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A Very Digital Christmas!

Hi y’all, Digital Citizens interloper Warlach here.

Tonight is the Digital Citizen’s Christmas party, and while we wont be having a panel I thought it might be a nice idea to still have a live blog, but with a twist: I’ll be setting up the computer at the event an encouraging everyone who comes along to post to the liveblog about 2010, their thoughts on 2011 or anything!

Think of it like a digital guest book blog hybrid thingy with Twitter comments from the the #digicitz hashtag and any comments made in the CoverItLive box below, pulled in too! Mad? Probably, but it’s Christmas.

So, come find me at the event if you want to participate, of just tweet using the hashtag and lets send 2010 out with a bang! See you tonight, either in person or online! :)

~Warlach

Digicitz 8 Liveblog Details

Hi y’all, Digital Citizens interloper Warlach here.

Tonight is the eighth Digital Citizen’s event – Pressing the go viral button: myths, memes, YouTube and the future of TVCs – and I’ll once again be live blogging the event for posterity and for those who can’t make it. To receive an alert when the show starts all you have to do is enter your email below.

I’ll be pulling in tweets which use the #digicitz hashtag, or you can participate below. If you’re wanting to ask the Panel a question, just use the hashtag or drop your question in the comments section below during the show and I’ll try and pass on as many to the panel as I can.

So remember, use Twitter or the comment system built into CoverItLive to join in tonight and add your thoughts from wherever you happen to be!

I’ll leave you with that for now. See you on the night, either in person or online! :)

~Warlach

Digicitz 7 Liveblog Details

Hi y’all, Digital Citizens interloper Warlach here.

Tonight is the seventh Digital Citizen’s event – So you think you’re a Social Media Expert? – and I’ll once again be live blogging the event for posterity and for those who can’t make it. To receive an alert when the show starts all you have to do is enter your email below.

I’ll be pulling in tweets which use the #digicitz hashtag, or you can participate below. If you’re wanting to ask the Panel a question, just use the #digicitz hashtag and we’ll try and pass on as many to the panel as we can.

Note, in the interest of full disclosure one of the speakers tonight, Katy Daniells, is my coworker and while I think she is grand will try my best to avoid any bias. I’ll leave you with that for now. See you tonight, either in person or online! :)

~Warlach

Every geekgirl is precious

Over the years various people have said in different ways that I’m too girly to be a geek and too geeky to be a girl. However, I am both a geek and a girl – a geekgirl. And I’m merely one of the many geekgirls around the world.

Every single geekgirl is precious. In my opinion every single geekgirl should be made to feel welcome and included into our community.

We should be saying to each and every one:

Welcome geekgirl, you’re here at last; we’ve been waiting for you”.

Instead in Australia, if you call yourself a geekgirl, you might experience a public rebuke (as I did not so long back) like this:

[Source: http://twitter.com/alexburns/statuses/8315283151 28 Jan 2010]

Or if you get excited on a public forum and want to gather the geekgirls together for sharing and growing the community you might be told this:

[Source: Women on Wave – public wave - https://wave.google.com/wave/waveref/googlewave.com/w+buzi-t_KC accessed at 28 May 2010]

All this is because a woman who was a pioneer who inspired many of us in the early days of the web says that she is the only geekgirl.

In fact Rosie registered a trademark for the word geekgirl in 1995. Since then, instead of welcoming all the new geekgirls who followed, she has defended ‘her’ word vigorously.

At first I was surprised and then angry at having someone telling me I couldn’t use the term geekgirl in casual conversation. So being a fan of civil action, I looked up Rosie’s trademark, found it to be limited to “Publication of electronic books, magazines and/or multimedia both online on a communications network and on recorded media including optical disks and magnetic media”, and I thought I could register a trademark outside that scope and then make the term freely available for everyone to use. I’ve now realised that this approach didn’t really communicate my intent.

I have never met Rosie nor communicated directly with her. I bear her no ill will or animosity. I do not presume to intuit her motivations in any of her actions.

It has been reported to me that Rosie is selling t-shirts with the word geekgirl on them – good on her! The more women in the world wandering around with that word emblazoned on their t-shirts the better. Perhaps she can launch out into other garments and knick-knacks too?

But I do call upon Rosie to set the geekgirls free to use these two plain English words that describe them – geeks who are girls.

