
Liveblogging from Netroots Nation
Sunday:
12:42 PM -
It looks like other folks are writing about NN08 as well. Here’s a taste:
10:57AM - A friendly-looking, somewhat heavy kid in his late teens, rifle case slung over his back just approached me, asking if I knew if “the gun show were here [at the Austin Convention Center." He said, "I wonder if its down on this level. I asked around but it seems that folks with the orange name-tags [Netroots Nation attendees] don’t know much about it.
10:46 AM - Everyone that hasn’t already left is on their way out of the convention center. On my way in, I passed Jay Rosen, who looked as epically knowledge-filled as always. Here he is on a (very) short video from TheUptake defining citizen journalism:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcYSmRZuep4[/youtube]
10:37 AM - My conversation yesterday with Prof. Lessig was great and I look forward to posting something more substantial about it tomorrow. He discussed how Change Congress plans on employing the carrot model, presentations, and more. I asked him if he thought that Congresspeople on the whole have a sense what’s coming in the context of the ability of constituents to leverage power in a whole new way. He did not, he said, and for him that is part of the reason why the time to act is now
Saturday:
04:44 PM - Lots of milling around going on right now. People are getting end-of-the-conference antsy. I had a great conversation with Colin from ePolitics. His site is a fabulous resource for anyone who is looking for a how-to tool re: the field of political organization on the Internet.
02:06 PM - Blogging Creating Political Community Around Film (with Wendy Cohen of Screening Liberally and Participant Media, Tracy Fleischman of Live From Main Street, Jacob Soboroff of Why Tuesday?, and Jim Gilliam of Brave New Films).
12:37 PM - Blogging Lessig’s keynote:
12:07 PM - I am preparing to blog about Larry Lessig’s keynote. We’ll be talking with Lessig later today, and I’ll feature notes based on our conversation later this afternoon. I’ll definitely be posting a larger, more substantial post about our conversation about Change Congress and Internet collective action very soon.
08:02 AM - Blogging Ask The Speaker Pelosi:
07:40 AM - Showering the parties and late-night pizza off of me and heading over to see the Speaker Pelosi event. There has been word of a “very big” surprise guest. Thoughts? I’m not even going to speculate.
Friday:
03:02 PM - Blogging Milblogging: How the Troops’ Writing Affects Our View of the War (with Alex Horton, and Richard Smith and Brandon Friedman of VoteVets.org and moderated by Kevin Maurer, a 5-year embedded AP journalist):
01:45 PM - Blogging John Hlinko discussing how to connect to blogging/campaign audiences
01:35 PM - I was struck by something an audience member at the “Working from the Inside Out” said to me. A grassroots activist/organizer in Florida for the Democratic Party and DFA, she talked about the amount of elected representatives she runs into that don’t know about many of the issues, or even how to navigate around on the web. “We need to get to them as soon as they get elected,” she stressed to me, “but a lot of people don’t know how to get in there.”
She went onto make a suggestion that I recognized, as I, too, have been a party organizer. Those who are interested in getting close to a campaign or candidate simply need to volunteer for the campaign, as it gets them close to many future staffers. In my experience, many of the people I worked campaigns with went onto work as staff members. “I know a Republican representative,” she said, “and he’s even said to me, ‘It’s hard to say ‘no’ to someone I have seen licking envelopes at my kitchen table.”
Great point.
12:30 PM - A great note on the lunch with Kos and Harold Ford from Todd Beeton from MyDD:
He then spoke about how ridiculous the traditional media is, especially when he is asked about Obama’s so-called move to the center. It’s clear from what ends up getting written, that what he says goes in one ear and out the other because his response doesn’t fit into their “move to the center” narrative. As Markos says regarding Barack Obama’s FISA vote:
“We weren’t mad at Obama for moving to the center, we were mad at him for NOT moving to the center. There was no popular movement in favor of this bill. If you ask most Americans I think they’d tell us that they do not support the government spying on Americans.”
