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Seven Theses on Dictator's Dilemma | technosociology - 0 views

  • The capacities of the Internet that are most threatening to authoritarian regimes are not necessarily those pertaining to spreading of censored information but rather its ability to support the formation of a counter-public that is outside the control of the state
  • Dissent is not just about knowing what you think but about the formation of a public. A public is not just about what you know. Publics form through knowing that other people know what you know–and also knowing that you know what they know.
  • Thus, social media can be the most threatening part of the Internet to an authoritarian regime through its capacity to create a public(ish) sphere that is integrated into everyday life of millions of people and is outside the direct control of the state partly because it is so widespread and partly because it is not solely focused on politics. How do you censor five million Facebook accounts in real time except to shut them all down?
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It's Not Twitter or Facebook, It's the Power of the Network: Tech News and An... - 0 views

  • In the end, it’s not about Twitter or Facebook: it’s about the power of real-time networked communication.
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The First Twitter Revolution? - By Ethan Zuckerman | Foreign Policy - 0 views

  • Tunisians got an alternative picture from Facebook, which remained uncensored through the protests, and they communicated events to the rest of the world by posting videos to YouTube and Dailymotion.
  • Not content just to filter content, last summer Tunisian authorities began "phishing" attacks on activists' Gmail and Facebook accounts
  • Tunisia has aggressively censored the Internet since 2005, blocking not just explicitly political sites, but social media sites like video-sharing service Dailymotion
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  • When the riots intensified last week, the government began arresting prominent Internet activists, including my Global Voices colleague Slim Amamou, who had broken the story of the government's password phishing.
  • But any attempt to credit a massive political shift to a single factor -- technological, economic, or otherwise -- is simply untrue. Tunisians took to the streets due to decades of frustration, not in reaction to a WikiLeaks cable, a denial-of-service attack, or a Facebook update.
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From Innovation to Revolution | Foreign Affairs - 0 views

  • he has to convince readers that in the absence of social media, those uprisings would not have been possible.
  • Do social media allow insurgents to adopt new strategies? And have those strategies ever been crucial? Here, the historical record of the last decade is unambiguous: yes, and yes.
  • these changes do not allow otherwise uncommitted groups to take effective political action. They do, however, allow committed groups to play by new rules.
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  • the power of social media to synchronize the behavior of groups quickly, cheaply, and publicly, in ways that were unavailable as recently as a decade ago.
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    dialogue entre Malcolm Gladwell et Clay Shirky dans foreign affairs: "do social media make protests possible?"
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Tunisia, Twitter, Aristotle, Social Media and Final and Efficient Causes | technosociology - 0 views

  • What Ethan is saying in his piece is that social media facilitated the events in ways that were crucial (material cause), but the revolution was made by the people of Tunisia at great human cost (the efficient cause) and it was aimed at overthrowing to corruption, unemployment and tyranny (the final cause).
  • I find it hard to believe that the ability to disseminate news, videos, tidbits, information, links, outside messages that easily, transparently and without censorship reached one in five persons (and thus their immediate social networks) within a country that otherwise suffered from heavy censorship was without a significant impact.
  • Social media helps strengthen communities as it is the antidote to isolating technologies (like suburbs and like televison)
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  • Social media seems to have been key allowing the expatriate and exiled community to mobilize and act as key links between rest of the Arab sphere
  • yes, the ability to disseminate information is not a sufficient cause for success, but it is surely a necessary one
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Egypt's Facebook Revolution: Wael Ghonim Thanks The Social Network - 0 views

  • I'm not a hero. I was writing on a keyboard on the Internet and I wasn't exposing my life to danger," he said in an interview immediately after his release. "The heroes are the one who are in the street."
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    "I want to meet Mark Zuckerberg one day and thank him [...] I'm talking on behalf of Egypt."
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Eurobaromètre sur l'information européenne : le fossé générationnel des média... - 0 views

  • Pratique minoritaire au sein de la population européenne, la fréquentation des médias sociaux semble en revanche s’être installée comme une pratique commune et solidement ancrée au sein de la jeunesse européenne : 66% des 15-24 ans disent utiliser ces médias au moins une fois par semaine ; 50% des 15-24 ans utilisent les médias sociaux quotidiennement.
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How to run a protest without Twitter | GlobalPost - 0 views

  • Instead, the rebels lugged a 100-pound radio transmitter. For years, there was massive soldier who carried it on his back through the rugged trails, Gusmao recalled. When they reached a point high enough, they would transmit the latest developments, and then quickly flee before the Indonesians tracked them down.
  • Historically, new technologies have consistently shaped collective action
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The Political Power of Social Media | iRevolution - 0 views

  • herefore, attempts to outline their effects on political action are too often reduced to dueling anecdotes
  • two perspectives on the role of social media in non-permissive environments, the instrumentalist versus environmental schools of thought.
  • Throughout the Cold War, the United States invested in a variety of communications tools, including broadcasting the Voice of America radio station, hosting an American pavilion in Moscow  [...], and smuggling Xerox machines behind the Iron Curtain to aid the underground press, or samizdat.”
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  • protests, when effective, are the end of a long process, rather than a replacement for it.
  • t is in this second, social step that political opinions are formed. This is the step in which the Internet in general, and social media in particular, can make a difference.
  • llows people to privately and publicly articulate and debate a welter of conflicting views.
  • one of the main forms of coordination is what the military calls ‘shared awareness,’ the ability of each member of a group to not only understand the situation at hand but also understand that everyone else does, too. Social media increase shared awareness by propagating messages through social networks.
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