There is a good model already existing in the open source community for trademarks to co-exist with community usage. A great example is Fedora – where they allow community usage of the word Fedora as outlined here:

Noncommercial and community web sites
In the past, community members have inquired whether it is permissible to show support for Fedora by:
• placing the Fedora Trademarks on a personal web site or blog to support Fedora
• making a page on a social networking web service to support Fedora
• linking to Fedora from a wiki to provide information or show support for Fedora

The guidelines relating to such usage are set forth in this section.
It is permissible to use the Fedora Trademarks on websites to show your support for the Fedora Project, provided that:

• where possible, the design logo hyperlinks to the Fedora Project website, http://fedoraproject.org/, or if that is not possible, the site includes a prominent link to the Fedora Project website at http://fedoraproject.org/.
• the site indicates clearly that it is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Fedora Project; in addition, where possible:
• the site must include the text “This site is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Fedora Project” prominently on any page that includes the Fedora Trademarks, and
• if the Fedora Trademarks appear in a page header or any area that is designed to be presented on more than one page, the notice must also be designed to be presented on all of those pages as well. (i.e., if the Fedora Trademarks appear in a site-wide header, the informational text must appear in that header or an identically site-wide footer.)
• the site does not use visual styling that could be confusing to viewers or visitors as to whether the site is hosted by or on behalf of the Fedora Project”
[Source: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Legal:Trademark_guidelines#Noncommercial_and_community_eb_sites at 28 May 2010]

Come on Rosie, isn’t it time for you to set your geekgirl sisters free?

Social Media: It’s just another tube

iDarrylDarryl Adams,  government worker and internet tragic, argues that social media is just another tube – and ‘social media experts’ merging it with advertising are getting it wrong.

Senator Ted Stevens (R Alaska) was lampooned for his infamous “The Internet is a series of tubes” speech.

He may have been onto something.

One thing that many people on twitter do is promote social media, and their “skill” in navigating it professionally. They heap praise on companies and high profile people who “get it” (that is, use it in a way they feel is appropriate) and lampoon people and companies who “don’t get it”.

For me, social media is just another channel available on the internet, another tube you will.

Look at Twitter as an example. You send 140 characters at a time to every user. Other members of the twitter community can chose to focus on your “tweets” by “following” your profile or by filtering via search teams or “hash tags”.

Is it hard system to learn? Not really; it is Simple Message Service (SMS) on steroids. You’re sending an SMS out to the wild. The effort is for other people finding your messages and focusing on it (again by following or searching).

So Twitter is a data pipe. To make it useful, the users tune it by adding and removing users based on the content or belief systems. Users are filtering the content to suit individual taste.

Facebook is the same. You select people you want to follow and groups you wish to get information on. The people you follow have an option to allow or disallow access to their data, and you have the same control (leaving aside the distressing tendencies of Facebook violating privacy for profit).

Now if you’re supplying content, the skills needed to get your content consumed is the same as most over media. The good news that there is demand for any type of content, from serious political and social debate to fart jokes. The bad news is that you need to make your content appealing in Social Media so that people can actually find it. There is a whole industry that specialises in doing just that: the Advertising Industry.

And for me, that is the issue. Social Media experts are not promoting the technology, or teaching people the skills to develop their self filtering skills. They are trying to merge advertising with social media. By selling social media as another advertising outlet they seek to tap into the large amount of cash the industry commands. By charging for advice on how to promote your content, they seek to expand the people viewing it. This to me is the wrong way. User count is a broken metric, as I would prefer 6 engaged followers than 6000 passive followers. Using number of followers looks impressive, but follower count is meaningless if the content in not what they are after. Too many followers and your content get swamped again, this time with a high noise to signal ratio, buried under a plethora of messages. If I want to produce content, the users who gain value from my content are the people I want following me.

Social Media is just another delivery system of content. It is a progression from email, IRC and websites that create networks of people, with an added bonus of having an outlet that is totally unfiltered. And companies like Google and Microsoft realise what the unfiltered content of social media is worth. These are the companies who will use the data in search, in advertising delivery, in focusing and fine tuning on user needs and desires.

There is no good or bad way to use Social Media. Social Media is a pipe. The value for users is to filter to suite their tastes, and the value for companies is to aggregate and analyse.

But the internet is not a truck. Wise words, Senator Stevens.

Darryl Adams is a government worker and internet tragic. A former IT worker, he still pines for the days of IBM keyboards that go CRUNCH and the glow of green screens.
He can be found on on Twitter, blogging here or on Facebook.

N.B. The views expressed here do not reflect the views of his employer, the ATO.