10:37 AM - Blogging Working from the Inside Out: Success Stories in Netroots Organizing: (with Timothy Karr and Craig Aaron of Free Press, Adam Green of MoveOn.org, Liz Rose of the ACLU, Andre Banks of Color of Change, and Joan McCarter, a Daily Kos blogger):
10:00 AM - A set of notes and observations on Don Siegelman, who spoke at Netroots Nation.
09:15 AM - Blogging From Dean to Obama: Four Years in the Internet Revolution (other observations can be found here):
8:30 AM - Heading over to “From Dean to Obama: Four Years in the Internet Revolution“
Thursday:
8:58 PM - Howard [!]:
08:02 PM - The lead up to Howard:
05:25 PM - Time for a drink or two with my conference-hopper buddy Alex from Eventful and then on to see Howard speak.
05:25 PM - This is a really great photograph of a conference-goer checking out a hand-written list of all of the US soldiers that have died since the start of the conflict in Iraq. It is just one of very many photographs coming from this dude’s Photobucket feed.
05:03 PM - I spoke briefly with the ever-impressive Michael Silberman of Echo Ditto. He talked briefly about the work he’s doing at present for the 1Sky Education Fund. It is a fascinating organization, well-worth checking out, that is focused on climate change and organizing using the “Internet and old-fashioned neighbor-to-neighbor outreach.”
04:25 PM - A hilarious piece of Kevin Bondelli’s blog post today:
A funny thing just happened. A couple of guys were walking by in the hotel that weren’t associated with Netroots Nation, and one says to the other: “there are a lot of people in this hotel using laptops, huh.” I bet this lobby looks really strange to people that don’t realize that there is a blogger conference going on.
04:16 PM - Netroots Nation is huge. The Austin Convention Center is huge. These people’s ambitions are huge. I saw in the comment section of someone’s blog a joking statement about bumping into all of the wide-eyed newbies. I, indeed, am one of those wide-eyed newbies.
03:02 PM - At a session with Blogs United about best practices, etc.
03:00 PM - Another great piece about Netroots Nation. This one is featured in The Center for Media and Democracy.
01:30 PM - At a Democracy for America training on crafting campaign messaging:
01:40 PM - Great article in the Dallas Morning News about Netroots Nation.
01:34 PM - Haven’t eaten in nearly 12 hours, thus I am thankful that Wired For Change was somehow responsible for getting a bag of chips into the free crap bag that you’re given at conferences. I’m also grateful to whoever thought to put a fortune cookie in there, though it was smashed to hell before it got to me. There’s also a condom from Center for Constitutional Rights. I wonder how many folks at this internet and politics event are going to put that to use.
01:00 PM - There was a rally today featuring Howard Dean, who will also later this evening deliver the keynote address. Some reports say that the numbers there were at around 100 people but I got the sense that it was much more than that. He fired up all of the congregating liberals like it was 2003 again. Heeeeya! [A special thanks to Robert Harding from The Albany Project for the photo]
12:43 PM - I am excited for the Dean speech this evening. There’s still a lot of buzzing about Pelosi and how she’ll address the I-word issue. Further, we’re excited that we’ll be talking with Larry Lessig about Change Congress on Saturday. Stay tuned.
12:36 PM - I want a taco.
11:11 AM - It looks like I spoke way too soon. The hotel is standing firmly in my way. The bureaucracy gods are keeping me down.
10:19 AM - After a nearly Homeric trek from Boston, Massachusetts to Austin, Texas, I am finally in town and nearing a place where I might be able to actually get over to the Austin Convention Center — So long as a bank, a Jet Blue flight delay, or a disgruntled hotel employee doesn’t stand in my way, I should be there shortly.
This week’s guest-poster Justin Massa will be liveblogging the from the National Commission on Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity’s first hearing on Tuesday, July 15th. The the Miami Valley Fair Housing Center is video streaming the day as well.
