political blogs, there are people very good. In American political sites, you can always tell which side they are on. The non-mainstream blogs, you can always tell what side they are on.

Richard: My kids are on MySpace and Facebook, and my wife calls it MyFace.

Member of audience: Ask Alaa, if you see blogs as the new political opposition.

Alaa: I don’t think that blogs can go anywhere on their own. It is not what you can do on the internet, it is the network on the ground. When you add the blogosphere and SMS and e-mail to a thriving community of opposition, it can become very powerful. But if you don’t use these tools on the ground, you don’t have anything but debate. You see the rise of the new generation of activitists. It is being reflected in the blogs and empowered with technology. But it is turning out very easy to intimidate the activist bloggers.

Ethan: There are a wealth of other tools. You can’t neglect mobile phones or e-mail. What is great about the blogosphere, it is an international space.

Question from woman from Moscow human rights group: Several speakers have spoken about ethical limitations of blogging. To me, blogging is private, it has no ethical limits. It is about people getting on web and writing their private diaries. If there are politicians, it is public. If not public, how to apply ethical standards.

Ben: The ethics come in when you publish it in a public space like the internet. If you want it private, write it down in a book and put it under your bed.

Question in Russian: Director of journalism from Moscow. I wanted to draw attention that very important in Russia to situation of journalists to the rest of the world. Number of demonstrations around the world, police would arrest journalists. It is very important to have bloggers. Because of state control of internet, very hard to get information.

Ethan: Tremendously active Russian blogging scene. One of really interesting things is that Russian bloggers have attached themselves to LiveJournal because it makes it possible to constrain posts to certain audience. Some LiveJournal posts only limited to certain group. Different than in US where writing for a global audience.

Bill from Greece: What I feel from countries like the Middle East not as free as Greece, Europe or the US, feel like more free than working at BBC or Fox News. How are we going to protect this? How can we talk about these restrictions? Should we journalists put this on first level of information.

Richard: Not a plug for Al Jazeera. Egyptian blogosphere is a big story. We need to amplify the blogosphere where it is being shut down.

Kevin Marsh: I think that broadcasters do have a duty here. It comes back to the point of authenticity to take that point and amplify it. I think that blogging needs protection from a whole host of things. Mature democracies need protection as politicians look to social networking sites and they think that will solve their problems. You overlook at your peril of western politicians that these networks represent what is on the ground. This is free civic conversation but it isn’t politics.

Ben: Yes, there is a lot of nasty uncivil stuff on the blogosphere. If you want to see nasty comments, write a post about Israel-Palestine or read Richard Fisk’s e-mail. Free speech is a bitch, and the blogosphere needs to be defended even though at times you don’t want to look at it.

Member of audience: On one hand, we’re told we missed the story by not reading blogs in Birmingham, but we can’t go into blogs for Virginia Tech. But it is OK to send in large number of cameras to Virginia. Isn’t it less invasive to use found comments?

Kevin Marsh: Intrusion is part and parcel of journalism. This is a new phenomenon, a new medium. I agree with you rushing into a campus with a large number of cameras. that’s the nature of news. I’m much more equivocal about dipping into blogs and exchanged messages. I don’t think we have the etiquette sorted out. If you’re posting in what is your mind is half a private space or a public space.

Ben: A lot of people assume that they are writing under Chatham House rules.

Richard: Ethan, last comment from you.

Ethan: I think that a lot of this is learning how to read in this new medium. There are questions of how to read blogs. Look not just at post but through history of what they have written. Look back at who they writing for. Are they writing for the wider world or for just a few friends? It’s a new medium. We are learning not only how to write in this space but also how to read in this space.

links for 2007-05-04

Never travel with The Man’s computer

Suw and I have had this conversation more times than I can remember lately: When did IT become the enemy? How many times can journalists not do their jobs because they’re locked out of their own laptops? In my previous job, I often travelled with two computers. A clean one that I could configure to my heart’s content, and the one provided by the company where I couldn’t configure the comms to file stories and couldn’t add software needed to use mobile modems or other hardware. I only bring this up because I’m at an event where a fellow journalist can’t configure his WiFi because he doesn’t have administrative right on his computer and therefore can’t post to his blog and can’t do his job.

Internet World: Lulu’s model for self-publishing

I started my day off at the Internet World 2007 conference because I wanted to chat with the folks at LinkedIn for a story I’m working on about online business social networks. The first keynote was by Bob Young, one of the founders of the self-publishing site Lulu.com. In 1993, he co-founded ACC Corporation that went on to merge with RedHat, which has grown into a Fortune 500 company.

“I thought I’d talk about three things: 1) Web 2.0 and what it means in Europe. 2) What it means in the UK. 3) What it means to you.”

How I got to Lulu from this RedHat thing. Those of you familiar with software, know that it was built on a proprietary model. (Well, I might quibble with him on that one seeing as Bill Gates actually stirred up the young software world when he suggested that it should be proprietary and that people should charge for it. That’s ancient history in the software world, in the days of the Altair. But I know where he’s going with this.)

