On Blogging…
Blogging is a strange beast.
I was on ScriptingNews yesterday, reading Dave Winer’s spot-on post about Google web clips. Frankly, it surprised me that it was a new feature to him, as I’ve had it displayed above my Gmail client for what seems months now. Maybe Google is releasing features in chunks of user groups? I digress…
Just as I began to create a post about the differences in my mental model when I’m searching for information and performing specific tasks to accomplish a specific goal within an application (with the former being the proper place for RSS advertisements [which is what they are] and the latter a place that should be free of such junk), I happened upon his post which used an out of context quote from Tara Hunt’s post as a lead into a somewhat self-aggrandizing post. Well, that shifted my posting focus.
Within 10 minutes I had moved from one blog to another, uncovering the gist of what her quote actually referenced. In the end, I found myself watching a 3 minute-long clip of Mena Trott and Ben Metcalfe going at it at Les Blogs conference in Paris. This somewhat common interaction in the midst of a conference (speaker and attendee getting worked up in debate) was different because it came into being due to the backchannel IRC conversation being presented behind Mena, which led her to call Ben out of the audience to back up his off-comment.
So instead of dropping a UX post, I found myself clued into who Ben Metcalfe is and this practice of presenting IRC conversations "to add texture" to a conference presentation—a practice which, I feel, is completely fucked up. Don’t agree? Feel free to create more noise for the sphere to devour. Monitoring the sheer amount of conversations that posted following the Mena-Ben exchange has been almost humorous. Yes, this post is my second referencing the “event.”
Look, blogging is empowering; it connects us individual human beings, allowing us to have a voice within the mass markets of consumerism. To Dave’s point, it’s also a hell of a lot more than that, as human behavior is impossible to predict or map out. The great thing about the blogoshere is that there is little to no organization or editorial control across blogs, but a snapshot of the conversation across the blogosphere might tell a different story.

We’ve already moved beyond the purist definition of a blog (or a web-log) into a sphere peppered with collaborative blogs, some laced with specific editorial agendas, others serving as a virtual world for friends in the real to pool their perspectives of the world. This evolution begs a bunch of questions to be asked:
- What happens to these voices in this ecosystem as the blogosphere continues to evolve?
- Is there a tipping point for these new blogs to leave the support system of the blogosphere and enter the capitalistic fray of the mainstream media?
- What signifies that initial shift; a weekly email between contributors agreeing upon editorial direction and goals, possibly?
- How about an advertsing or revenue model that only subtly effects the subject matter of posts?
- A blog isn’t a blog simply because of it’s posting and interactive features… or is it?
Are we moving towards creating more brand in the ether or is it the first step to creating grass roots, organized, activism with a catchy name to evoke information scent within the greased-palm structure of the mainstream media?
Oh, and about social tagging…
Tags: activism, advertising, behavior, Ben Metcalf, blogging, brand, citizen media, collaboration, Dave Winer, experience design, Google, Les Blogs, Mena Trott, mental model, old media, Paris, RSS, Tara Hunt.Search
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Hi Sean,
Great post! thanks for that link to the video stuff…
Backchannel chat posted behind a speaker is, as you note, but using a different term, very, very rude. Mary Hodder and Kevin Marks at the Corante Symposium on Social Architecture made note of how distracting the backchannel chat was to what they were presenting…and that backchannel chat was civil!
I think Mena veered off her point a bit–her motive I can’t speculate on. But it didn’t help the argument *for* keeping dialogue (and debate) civil.
hey tish,
remember passing notes in school? what if they were passed on a virtual blackboard? we’d have no teachers (or maybe students). the practice reminds me of CNN scrolls which have been proven to reduce the capacity to retain facts from a broadcast.
all i know is that i’ll throw the system out the window if it’s even sprung on me while i’m trying to speak to/with an audience.