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We’re happy to feature this guest post by Justin Massa of MoveSmart.org:
Exploring the implications of new technologies for old-line civil rights organizations, E. Ethelbert Miller recently wondered in a Washington Post article, “What would happen if W.E.B. Du Bois or Marcus Garvey had a laptop?” Such ‘what if?’ reflections are commonplace - baseball fans constantly debate how Ruth would have hit on steroids or against modern pitching speeds. For this former community organizer, the most interesting reflection is, “How would new social media tools have affected Anti-Racist Action?”
In the late 90’s I co-founded a chapter of Anti-Racist Action (ARA) in Chicago. As part of a group of punk and hardcore kids who were concerned about organized racism showing up in our subculture it was a natural choice. Those were heady times for ARA; after a decade of slow but steady growth the number of chapters had exploded to nearly 130. The murders of Dan Shersty and Spit Newborn, two Las Vegas ARA members murdered execution-style in the desert by nazi skinheads, and the Illinois-Indiana racist killing spree of Ben Smith exactly one year later served us with a stark reminder of just what we were up against. Youth recruitment by white supremcists was increasing, becoming more effective, and funding the movement through the sale of white power music.
Just 7 years later ARA is but a shell of its former self. There are only a handful of active chapters and the once ubiquitous info tables at punk and hardcore shows are gone. I drifted away about 6 years ago, transitioning first to working full-time for a civil rights organization and then completely losing touch after becoming a public school teacher. While chapter leadership had used a listserve to effectively coordinate and strategize, the Internet was then more a tool for research than organizing. But I can’t help but wonder, with today’s tools would we have built Sprout widgets warning against racism and lobbied bands and record labels to include these on their websites? What strategies would we have developed to effectively confront racism on social networking sites? If our online presence - which was never very well organized or accessible - would have been better, would the organization still be as strong? How would Twitter and live streaming media have changed the ways we directly confronted organized racist events?
While my approach and focus has changed over the years, the values that working with ARA instilled in me still influence my work today - confronting racism head-on with a heavy dose of education and passion can be incredibly effective. What’s your favorite or most influential organization that’s either in decline or gone, and how might new social media tools have changed things for them?
Justin is a co-founder and the executive director of MoveSmart.org, a start-up organization that fosters residential integration through technology. By day he investigates complaints of housing discrimination for the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights.
Do you love the idea of conference-going, but hate schmoozing, bad food, high ticket prices and sterile atmospheres? For many conference-going types, there is something left to be desired by the overall exchange that happens at these annual face-to-face festivals of education (and sometimes self-congratulation). Also faced with high-admittance-rates, people who might have otherwise just stayed home and uninvolved are hitting up Second Life mirror versions of the real-life events.
In the blogging arena, many folks are discussing the upcoming Netroots Nation and its place in the virtual arena Second Life. Here, “Miss Unsocial” discusses “taking charge of Social Events” at the virtual event. She says that there’ll be streaming video, the creation of virtual buildings, ballrooms, exhibition booths, and all sorts of other conference staples.
I am a total type-A, socializing socio-path with a penchant for collective back-patting, so I admittedly don’t get into the whole pixelized version of real-life thing. I like face-to-face discussions and don’t hate bad food. I am typically allowed to get in as a member of the media, so I don’t have a lot to complain about with regard to real-life conference hopping. However, for those who can’t afford the tickets or cant get into the atmosphere, a solution to simply not-going may be attending in the world’s favorite virtual alternative universe.
[Check out this post at Participant Media about conferences, Second-Life, and the paradoxical meta-ness of it all]
The Netroots Nation in Second Life wiki explains how attending the Austin-based gathering online is free and worth checking out. This is a great alternative because it obviously brings the ideas to people who would otherwise go without seeing/hearing them and gives users an arena in which they can discuss the ideas being circulated.
This blog discusses the speakers who will be available at the virtual events. And also, speaking of Second Life conferences, if this is your bag, do check out the Second Life Education Community Conference, available to both real and virtual attendees (as per usual, real lifers have to pay), which is scheduled to take place September 5th through the 7th.
