<HTML><BODY style="word-wrap: break-word; -khtml-nbsp-mode: space; -khtml-line-break: after-white-space; "><P class="MsoNormal">I attended the lecture where Ethan, Trebor, and Danah spoke. Trebor’s suggestion that sociality has become a form of exploited labor rang true for me, but what that means in terms of courses of social action is less clear.</P><DIV class="MsoNormal">As Ethan stressed, you don’t have to do it their way. They provide a service you can take or leave. And most people choose to take it. The notion that this is a Faustian bargain is a non-starter. If people don’t feel exploited on any articulable level, what can you do? </DIV><P class="MsoNormal">The way that hegemonic forces define choice seems obvious when you talk about television or the print media, and so unclear to people when you talk about the internet. Listening to the discussion, I felt that we are at a point sort of like the early days of factory labor, where the fact that people are being brought together in a new way is just starting to reflect itself in terms of the consciousness of a predicament. </P><DIV class="MsoNormal">Danah’s suggested that youth are excluded more and more from real public space shed an interesting light on youth use of online spaces such as Myspace. In my mind’s eye, I started to compare the youth of Los Angeles to the English peasantry forced off the land by the Enclosure acts, only instead of being sent to Australia, they have to do time in Second Life. </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Choice in our era is a problematic notion in general, but specifically we can ask ‘Where do you go?’ if you turn off and tune elsewhere?</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Trebor suggested that the non-profit route is insignificant. He mentioned Craigs List, I believe, and one of the questioners made a plea for a public, presumably government-owned online space that seemed well-intentioned but also seemed to fall flat.</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">In a market sense the insignificance of alternatives in more than apparent. Any discussion of monopolies in industry would give the $155 Billion Google and the $300 Billion Microsoft and their confreres control of a market. When I came home from the Vera lecture I noticed the story about Google offering $3.2Billion for the online ad agency Double-click. The irony of Microsoft challenging the sale on monopoly grounds adds to one’s conviction that the future of the online universe will be controlled by fewer large players.</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"><SPAN class="Apple-style-span"><I>"Together, Google and DoubleClick will empower agencies, advertisers, and publishers to collaborate more efficiently and effectively, which will, in turn, provide a better experience for our users. </I>"So says Susan Wojcicki, Google's VP for Product Management.</SPAN></DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">What increased monopoly control means online is different than what it means in television, radio or print, where it is more difficult to become your own producer, but it exists. I would not argue that non-profit entitities will be significant competition on that level. </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Ethan himself has been central to creating a project Global Voices, globalvoicesonline.org, a developing world voice that speaks to power in a politically intriguing way. His astuteness in creating such a group, and the crowd obviously enjoyed the presentations of online citizen media political action in difficult circumstances in East Africa and Southeast Asia, is an important quality. I don’t share the belief that you can just leave or turn off. But I do believe alternative spaces are important, if only for postulating an alternative, for creating cultural frameworks, skill sets and even modest infrastructure. Perhaps as someone who has worked in alternative and community media for many years I have to. But what might alternatives mean, and how can they mean something valuable?</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Unfortunately the ground is shifting rapidly, casting the possibility of even a relatively open online universe in another light.</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Another trend that bodes poorly for a free or open space online is the significant move of online culture to mobile devices. Industry statistics suggest that mobile devices will be the major route to the internet in just a couple of years. Particularly in the US these mobile platforms are closed and proprietary. Their future development in the hands of operators and other big players moves them more in the direction of the worst kind of television and commercial radio. </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">While in East Africa an NGO can negotiate to develop social software for cellphone use, that’s not much of an option in the US.</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">How that might change is difficult to see. When one adds the rapid development of locative devices for control both in public space and the workplace, the picture looks rather grim. </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> Trebor advocates in "Re-public" an invigorated media literacy, making a plea for “a participatory skill set, resistance to the monocultures of the web and self-awareness.”