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    by
    Ronni Tino Pedersen
    August 19, 2008

    Fed up with summer crime fiction? Next week brings some non-fiction that could prove as nerve shattering as the best whodunit – and the main characters are just kids!

    Born Digital is published with high praise from Creative Commons-founder Lawrence Lessig, who calls it ”required reading for parents, educators, and anyone who cares about the future.” And who doesn’t basically.

    More specifically it’s the future of our teenagers, our culture, our businesses and our regulatory principles that is at stake, according to authors and Professors of Law, John Palfrey and Urs Gasser. The subtitle of their prediction analysis is “Understanding the First Generation of Digital Natives” and it accounts for the societal changes brought on by digital technologies, the kids that are surfing them and the 30+ that are struggling to stay afloat.

    The book excerpt states that digital natives “have come to have a degree of control over their cultural environment that is unprecedented,” but as much as this development requires caution, the authors wish “to suggest things that all of us – parents, teachers, leaders of companies, and lawmakers – can do to manage this extraordinary transition to a globally connected society without shutting the whole thing down.”

    “The purpose of this book is to separate what we need to worry about from what’s not so scary, what we ought to resist from what we ought to embrace.”

    This is beautifully in tune with social media pioneer Howard Rheingold’s message in this 3 minute interview: “Is internet communication beneficial or destructive to our social relationships, does it increase or drain away social capital from our societies. The answer: It depends on the knowledge we have of using these media.”

    Rheingold, who teaches social media through social media at Stanford, sees it as a tremendous opportunity as well as a challenge for educators to guide the development of participatory media in a mutually beneficial direction. To make the Smart Mobs smarter, instead of more moblike, as he puts it.

    I tried to remember incidents of either smart or moblike digital natives in Denmark (and all I got was this lousy t-shirt…?) but somehow I’m short of examples. Anyone? Or does high standard of living just coincide with exceptional social media morals?

    Meanwhile, I’m looking forward to the suspenseful pages of Born Digital.

    This post is categorized in
    2008 , Blogpost , Business , File-sharing , Internet , Printed Media
    Comments
    1. #1
      Ronni Tino Pedersen
      Posted August 20, 2008 at 16:36 | Permalink

      Here’s an example of a flash mob party in Copenhagen. It was a post-clubbing party on Enghavevej on the last night of the Reboot10 conference, June 27th 2008.
      Unfortunately I didn’t get to experience it myself – looks like a blast. I wonder how it was announced? By Twitter?

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82yjO3g8Smk

    2. #2
      Posted August 21, 2008 at 09:16 | Permalink

      Thanks for the recommendation – I want that book!

      Smart mobbing was taking place all the time in Copenhagen. The young activists from Ungdomshuset had/have structure of mobilisation which is based on chained text messages, websites or social networkssites.

      Now they have a house, så the activities of the movement are different.

      But think of all the torsdagsdemonstrationer or occupations, or pirateparties – all are coordinated through smart mob technologies.

      And since the activists are all digital born, the question is if smart mob is to narrow a notion – the activist’s use of digital media is integrated in their lifes, that is a part of their culture and therefore a notion like Mobil(e)sation or culture of mobilisation can be better to use.

    3. #3
      Ronni Tino Pedersen
      Posted August 22, 2008 at 14:21 | Permalink

      Lotte, you’re of course right. The youths of Ungdomshuset did use digital technology to their advantage when organizing protests in Copenhagen.

      On one specific march I remember they even did a Google Maps mash-up to show the progress and report incidents of police violence as/if it happened: http://tinyurl.com/6eympa

      Your comment on the adequacy of the term “smart mobs” is interesting. Surely mobilisation through mobile communication is becoming mainstream. “Culture of mobilisation” perhaps, but mobilisation is too broad a definition I think and it doesn’t take into account the use of digital technology.

      But maybe you’re right: We could also use a broader definition. “Smart mobs” should be applied selectively – not whenever three people text to meet for coffee.

    4. #4
      Posted September 30, 2008 at 05:36 | Permalink

      @Ronni The party after Reboot (post-boot, so to speak) was not announced, other than we all knew there were going to be a small get-together at Ideal Bar beneath Vega, but soon we found out that the real party was outside. There was a guy who sold beer for 10 kr. a piece that he had just bought for 12 kr. a piece a couple of hours before, so Polar Rose-people jumped to the rescue and bought some beer for him to give away :)

      So, basically, it wasn’t announced, but just kinda happened when we found out it was much more fun outside (or at least until the police showed up and asked us to leave).

      Mygdal himself said that it was the best post-Boot ever – even better than Reboot2 which ended in everybody singing “Heal The World”, so at least we did something right :D

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