LOLcats vs. Ushahidi: Let’s get this straight

Post reproduced from the Digital Cultures Research Centre blog

On July 4 2010 Flickr listed 37,332 lolcat images.  On the same date the number of images tagged as ‘human rights’ was 156,455. Just over four images pertaining to human rights for every lolcat. Seems like a pretty good deal to me.

As we know, discussions round UGC have a tendency to polarise between the ‘end of civilisation as we know it’ and ‘the dawning of the age of aquarius’, but both of these totalising positions don’t take account of the crazed heterogeneity of content that is out there, or begin to differentiate in the ways the last post started to. In this post I want to argue that our use of media through online UGC is obviously ’empowering’ as a form of literacy; people want to write media because they understand that they live in societies where mediated knowledge, information and experience are sites of enormous power and wealth. Politics, reputation, consumption, pleasure, and identities are all produced through the attention traffic of media systems. Why wouldn’t ‘people’ want to participate in those systems ? If they’re good enough for generations of Oxbridge graduates (like me) then why wouldn’t everyone else want a piece of the action given a chance?

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Larry Lessig re-examines remix culture: TED 2010

In a useful, humorous and typically urbane discussion of the politics of the mashup, Larry Lessig guides us through the values that sit behind the ideals of ‘openness’. Openness for Lessig is a commitment to the values of ‘freedom’, ‘community’, ‘limited regulation’, ‘respecting the creator’. These are, of course, traditionally right-wing values (derived from the principal of liberty). However, Lessig intimates through his articulation of the respect for the creator and for community that the political ecology of openness isn’t simply ‘everyone for themselves’ but rather a (self-)mediated and negotiated sharing of ‘content’ and ideas.


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Post Match Reports

The symposium on Friday was, I thought, really successful and I’m already having ideas about how we do AAA2 next year – as a two day event with a higher profile.

This is hardly headline news, but the focus on UGC is a really productive way of addressing lots of issues in digital cultures research – although as it turns out the term itself is disputed and (by some at least, Mandy Rose !) despised. I hadn’t quite taken on how the term itself is uncomfortable for lots of us; a technocratic rationalisation of ‘people’ expressing themselves through connected mediations. What was UGC called before ? Just ‘content’, amateur, access, or ‘community’ ?

I’m not going to go into commentary and comment on individual papers, I’m hoping that  over the next two weeks we can gather all the papers here and then we can comment individually if you like. My headlines from the day go something like this.

One of the implications from the journalism panel and others was that ‘Professional’ media workers have to become more like ‘curators’, ‘enablers’, ‘linkers’. These themes were strongly echoed by Sandra Gaudenzi and Mandy Rose who both talked about producers setting up the constraints, or rules of the game, then shaping the content that emerged.  This is all in the spirit of Beryl Graham’s insight in a 1995 essay that the skills of being a good interactive artist might turn out to be closer to the those of the good party host than those of the traditional studio bound artist. Setting up the conditions for participation.

But for this new curatorial role to become possible trust is an essential feature of the system. Journalists for instance need to trust contributors and vice versa – human sympathy seems to be an important part of the process; the publish then filter has to generate trust which needs human leadership. But Kellner’s ‘Big Media’ aren’t going away – we’re just seeing a different disposition of their agency; the big trees in the media jungle are having to find new ways of exploiting the symbiosis they have always had with the creatures on the forest floor formerly known as the audience.

Why does (some) UGC move me ?  Why does UGC often  make me feel thrilled, inspired, choked, inspired, proud ? I’m thinking here about Jessica Crombie’s refugee blog news site from Kenya and the brilliant Ushahidi network, of the Main Street project from MAP,  Tony Dowmunts midnight ramblings from Sierra Leone,  and even weird individual moments of crazed joy like the Numa Numa guy. Seeing these various examples and experiencing this set of feelings over and over through the day made me reflect on this affective quality. This has two immediate consequences. One is to revisit the work I did in Freakshow on the place of emotion in the public sphere: however whilst that was concerned with the impacts of speaking as ‘I’ in the public sphere of a disembodied and bourgeois ‘we’ this affective quality has more in common with a feeling from and for the collective. This is complex and tricky stuff – but the way in which the individual experiences in for instance Video Nation were always held in a productive relationship to the polity through their framing as “Nation”  is similar to the role of social networking in  ‘inspiring’ UGC. Burgess & Green in their You Tube study stress time and again that it’s the social networking aspect of this work that’s new and interesting. But maybe the affectively driven social networking functionality actually really does replace – directly – the rhetorics of a public sphere based on rational communication. We are emotionally driven by belonging and connecting. This  affect is reproduced in certain kinds of UGC experience that connect us to something human, or perhaps tribal.

