Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

A Blog for the Blog-less

I wrote this as a part of our IISC blog at work, which will be launching in May.

I find this video fascinating. My girlfriend showed it to me a few months back as she presented on theology and social media for her graduate program. Aside from the breadth of topics that bloggers can post on, this video gives us an insight on how vital technology, and specifically the Internet, is becoming to our everyday lives.

There is no denying that blogs allow individuals to have a voice. If that voice is read and responded to, communities are created, not limited by physical space. These virtual, content-oriented communities are especially strong in arenas such as Twitter. Twitter is a dynamic and responsive interface for conversation. Blogs have the same ability, though the conversation is not necessarily as seamless as it can be on Twitter. Regardless, the powers of shared thought, understanding and education are alive in these worlds and there exists a great potential to create real action, and even social change.

What I often question is how this will all play out over time, because though blogs are a tool which are not limited by physical space, access to their creation and use is limited. Blogs, and social media overall, are limited by the resources one has at their fingertips (pun somewhat intended), be it a computer, Internet access, electricity or even literacy.

History shows us those with technology often grow at an exponentially greater rate than those without it. So how do we most effectively create sustainable social change with the aid of social media, without further separating ourselves from the majority of the world (which doesn't have constant access to a computer)?

Hugh Jackman, Australian dreamboat and actor, recently said he wanted to donate $100,000 to charity and asked his Twitter followers who he should donate to. After thousands of suggestions, Jackman said he would donate $50,000 to two different charities, Operation of Hope and Charity:Water. Both are incredible organizations. Most inspiring though is that this a success story on the power social media has to aid in social change. (Credit where it is due, my knowledge of Jackman's charity donation is again the result of my girlfriend.)

Today we can communicate in ways rarely dreamed of five years ago. To have a voice, to contribute to conversation, to act, are all invaluable to the promotion of justice in our world. From Iran to Twitter, our need to bridge the gaps has never been more pressing, and our potential to create sustainable social change has never been so great.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

A New Avenue

Oh my oh my. There is a new world, quite literally at one's finger tips. That's right. I am writing you for the first time on a bus via my blackberry. What a world we live in. A world that is dominated by invisibility.

Wireless technology has always boggled my mind. The transfer of data and information between machines through an avenue which is invisible to the human eye. But the data is not "new" information. Rather, it is the same information that has always been transferred by humans through contact and since the beginning of time. Now our computers are brain-like extensions of ourselves which those in the "developed" world, global north, seem to nourish more and more everyday. Sometimes even more so than our own minds! And of course this is only so true because most knowledge we expect our computers to retain (not access) must go through our minds too. The difference lies in what we let computers substitute for us. For example spelling, phone numbers, even directions now. Let's hope everyone is always taught the sun rises in the east, or we all may become very lost.

So not all of this makes sense but I don't expect it to. It is to create new thought. And I wanted to comment how I was on a bus and wanted to speak so I worte. And more appropriately, I typed to myself.

An interesting quote to ponder...spoken by an US American futurist, Alvin Toffler. "Those who will be illiterate in the 21st century will not be those who cannot read or write, but those who refuse to learn, unlearn and relearn".

Sometimes I wonder if I should load my blog with popular quotes and the most frequently searched words on google so that my blog will appear on searches and people will read it...the future power of tagging. But there is no real need for that right now. I just wanted to write for a while. Paz!