Thursday, March 24, 2011

Not So Socialist Media

We are living in trying timesl

In the time since I blogged here last a nefarious little invention called Twitter has taken the world by storm and been blamed partially at least for the downfall or two North African strongmen, Kenyans butchered each other to near nothingness, Google have achieved near world domination in a near impossible field if you have asked me at the time -mobile -through an equally nefarious (depending on who you ask -refer to RMS here) invention called Android and the term apps has become part of everyday parlance and the term innovation is thrown around a bit too much for my liking. Today mentioning dates in the fashion of January 21st and May 15th is a treasonable offence in some country thanks largely to the aforementioned nefarious invention, Twitter.

It is the year of our Lord Two Thousand and Eleven and it seems technology is inescapable. I have an app on my Droid that predicts my girlfriend's menstrual cycle another to walk me through her pregnancy, one that makes fart noises, an app that allows me to play guitar and another that, case in point, allows me to blog. In other words my Droid is my life.

Locally thanks largely to the success in university and college campuses anyway of the Huawei Android phone from local smartphones are almost ubiquitous an eventuality that would have been extremely unlikely in my thinking two years ago.

Today Twitter is used to shape opinions not only around the world but even on my campus where there is currently a bounty on the first twit pic of the principal’s secretary’s rear. Today, I am more likely to catch breaking news on Twitter and Identica than on radio as was the custom. With my Al Jazeera app I can easily watch a full length documentary on my mobile phone.

But some things have not changed.

Much of software land is still in the hands of evil capitalist pigs. But there is hope. Upstarts such as status.net are working to wrench social media and its increasingly important social and economic ramifications from the death grip of proprietariness. Another project Diaspora seeks to make amends for Facebook's many sins. Facebook if you are not aware has grown to have the population of a large country.

Twitter which two years ago was an upstart few knew about (that was before Oprah Winfrey joined) has achieved fame and status the world over. But Twitter, who turned five the other day, are still struggling to turn over a buck.

Recent moves by the vendor to curtail their own developers, largely to thank for their huge following are worrisome.

Twitter’s strategy of killing off rival clients so as to make money is rather simplistic and short sighted.

There is need to think of Social Media outside of the myopic context of money and financial greed. Social Media, I put to you, has a far greater role and potential as an agent for social change and empowerment. As proven in the last couple of months social media and mobile can be used as a tools to organize protests, topple repressive regimes, to spread information to counter state sponsored misinformation and help families and communities get in touch in the event of calamities and disasters. Things that we cannot put a price on.

It has also become apparent that if communication services such as Twitter are left to a single vendor they can easily be censored off national Internets, as was the case in Egypt and more recently Libya. The underlying technology for such services needs to be widespread and in the hands of various vendors such that a single DoS attack will not jeopardize the communications of users. Federated models such as the one promoted by Status Net and project Diaspora are welcome steps in the right direction here.

Do you not think it is time we harnessed the social dividend of social media.

Social media is still largely controlled by large corporations in the west. Despite attempts to incorporate new ways such as text to encourage inclusion in social media, much of Africa is still in the dark as far as social media is concerned.

The events of the last couple of months have proven that the consumers of social media care deeply about subjects such as social welfare and justice. I put it that social media channels such as twitter have become such important means of communication that it would be wrong to leave them in the hands of a few in the west.

And oh, did I mention that nobody blogs anymore choosing instead to Tweet or Facebook on their mobile phones.

The blog is dead a friend on Identica noted the other day. And by dead he meant it no longer attracted the interest of drive by technoratti.

Technology it seems, nowadays, is more hype than aiding human development. Sadly, that has not changed in the last two years.


You can follow the author on twitter at twitter.com/nj3ma or on identi.ca/nj3ma
Published with Blogger-droid v1.6.7

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

On Twitter: Mayxvth

The Society has since made an entry into the Twitterverse. The Society's Twitter ID is mayxvth. We can also be found on identi.ca as mayxvth and on 2tika The Kenyan Microblogging directory.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

The Linux Declaration of Independence: So it is written,so let it be compiled

[With sincerest apologies to Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, et al.]

When in the course of digital events, it becomes necessary for the people to dissolve the proprietary bonds which have connected them with their computer operating systems and other proprietary software.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all computer users are endowed with certain unalienable rights, and that among these are the pursuit of control of their digital experience: the right to choose their software, the right to run a program for any purpose, the right to study and adapt the program to one’s needs, the right to redistribute copies to help your neighbor and the freedom to improve the program and redistribute the improvements to the public for the benefit of all.

That whenever any form of corporate software hegemony becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to abolish it and institute a new system, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form that ensures digital choice and digital freedom.

When a long train of abuses and usurpations by proprietary softtware provided by multinational corporations design to subject computer users to digital despotism, it is the computer user’s right — it is their duty — to throw off this system, and to provide new safeguards for their future digital freedom.

We, therefore, the computer users of the world solemnly publish and declare that all computer users ought to be free and independent of proprietary software; that they are absolved from all allegiances to, and all political and social connection to, proprietary software, and claim all rights digital freedom provides. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of the divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our sacred honor.



During my wanderings and sojourns in cyber space and the blogosphere I stumbled on this masterpiece.
It kinda caught the whole mood ad spirit of FLOSS and that is why I have decided to have it up here.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Happily back online

Hello people, its been quite a while since my last post to this here blog. I havent been online in fact because my phone which was my primary mode of accessing the net was thugged. Currently online courtesy of ma buddy Ibra's impressive nokia 6110 and a fairly fast Celtel Edge connection. Plan to be posting here regularly now.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Chatting with your web 2.0 acquintances actually a well paying fulltime job!

Well who wud have thot, looking to end a rather low week on a hightech note I tagged along with my cousin to his wkplace at Nokia Siemens,Nairobi.The dudes there get paid to stare at Facebook all day and code on occasion.You jst gotta love this wikinomics!

Socialists of The World Unite!

Obviously,the execs at Pfizer,Monsanto,Microsoft,Shell Bp and similar outposts of fascist enterprise and their wonderful shareholders(typically middle class Americans and pension funds-remember Enron?heh,heh) need not read further than this first post.