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According to an article published in IT Business, Canadian consumers, outraged by what they consider to be an over-priced Rogers Wireless iPhone plan, are protesting the phone’s release today. Perturbed that the Canadian plan costs more than it does in the U.S. and U.K., 60,000 Canadians signed an online petition at the website RuinediPhone, maintained by Oilchange.com, a Toronto marketing company. The petition, which has gained the support of an MP and much media attention, will be delivered in hardcopy form today, upon the phone’s release there.
The delivery of signatures will be accompanied by a podcasted interview with David McGuinty, a liberal MP, discussing his support of the protest. Rogers Wireless has been asked by those involved with the movement to comment, but a Rogers spokesperson suggested, “We generally don’t respond to petitions or polls.”
The sentiment is interesting, of course, as Rogers is suggesting that they generally “don’t respond to the will of customers.” What they likely mean is that they generally don’t respond to petitions or polls until sentiment is manifested in sales.
The movement’s petition is better organized than many other internet petitions, as it is being offered in hard copy form with enough media attention to propel said delivery. The involvement of a member of the MP doesn’t hurt, either, as it brings with it further press attention. [Note to petition organizers: Get to know your representatives.] It has been suggested that Rogers has already accommodated consumer complaints by adding to the package an inexpensive data upgrade. In direct contrast to their sentiment regarding petitions, Liz Hamilton, the same company spokesperson, said, “This is in direct response [to] what we heard from our customers.” David McGuinty, the liberal MP in support of the protest, has suggested that the promotion is temporary and merely a PR move.
The RuinediPhone appears to be on its way to sustaining the movement. Delivering more than just a petition, their multi-dimensional, press garnering approach is drawing a lot of negative attention to Rogers Wireless. Perhaps, persuaded by the number of signatures, the detail of press and now government attention, signatories and other customers will be convinced to hang back on their eagerness to pick up the phone and see if Rogers budges.
We will soon see if lackluster sales, which the company presumably does respond to, will be influenced, in part, by the RuinediPhone action.
Also in eAction News:
Despite puppy mills being legal and licensed in the U.S. by the Department of Agriculture, animal activists in L.A. are gearing up to take on pet stores they claim are in business with said mills. Rather than engaging in theatrics, the group will operate education tables outside of the stores they have indicted.
Last Chance for Animals and Best Friends Animal Society, two animal welfare groups working together on this issue, will set up education tables outside of pet stores where they will inform patrons of the origins of where the animals come from. They will feature photographs of the conditions in which the animals are purportedly bred and offer shoppers general information about puppy mills.
In contrast to the action we highlighted yesterday’s news report, this technique is especially interesting. Yesterday we highlighted a protest organized by the I.W.W. Starbucks Union—one that placed some focus on the theatrics of political theater. This back and forth between the effectiveness of tactics reminds me a bit of the debate inspired by the piece by Sally Kohn published in the Christian Science Monitor last week (that nearly the whole of the Millennial activist community chimed in on) about whether or not modern activism is effective because it doesn’t have the Situationist sheen of old activism.
Yesterday I stated that it would seem it makes more sense to bring a large group together and inform/impress with a presence rather than to bring together a small group of people and turn off spectators with confused imagery and political theater. Confusion is fine if irony and chaos is what a group is trying to convey, but if there is a message and it is distorted by an unwillingness to connect with onlookers, this is an unnecessary waste of resources. While political theater is not being denied recognition of its importance, applying it to every protest scenario might be ill-advised.
The animal groups appear to be striking an interesting middle ground by coming together to provide a small collective interested in educating the public rather than overwhelming the public or establishment with a presence. As it seems the group’s goal is to discourage support of puppy mills, and since they likely won’t be able to set up a stick-and-carrot model in which supporters agree to buy X so long as the store doesn’t provide Y (in this case, milled puppies), this appears to be a sensible way to engage with patrons.
In your experience, which is the better way to demonstrate? Is theater necessary for informing onlookers? Or is a more concentrated, person-to-person effort important? What, as an onlooker, do you find you’re more compelled to pay attention to when passing a demonstration?