</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">I would suggest that we need to occupy the mobile/locative platform space, at least speculatively. I would argue that what is needed are new efforts to bring together people who together might be able to offer tools, thinking and energy. </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">To this end several groups here in New York are putting together an ‘unconference’ to bring together programmers, designers, activists, students, and artists in early May. See www.mobilizednyc.org. We invite participation and of course, discussion!</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"><BR class="khtml-block-placeholder"></DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Cheers,</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"><BR class="khtml-block-placeholder"></DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal">Marty Lucas</DIV><DIV class="MsoNormal"> </DIV><BR><DIV><DIV>On Apr 18, 2007, at 8:22 PM, Trebor Scholz wrote:</DIV><BR class="Apple-interchange-newline"><BLOCKQUOTE type="cite"><DIV>Our discussion about affective labor and the sociable web came up again at a recent panel at The New School. Afterwards there were quite a few</DIV><DIV>fascinating responses to the arguments across the blogosphere to which I responded at: </DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV><A href="http://www.collectivate.net/display/ShowJournal?moduleId=223903¤tPage=3">http://www.collectivate.net/display/ShowJournal?moduleId=223903&currentPage=3</A></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>I summed up my ideas in a willfully provocative essay for a new issue of the journal Re-Public. (The issue also features essays by Geert Lovink, McKenzie</DIV><DIV>Wark and Michel Bauwens.) </DIV><DIV><A href="http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=138">http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=138</A></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>What is a fair exchange in the context of the highest traffic sites of the sociable web? Yes, we get much out of many sites to which we contribute. We can</DIV><DIV>"egocast," build friendships, develop thousands of weak ties, learn, date, and simply enjoy hanging out with friends on this disembodied platform. </DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>It is hard, however, not think of utilization when NewsCorp spent $583m on MySpace, which is now estimated to head toward a market value of $15billion</DIV><DIV>(over the next 3 years). A definite value is created and that surplus value is not shared in a fair way. </DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>The community, which indeed undoubtedly benefits, is monetized. People cannot simply leave if they don't like being used because their friends are all on</DIV><DIV>that site. You can't post a video to a small video-sharing site if online fame is what you are after. Perhaps the days of "Friendster-mobility" are over. Here,</DIV><DIV>the networked publics left in large numbers. The choice that participants have is limited; they are in a social lock-down of sorts. This lack of true</DIV><DIV>alternatives may have well been the reason that 700.000 users of the Facebook recently protested when the unpopular RSS feature was introduced.</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>On the before mentioned panel, both, danah boyd and Ethan Zuckerman brought up the tremendous costs for NewsCorp that are associated with</DIV><DIV>technically supporting all that sociality on MySpace. Ethan also pointed out that it may take big business to facilitate large scale networked social life. </DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>In the end, what really matters is not only that people become aware of the fact that they are being used on these giant sites. It is important to be clear</DIV><DIV>about the ownership of content and it is also crucial to know the privacy rules of the platforms that we are using. </DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>What is most important, however, is the ability to be independent, which means that I have a way of leaving-- taking with me what I invested (the</DIV><DIV>content-- the blog entries, the photos, the videos...). For me, much of the ethics of the sociable web is related to the ability to call it quits.</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>-Trebor</DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>PS: </DIV><DIV>Some of these topics were also picked up in Sweden:</DIV><DIV><A href="http://www.whomakesandownsyourwork.org/mw/index.php?title=Main_Page">http://www.whomakesandownsyourwork.org/mw/index.php?title=Main_Page</A></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>New subscribers-- you can read our list archive of this debate at:</DIV><DIV><A href="http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2007-April/thread.html">http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2007-April/thread.html</A></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>_______________________________________________</DIV><DIV>iDC -- mailing list of the Institute for Distributed Creativity (distributedcreativity.org)</DIV><DIV><A href="mailto:iDC@mailman.thing.net">iDC@mailman.thing.net</A></DIV><DIV><A href="http://mailman.thing.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/idc">http://mailman.thing.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/idc</A></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>List Archive:</DIV><DIV><A href="http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/">http://mailman.thing.net/pipermail/idc/</A></DIV><DIV><BR></DIV><DIV>iDC Photo Stream:</DIV><DIV><A href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/idcnetwork/">http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/idcnetwork/</A></DIV> </BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><BR></BODY></HTML>