Twitter

Brian got me to sign up for this thing called Twitter, brought you by the talented developers of Odeo and other good stuff. You send short text messages from your phone or a web form, and then it updates your friends as well as the public timeline. It looks like the designers were playing a lot of Katamari when they created this.

People mostly seem to be using it to report their status “tired, hungover” or “at the office” but it seems like it would be especially effective for spontaneous social planning, ie: “Snagged a great table at Mill Town, looking for company.”

Anyway, it also has a badge so you can help your blog readers monitor your status (because I *know* you care). šŸ˜‰

655,000 Iraqis dead, and counting…

I woke up this morning to a story on NPR saying that a new scientific study says the Iraqi death toll is something like 10 times higher than the Pentagon’s count and even 5 times higher than the independent IraqBodyCount.net (which is responsible for those cool counters you see on people’s blogs and which I referenced in an anti-war screed/blog entry two years ago

This afternoon I got an e-mail from the Democratic Party alerting me that “The U.S. Army has plans to keep the current level of soldiers in Iraq through 2010.”

And I suspect that even electing Democrats won’t make much of a dent in our illegal, racist, christofascist occupation of the Middle East at large. How can we get our troops home safely and quickly???

Local blogs aren’t the only way they’re behind

This weekend North Carolina’s leading right-wing think tank held a conference for bloggers in Greensboro, NC. Just in case any limp-wristed, peace-loving, liberal hippie bloggers might mistake it for something they would want to attend, it was called “Carolina FreedomNet.” Can’t you just hear the deep-voiced announcer?

Anyway. I know I am on the Locke Foundation radar because their Executive Director sometimes visits OrangePolitics. I’m proud to know that I am part of the lefty blogosphere that inspires this kind of concern:

“Local blogging communities will become, and are already in some places, really important to electoral politics and local policy,” [Mary Katherine] Ham added. “Both are of great importance to conservatives. You don’t want local left blogger down the road blogging up the need for a new granola-paved bike path and the need to use your tax dollars to pay for it, and not have your own message to counter him. If there’s a vacuum, they will fill it, and the right blogosphere tends to be a bit behind on these kinds of things.”
Beltway Blogroll: All Blogging Is Local via Politics and technology: Right-wingers talk about the local lefty blogs

Yeah! Granola-paved bike paths for all!!! But seriously, there have been a few conservative local blogs here in Orange County, but they have trouble being coherent long enough to have an impact on much of anything.

Next week – also in Greensboro – ConvergeSouth. I can’t go as I’ll at be this awesome wedding, but it should be fun. If you go tell Ed and Sue I sent you.

Me too

So earlier today, my friend Ed Cone’s blog brought my attention to online debate about Ms. Magazine’s upcoming cover story called “We Had Abortions.” Because the majority of commenters on Ed’s blog these days are right-wing trolls I got pissed off just thinking about what they might say.

After skimming the comments, I fired off this angry comment:

I had an abortion 18 years ago, and it was absolutely the best thing for all involved including my future children which I will be able to love, nurture, and support much more effectively.

Any of you who think what I did should be illegal: How many children have you adopted lately? How much additional taxes do you want to pay for public assistance for children and the people who take care of them? How many of you are even capable of getting pregnant?

And how many of you want me making decisions about YOUR family? Now please shut up and start acting like the Christians you claim to be.

Continue reading “Me too”

Reality check for grassroots organizers

It’s so obvious, but nobody does it. We say we’re working for “The People” (or poor people, or immigrants, or women, or African Americans, or whoever) but do we really accept their leadership? Do we even listen to the voices we think we are empowering?

Zack Exley’s manifesto “An Organizer’s Guide to Trusting the People” lays out a network-centric approach if I ever heard one.

Those and other experiences like them gradually woke me up. I started approaching groups of workers with the assumption that they were, taken as a whole, savvy and strategic, not apolitical and apathetic. That opened the door to all kinds of great collaborations. I started assuming these groups of people were strong, deep, strategic and concerned — ā€œeven if they wereā€ made up of Evangelical Christians, survivalists, muscle car drivers, trailer park dwellers, pit bull breeders, and anything else my Northeastern Liberal upbringing had taught me to ridicule.
An Organizer’s Guide to Trusting the People

To me this isn’t just something that it helps to think about when organizing or to try to believe, it’s something that I must believe to be an activist and organizer. In fact, it’s fundamental to the whole idea of network-centric advocacy. The People = The Network. They collectively are the leaders, our job as organizers is create tools and infrastructure that allows them to do their thang.

Continue reading “Reality check for grassroots organizers”

Online communication tips

For all the wonderful people I met today at the Triangle United Way’s communication seminar for nonprofits, here are all the links mentioned during my workshop:

In each case, the hyperlinked ‘example’ will take you to my own personal page on that site. One of the important aspects of online social networking is that individuals can create and manage their own identity with which to interact with the community.