Also in eAction news:
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Along with Kelly Coyne, Erik Knutzen is the author of Homegrown Evolution (formerly Homegrown Revolution), a blog that covers “urbanites are becoming gardeners and farmers.” In June, the pair authored Urban Homestead, a book based on the same premises as the blog and released by Process Media. I have read it and it is a wonderful starting point for anyone interested in figuring out how to live off the land from the comfort of their own apartment, condo, or urban living space.
I came across Knutzen’s name a little over a month ago in an article about guerrilla gardening in the L.A. Times. Since he was pretty embedded in work in the community and guerrilla gardening communities, we reached out to talk with him about how public desire for reallocation of space and resources leads to community and collective action.
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As a follow up to our post yesterday, where we mentioned Mobile Commons as a good starting point for organizations to connect with when looking to use mobile technologies, we talked for a bit with Michael Sabat. We met Sabat at the Personal Democracy Forum, he works with Mobile Commons, and he answered some of our questions regarding how an organization might best utilize the services provided by the startup.
Sabat describes Mobile Commons as “an online platform that allows organizations to create and manage SMS/voice/mobile communication campaigns.” To convey the effectiveness of SMS campaigning, he compares text message based campaigns to an email campaign. Whereas emails are opened over the course of many hours, he says that a high volume of text messages are opened much closer to their reception. People are nearly always within inches of their phone, and thus the messages they receive there. Further, SMS response rates, compared to email, are much higher (70% is common). It is for these reasons (and more), he claims, that organizations should consider using mobile phones to mobilize their user-base.
Michael Sabat: So what SMS allows you to do is communicate instantly with a core group of supports that wants to hear and is expecting to hear from your organization. SMS allows you to call for immediate or timely action (because it is safe to say that people are reading the message within an hour) and Mobile Commons let’s organizations track and measure these actions. SMS/Mobile Commons helps your organization reach people where email and computers can’t - for example in a store or restaurant.
Make Something Happen: As a collective activist, how would I use the site to further my goals and mission?
Sabat: You can use Mobile Commons to engage supporters at live events, spread news quickly and call for actions. For example we have an application perfect for calling lawmakers in an advocacy campaign. mConnect allows a custom activist to set up a campaign with the end result of having supports call their legislators with cohesive and direct messaging.
With mConnect the organization send a text message including a phone number to their supporter list. The receivers reply CALL or simply press SEND and they are connected to a voice recording that the organization records. This can be talking points or an overview of the situation. The caller is then forwarded on to a destination number (radio show, or congressman’s office) with a clear message and talking points fresh in their memory.
MSH: How would you like to see people use the site in a way they are not already using it?
Sabat: The ideas are endless, but I would like to see more effective txt to voice campaigns through mConnect. In the near future our software and a (smart/fortunate) organization will drive 10,000 phonecalls to a specific cause and that will help change a decision that matters. This will happen soon, we are just waiting for the right circumstance.
The most exciting idea ahead is mobile giving. Basically someone can donate $5, $10 or $25 simply by texting in. The charge will appear on their cellphone bill. This can have serious applications at live events and for emergencies. It’s a great way to do micropayments. So this is brand new and there is a ton of interest and many good ideas. I’m sure that we’ll hear a lot about this moving forward.
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The termination of two Starbucks employees has led to demonstrations in Manhattan, Grand Rapids, and other cities throughout the world, a New York Indy Media article reports. While reports about turnout and influence of the demonstrations is being celebrated by bloggers who covered the event and the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), organizing around the impact of the protest rather than around the issue being demonstrated against could have been a more influential way for the organizers to gather in support of the issue of the terminated employees.
Twelve demonstrators met in front of a Manhattan Starbucks to protest the termination of two employee union organizers. About a dozen protesters gathered in front of the Starbucks on 17th and Broadway on Saturday July 5, Industrial Workers of the World Day. The protest was one of many IWW protests that took place on that day all over the world.
The two terminated employees had been working to gain more benefits for Starbucks employees.
