Sunday, December 3, 2006
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So I see that the second-most interesting article about blogs in the New York Times today got a lot of attention. That would be K. Daniel Glober's op-ed on the increased linkages between bloggers and political candidates: The Netroots.” “People Power.” “Crashing the Gate.” The lingo of liberal Web bloggers bespeaks contempt for the political establishment. The same disdain is apparent among many bloggers on the right, who argued passionately for a change in the slate of House Republican leaders — and who wallowed in woe-is-the-party pity when the establishment ignored them.As William Beutler points out, this op-ed has not had the best of reactions in the blogosphere -- in large part because the piece could give the impression that some campaign bloggers did not act up to the Times' ethical standards. Me,I just yawned, and recalled what I wrote about this six months ago: What's going on is not illegal, or even out of the ordinary in Washington, DC. It's politics as usual. The only reason the story is noteworthy is because bloggers... have persistently said that they and theirs -- a.k.a., the netroots -- are not about politics as usual.Now, the most interesting story about blogs in the NYT today was Clive Thompson's cover story in the magazine about how blogs and wikis could prove useful structures for intelligence analysis: [T]hroughout the intelligence community, spies are beginning to wonder why their technology has fallen so far behind — and talk among themselves about how to catch up. Some of the country’s most senior intelligence thinkers have joined the discussion, and surprisingly, many of them believe the answer may lie in the interactive tools the world’s teenagers are using to pass around YouTube videos and bicker online about their favorite bands. Billions of dollars’ worth of ultrasecret data networks couldn’t help spies piece together the clues to the worst terrorist plot ever. So perhaps, they argue, it’ s time to try something radically different. Could blogs and wikis prevent the next 9/11?....Clearly there are downsides as well, and Thompson discusses most of them in the story. posted by Dan on 12.03.06 at 08:17 PM Comments: If the process of peer review and peer promotion of intelligence reports, that andrus describes is so powerful in the dni effort to improve intel gathering and sharing, then it's easy to see how netroots in politics as described in glober's nyt op-ed will deepen the fund of information available to people and make possible a new politics that challenges the lobbyists and large corporations for control of american politics. The blogsphere brings back the 18th century new-england-town-square where every day citizens engage each other over the important issues of the day. In short, unlike other media like news papers and tv, bloggers talk back...and listen with a degree of equality not seen often enough in the 20th century. posted by: michael savoca on 12.03.06 at 08:17 PM [permalink]Post a Comment: |
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