  1. blogging
    There are so many tools, and the right just depends on what your needs are. The most social one is Live Journal, the absolutely simplest is Blogger, the most powerful is Drupal. MovableType and it’s hosted version TypePad are also popular. I usually recommend WordPress because it is powerful and flexible without being difficult to use. Free hosted blogs are available at WordPress.com (example – one of my wordpress blogs)When you blog, your posts go into a standardized feed (see ‘bloglines’ below), which can be understood by other sites.
  2. Technorati searching blogs
    This site collects, sorts, and indexes millions of blogs. You can use it to search by topic and to give your own blog a wider audience. You can automatically ‘ping’ sites like Technorati and tag your posts when you publish so that more people will be able to find your blog. (example)
  3. del.icio.us bookmarks
    Save and organize bookmarks with tags, and browse the tags of others. (example)
  4. flickr photo & album sharing
    Upload and tag photos and add them to groups. Browse photos by personal contacts, tag, date, or “interestingness.” (example)
  5. bloglines aggregator
    Collect and organize RSS feeds. See how many other users subscribe to each feed. Now you can read (or at least skim) lots of blogs and other sites with feeds. (example)
  6. friendster the original social networking site
    Make your own profile, connect to friends, browse by connections, interests, geography, etc. Send announcements to your network, make matches between friends and colleagues. Facebook, tribe net, orkut, linked in, and my space are also popular with different communities. (example)
  7. wikipedia collaborative wisdom
    This is a great place to find information, on everything from global politics to new technology. You can contribute your own knowledge for public benefit, and even create new pages for topics you think are missing. (example – “nonprofit technology” entry)
  8. 43things sharing and supporting goals
    List your personal goals, find people with common goals and support each other. See also 43people, and 43places. (example)
  9. instant messaging
    As with blogging, there are many viable choices. For IM (instant messaging), get a multi-protocol client so you can use different systems with one application (Windows: Trillian, Mac: Adium or Fire). The different protocols or networks include: AOL, Yahoo, Google Talk.
  10. Internet phone
    VOIP (voice over IP) not only allows you to talk person-to-person for free, it allows for conference calling and other features. Skype is the most widely adopted, but Gizmo is also a good option.

With all of the examples above I have now given you 10 new ways to communicate with and relate to me and any of your potential clients, volunteers, activists, or donors!

Also, I did not spend much time on it, but I do highly recommend Jon Stahl’s suggestions for online communication planning. Even if you don’t use all of it, some will probably be helpful to spur new thinking.

Here is the “technology trap” that you should always keep in mind to help your organizations manage technological change:
The Technology Trap

And finally, here is a printer-friendly PDF of my presentation. Please enjoy!

Greensboro keeping the faith

What better place for such a protest than the city where the Greensboro Four sparked a nationwide sit-in movement for integration?

Four openly gay college students wouldn’t take no for an answer Thursday morning when they were refused enlistment into the Army.

The students conducted a sit-in at the Greensboro Army Recruitment Center.

Three of the four, Matthew Comer, Jessica Arvidson and Alexandria Nini, were arrested and charged with second-degree trespassing.
Students protest military’s gay ban – Daily Tar Heel

Poison Apples

You know I hated to hear this. Greenpeace has recently found that Apple laptops (including my lovely new MacBook Pro) are full of toxic chemicals.

Apple has recently launched its new range of MacBooks, but what you also get with a new MacBook is the highest level of another type of toxic flame retardant, tetrabromobisphenol A. Apple claims it is looking for alternatives but for now it appears to be using far more of this toxic chemical than its competitors.
HP and Apple’s toxic laptops exposed | Greenpeace International

Given that they have previously been criticized for making iPods with batterries that could not be replaced or recharged, this is starting to add up to bad envronmental image for Apple. Say it ain’t so!

When “your” network bites back

Cross posted from my work blog.

There's a great write-up by Adam Conner over on the Personal Democracy Forum of how the small actions of many autonomous individuals can add up to a networked tsunami. 

Yesterday, Facebook launched a new feature called feeds, which is a live stream of constant updates on the recent activities of your Facebook friends. Everything you or your friends do on Facebook, from adding new friends, to changing your profile, or commenting on other people’s pictures, is now streamed live to your homepage when you log onto the site. It was new, technologically impressive, and unexpected.

And a lot of people didn’t like it. Really didn’t like it.

Users immediately began creating anti-feed "groups" in Facebook to protest the change.

One group in particular, "Students against Facebook News Feed (Official Petition to Facebook),"; somehow connected the intangible elements of luck and timing to become the most popular “anti-feed” group.

By 11:55pm on Tuesday, its first day of existence, the group gone from 0 members to 68,607. At 12:55am it had grown to 85,521 members, having added nearly 20,000 members in an hour. At 2:06pm today there were 223,460 members, having almost doubled in size in 12 hours.

Facebook was promoting it's own protesters involuntarily through the unpopular new Feeds feature.

Every time someone joins the Facebook group "students against Facebook news feed," every single friend that user has is made aware of this the next time they login, without any action other than joining the group being required from the user.

This is a great example of how network infrastructure allows many people to communicate directly with each other and enables collective network action to flow through the pipelines.   Read the entire story at http://www.personaldemocracy.com/node/999