According to Daniel Gross, a former Starbucks barista and an organizer with the IWW, “Starbucks is as anti-union as Wal-Mart,” hence this “strategic” protest. One of the two fired employees had been told by the store manager “on several occasions that she must have nothing to do with unions
This blog details the protest that took place in Grand Rapids. They explain that “The coverage was surprisingly good for mainstream media.” They describe the demonstration:
“There was a 4 ft. Starbucks cup which symbolized Starbucks union-busting, poverty wages, lies about social responsibility, etc. And there was a bat which symbolized globalized solidarity.”
Photographs on the site display imagery that seems commonplace with union political theater. Pictures show a demonstrator in denim shorts and a backwards baseball cap “smashing” the cup, symbolizing, no doubt, how globalized solidarity will smash union-busting, poverty wages, and lies about social responsibility.
While the site suggests this protest was a success, by using the model of demonstration organization utilized by The Point, protesters might have been more successful by organizing around high numbers of demonstrators rather than placing a too-heavy reliance on the pageantry of protest [in addition to the bat and cup number in Grand Rapids, it is said that the drumming of protesters in Manhattan was met by strange looks]. Organizing around assembling an overwhelming turnout is more compelling, interesting, and persuasive than focusing on organizing around the issue alone. While pageantry is necessary, organizing in response to having a substantial and overwhelming number of supporters is ultimately more convincing than organizing simply because there is a cause to rally around. Doing the latter can ultimately result in low-turnout that leans towards a compensation by way of a 4-foot cup and a bat, which, while it feels triumphant to those who get to smash the prop, looks sillier to the onlooker than a bustling crowd might.
Also in eAction news:
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Late last year, The Economist touched on the ways that mobile phone users were “mastering the tricks of the mobile trade” with regard to protesting in the Philippines, Sao Paulo, and Jena, Louisiana. While the piece suggests that “pioneers of mobile telephony and texts as tools of protest and dissent” find “simply summoning people to demonstrations” to be “old hat,” I continue to run into individuals, groups and organizations via email, on blogs and at conferences that care to better integrate text messaging into their actions, both private and public, but still have no idea where to start.
Having in the past spoken with Katrin Verclas and Tad Hirsch about the exciting work they’re documenting and accomplishing with the use of mobile technology, it is easy to see how people would be excited by engaging in similar action. Getting started, however, can be an understandably confusing endeavor. Mobile Commons, geared to the organization, and Anyvite, geared towards individuals and groups, are two great starting points for the mobile-interested person who finds themselves starting from scratch.
Campaigns that are in a situation where they think that they might want to organize their users by utilizing mobile technology should keep an eye on Mobile Commons, a New York City based start-up that builds infrastructures designed to help organizers connect with users via the user’s mobile phone. Their tool set makes it possible for users to opt into campaigns simply by SMSing key words related to the campaign. Representatives from Mobile Commons showed me one campaign they had worked with where users could find information about the fish they were eating simply by texting the word “fish” to a particular number. By having them opt in, users can then be sent information, locations for action, and other information useful and related to the campaign. Further, campaigns can ask for information about the user in order to build user lists.
Mobile Commons, by all appearances, struck me as extremely user friendly and operable by nearly everyone. In addition to working with the ACLU, the Human Rights Campaign, The Sierra Club and many other campaigns, they also work with private companies as well.
Also interesting, though this more relevant to the individual, is Anyvite. The service, which TechCrunch very recently gave a positive review, is geared more towards individuals and leisure-oriented groups and it makes it possible for a group to edit an event on the go. Users are no longer bound to the one event, saved the way it was when organizers brainstormed it back at the laptop. Would you like to change the location of where you’re meeting? Want to change paint ball to football? Anyvite users are kept up to date with event edits via SMS, meaning no one will be left in the dark as users will remain up-to-the-minute informed via text message. This is a lovely departure from older, more traditional electronic invites and it is clearly more-geared to group action - As TechCrunch says - it is “sort of like a Twitter for groups.”
It’s a mobile jungle out there. Knowing where to start, for individuals and for organizations, is a sizable chunk of the battle.
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