The other consequence of thinking more about affect, and pleasure, is to resolve, or at least perhaps reframe, the debate between narrative and fragmentation that re surfaced during the discussion of Sandra Gaudenzi’s presentation. Our fragmented navigations of online media spaces and social networks is driven not by  somebody else’s news agenda,  about what it is imagined we ought to know but purely by own emotionally driven grazing; turns out for a lot of us the latest inanity from Perez Hilton is more compelling than banking reform; the photos uploaded by your class mates more interesting by far than anything else available today. The non narrative experience of distracted surfing is more emotionally satisfying by far since every click is driven by desire. Our navigations follow courses charted in the emotional connectivity of the social network. When we’re stranded alone on a cold railway platform at night waiting for a connection why do we reach for the phone ? Because the little strokes of emotional warmth  from a loved one’s pinged back text offers us a tiny bit of haptic connectivity. Participation and connection may be more important than content for the mediatized subject.

Whilst the memory of the ideological critique embedded in the history of UGC was still present in Emma Agusita’s account of the aims of her practice in community media and informal education it is equally clear from Dan Ashton and Martin Thayne that UGC is also a gigantic market opportunity. Here we were drawn to the reasons why UGC is such a distasteful term for  some of us – it’s a good example of modern newspeak in that the content in UGC is – in the Web 2.0 discourse – irrelevant. Its our activity, participating, posting, liking, sharing, rating and recommending that undertakes the massive global labour of attention aggregation.

All to play for then. More as I have to time to reflect on individual papers. Thanks to all for what I found a richly nourishing day.

Posted in Journalists, Crowdsourcing, Citizen Journalism, Popular Enthusiasm, Public Sphere/Culture, Uncategorized, user-generated content, Web 2.0 and Datamining | Leave a comment

Participatory documentary as “Convivial Media” – M. Rose

Mandy Rose, UWE Creative Arts Fellow

“Convivial tools”, wrote the radical philosopher Ivan Illich in 1973, “ are those which give each person who uses them the greatest opportunity to enrich the environment with the fruits of his or her vision.” This presentation employs Ilich’s concept of “convivial tools” as a framework for thinking about participatory and “user-generated” documentary content. The presentation will draw on examples, of practice that I’ve been part of – BBC’s Video Nation (access TV), Capture Wales (digital storytelling), My Science Fiction Life (collaborative cultural history), and work in the emerging field of collaborative online documentary – The Message and Mapping Main Street.

This framework of “conviviality” highlights ethics and social value, and encourages connections to be identified with historical practices –  Mass Observation, the “shared anthropology” of Jean Rouch – and with wider contemporary cultural practice – DIY culture, relational art and craftivism.

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Book your place for Access All Areas

The Digital Cultures Research Centre invites you to take part in Access All Areas, a timely and critical reflection on User-Generated Content. The symposium takes place on 21st May between 09:30 and 17:00 at the Watershed Media Centre. Tickets for Access All Areas are available from the Watershed Box Office.

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Changing Landscapes: The Emergence of Publish then Filter Processes

Due to the changing landscape of media within the online sphere, traditional processes of production are being called into question.  Within this post, UWE MA student Rhea Bawden discusses the development of these processes in relation to user generated content, publishing and gate-keeping.

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Understanding ‘Gate-keeping’: A Brief History

Within the digital environment, issues of new gate-keeping structures are often discussed.  But what do we mean by ‘the gate-keeper’?  UWE MA student Rhea Bawden investigates the history of the metaphor.

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“A true reflection of who I was at the time” – T. Dowmunt

“A true reflection of who I was at the time”: authenticity and artifice in video diary confessions.

Tony Dowmunt, Goldsmiths

In the offered promise of both access to television by outsiders and ‘non-professionals’ – and of less mediated, more authentic versions of themselves and their lives made by these outsiders, the video diary form was arguably the most important ‘genre’. Almost two decades later (the Big Brother Diary room having come and almost gone), the video diary, with its intimate confessions to camera, has become so familiar a convention that it is as easily parodied as previously valorised documentary techniques for capturing the ‘authentically real’.

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Anatomising User-Generated Content

Posted on behalf of Professor Jonathan Dovey.

In the preparation of materials for this symposium Sam Kinsley & I realised that we were working from quite different interpretations of the term ‘user generated content’. Given our different perspectives (ageing media academic & young ‘digital’ geographer) this is hardly surprising but prompted an interesting genealogical exchange. What follows is a first pass at recording the genealogies of user generated content (UGC).

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Network economics of personal content – M. Thayne

Martyn Thayne, University of Lincoln

Emerging from a critique of recent celebratory studies of new media (what have been classified as Media Studies 2.0: Tapscott, 2006; Rosen, 2006; Jenkins, 2006; Gauntlett, 2007; Merrin, 2008; Bruns, 2008), I incorporate a Deleuzian conceptual framework to demonstrate the economic motivations associated with the encouragement of user generated material. In particular, I examine the Deleuzian notion of ‘control societies’ within the context of how multimedia communication networks may be associated with the ‘re-territorialisation’ of global capitalism.

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