They gave you the binaries, not the source code. If you don’t know the difference, you should. In a very digital economy, in a digital society, if you only get the proprietary model, it’s like buying a car with the bonnet locked shut, and the dealer has the only key. Why would you want to open the hood the car? If you can open the bonnet, you have control of your car. You can take it to the dealer or any other garage. That is what took RedHat from startup in my wife’s sewing closett to a Fortune 500 company with half a billion dollars in revenue.

The control that gives you is that you don’t have to become a programmer but you can you hire someone to add the features you want.

Fast forward, and we’re now in the age of Web 2.0. For those of you who have difficulty understanding how Web 2.0 is different from web that you have used for the last 10 years. The companies no longer provide any value to you. We simply build an infrastructure and you the users add value. If you go to MySpace, you aren’t going there to use things that MySpace developed, you are going there for what users add.

The possibility has been there since the beginning of the internet. eBay is my favourite web 2.0 company. Everything of value has been added by users. I go back to Adam Smith. Businessmen in their own self interest create value for society. Yeah, you can trust the government to develop what you need, or Pierre Omidyar (founder of eBay) can create what you need.

What Lulu is trying to do – based on Adam Smith – is that companies working in their own self interest make the world a better place. This is not to make Lulu successful but make our users successful. YouTube created a lot of traffic but that was based on you guys. How do we encourage people to make video when you didn’t get paid for the last one? Web 3.0 will be based on what eBay, Lulu and Revver are doing. It allows you to get paid for what you are doing.

With the internet, geography ends. It doesn’t matter if you are based in Europe. There is no competitive advantage being based in US. The UK has one competitive advantage: English. English is the lingua franca of the modern world. It is the French of the modern world. You guys can build sites with as global of a reach as any company.

Question from audience: Isn’t this about enabling users? Such as one click purchasing for iTunes or Amazon?

Answer: The great technologies of the internet in ten years are not going to be the great companies of today. Internet is in its infancy. We still have not created the great applications. It’s a lot like the PC industry in 1985. In 1985, they were Ashton-Tate, WordPerfect. Dell not even founded or possibly founded in 1985. (I checked. Dell was founded in 1984, but shipped the first computer of its own design in 1985.)

Question: How do you monetise Lulu?

Answer: It’s all about our authors. Lulu allows you to publish in one of three ways. Either electronically, a book or soon as a CD or DVD. Think of Harry Potter, you can either read, listen to as an audio book or watch as a DVD. We charge for printing. We do the reverse of the publishing model. You keep 80% of the revenue you make.

Question: How does Lulu assess whether these are unknown authors whether they are of some quality?

Answer: Ahh, the quality question. We sell 160,000 books a month. We’re adding 5000 authors a week. What is interesting to us is that concern (about quality). We probably have the world’s largest collection of bad poetry. Early on, the Washington Post newspaper ran a story. The literary editor thought he had come across the worst novel in the English language and was asking how can self publishing create good novels? We encouraged (the author) to come to Lulu, and we sent out a press release saying the worst writer in the English language had come to Lulu.

There shouldn’t be a group of editors who decides what is good enough or relevant. It should be the marketplace.

We are working on social networking and recommendation tools, to allow readers to decide quality.

From the musical Gypsy Rose, there is a song that says you have to have a gimmick. You have to do something different. If you do a different detective story, you have to do something different, like base it in your home town.

We don’t think we compete with Random House or Penguin. They think they have succeeded if they get their authors down to 10 and sell a million books each. Our model is the reverse. On a single copy, on Lulu, you make money and Lulu makes money.

Sky responds to my mini-rant

A few weeks back, I posted what I called a mini-rant after watching Sky business editor Michael Wilson on air and then was directed to go to the Sky News site to respond on their blog. It took me a while on their old-look site to actually find the blog, but I wasn’t impressed at what I found.

I have to give the Sky News website team some points in responding to my rant. Julian March sets out their blogging goals on their Editor’s blog. And business producer Peter Hoskins left a comment and calls me out for having the sound turned down on that day. I will admit that, although I’ve heard them promoting their blogs on air several times since then and haven’t really felt compelled to look at their blogs because I don’t think they are doing a good job of framing a debate that really encourages me to take part. Mostly it still feels like traditional on-air promotion of their website. I think they could do a better job of setting up a conversation, a way that makes people want to join in. It’s still too much of a traditional news piece with “What do you think?” tossed on at the end.

I’ve responded to both Julian and Peter, on their blogs and here on Strange. It did hit a nerve that day, but again, I do give them credit in responding. It definitely walks the talk of transparency.

It made me think though about what is the difference between a blog post and a traditional article with comments. As comments become more common as a general feature on news sites, I hear some say that blogs on news sites will disappear. I think that blogs will evolve, and I believe that as ways for people to participate and contribute online proliferates comments will become a lowest common denominator as far as community features. But I don’t believe that blogs, in the context of news sites, are simply articles with a comment box and will therefore disappear as comment functionality becomes universal. I think there is a different editorial approach to blogging than writing news articles. As I put it to Sewell Chan of the New York Times over lunch, a news article is meant to tie up as many threads on the subject as possible, whereas a good blog posts weaves the threads of a good conversation together but leaves a few loose as an invitation to comment.

In a sidenote, Sewell is working on a new project called City Room. Intriguing. New York magazine has an internal memo about the project with a little snark about Sewell. I wish him luck.

links for 2007-04-25