Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category

Monday, June 20th, 2011

Power Abuse

If you don’t know all of the names, please follow the links – interesting that all have cause to fear the digital age….

What do Anthony Weiner, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Bashar Assad and Robert Mugabe all have in common?

Power abuse.  Plain and simple.

Add to that list Eliot Spitzer, Hosni Mubarak, Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, the Taliban and Al Qaeda, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bernie Madoff and a host of other abusers on every continent, in every country, even in every city…I would imagine.

Here we are in a world connected – like it’s never been connected before – with technology that has the potential to solve problems and save lives…not just kill bigger and better…and yet it’s like we have learned nothing.

What is truly amazing is that in the digital age it seems to have gotten worse – or maybe it’s just that we hear about it quicker and more globally.

Or maybe folks think that the digital that empowers all of us – empowers them a bit more.

But here’s the thing – in the globally connected digital world it takes but a few clicks to find that a former New York State governor and a former World Bank president used the same call girl service – talk about a small world….

Bottom line – the truth is and maybe even the good news is – that at the end of the day digital media might have finally democratized the world – even if we haven’t figured it out yet.

So while some may plot to kill and others to show their “wares” – while the vast majority are happy to shop and share – we are all part of, and vulnerable to, the same basic digital pathways.

All of which reminded me of an old proverb I heard many years ago…listen:

“Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back in the same box.” Italian Proverb

And there you have it – to my mind the true beauty of the Internet.

King or pawn – we all have the same ultimate accountability – as we always should have – but in today’s world – it can be tracked and traced….

Think about that, Anthony and Dom….

What’s your view?

 

 

Monday, June 13th, 2011

What Is An Idea?

What is an idea?

Seriously – what is an idea?

And when does an idea cross the road and become more – something real, tangible, useful, valuable – you get the picture.

I ask – out of all seriousness – having just read a piece in Tech Dirt that looks at ideas vs. intellectual property (IP):

The impetus for the question and their look at it is a web site called http://ideasmatter.com that has been created by Philips, Microsoft and DSM in an effort to better define the need for protecting IP.

Their manifesto states:

“Ideas Matter is a consortium of cross-sector enterprises, small and medium-sized businesses and trade associations that aims to expand awareness and promote the benefits of intellectual property (IP). We firmly believe that IP—and the ideas that lie underneath them—are important to the economy, important to society, important to companies both large and small. In other words, Ideas Matter.”

Listen to the language carefully: “…IP and the ideas that lie underneath them…”

The manifesto goes on to say:

“Despite its importance, intellectual property (which includes patents, design rights, trademarks, domain names and copyrights) remains a complex and often misunderstood topic.”

Again – listen carefully: IP “remains a complex and often misunderstood topic.”

Notice it doesn’t suggest that ideas are a misunderstood topic…HMMMMM.

Thought we might begin by looking at definitions – and there are no lack of them.

IDEA — noun

1. Any conception existing in the mind as a result of mental understanding, awareness, or activity.

2. A thought, conception, or notion: That is an excellent idea.

3. An impression: He gave me a general idea of how he plans to run the department.

4. An opinion, view, or belief: His ideas on raising children are certainly strange.

5. A plan of action; an intention: the idea of becoming an engineer.

6. A groundless supposition; fantasy.

Bottom line – its all in the mind; all in the realm of imagination; all speculative – and despite its being a noun, not real.

Now let’s look at the definition of Intellectual Property also a noun:

Property from original thought protected by law: original creative work manifested in a tangible form that can be legally protected, e.g. by a patent, trademark, or copyright”

See the big difference?

IP is tangible – it’s real – its 3D – it can be touched and felt; it’s material and physical – you get the point.

And, as such, it can be and should be protected. In fact, it is – IP is not open source – it is not “free fishing” – and I personally am a huge believer in fully applying the law to real IP.   

For example I won’t use bootleg downloads of music; books; movies – whatever – not only because I believe it’s a moral and ethical issue – but because I believe that if we don’t pay for great stuff, great stuff won’t happen – and frankly – I don’t know about you – but the thought of having to watch hours of stupid video vs. one Lord of The Rings – is frankly depressing.

And – to be really clear the notion that the Digital world is built on giving it away for free is no different than it was when Print was invented, or recordings – the debates raged – but lucky for us and global culture and knowledge – the safeguards were put in place.

We all know the famous verse from Ecclesiastes: “There is nothing new under the sun.”  And the notion that there are only really seven basic plots in all literature — a contested number to be sure, but all agree that there is a limit.

So imagine if Steven Spielberg got sued by the original Anglo-Saxon author of Beowulf – for “idea” infringement on the similarities between Jaws and Grendel. I guess lucky for Steven the author isn’t known and lived in the 700s.

So there you have it. Did the Winklevoss have a case against Zuckerberg? Do we think that ideas and IP are separate and distinct? Should everything be free?

Found this great thought – listen

“A revolution is an idea which has found its bayonets.”
Napoleon Bonaparte

And maybe therein lies the answer.

IP is an idea which has found its bayonets…..

How do you feel?

Do you download bootleg?

Do you think there is a difference between an idea and IP?

These are critical issues that I do believe affect the development of the future of great ideas and powerful IP.

Final thought – the Internet was created to share scientific knowledge…….

Share your thoughts – ideas…..

PS – I was going to write about the nexus of privacy; bad taste; public trust and pure sheer piggishnessthe story of Anthony Weiner will have to wait….

  • Digital is not always free -- and in the future possibly even less so. Soemone pays -- somehow. It is my view that the printing press was actually the revolution and that all that follows is an evolution -- the revolution being the possibility to share information -- not hoard it as had been the case in most of the ...
  • Really dont agree that the digital world is no different than when Print was invented. The main difference is that digital is instantaneous and free, when print was invented it was for a much narrower audience (remember most couldnt read) and was only available to those who could afford education. even today print is not available for free in many ...
  • Maybe the answer starts with a question: Is all ideas equal? Sharing basic ideas on facebook about your cheese burger is equal to sharing breakthrough idea on the world or on a new product? Or idea about love? Or song or software. The Internet allows for the first time for all ideas to be published. is all ideas equal in ...
Monday, June 6th, 2011

With Internet Blocked…

With Internet Blocked, Protesters Are Still Able to Mobilize….

So reads a news headline from The New York Times on Saturday, June 4, 2011. The Italics are mine…

The reference is to Syria and the ongoing repression by that brutal regime. But this is not about politics – it’s about human behavior and the almost stupid lack of even basic understanding of how it’s people who drive the use of technology and more so push it into directions that the obtuse analysts of our age never even imagined.

Imagine that – they were able to mobilize with the Internet. GMOOT – Give Me One of Those revolutions…

The press and such were so caught up with the already legendary Arab Spring and its use of Facebook, Twitter and the like that I imagine it’s inconceivable to them that people can communicate any other way. Let alone figure out how to rally together, organize and assemble.

Makes me wonder how on that momentous July 14th in 1789 the rumors in Paris managed to spread such that a crowd at least 3x times the expected showed up at the Bastille – not to mention the guards who defected and joined them. Imagine that! Did the headline the next day read – “With no digital communication at all – seeing as how it had not yet been invented – the French Revolution began…”

Or what about that fateful June 15th in Odessa, Russia, when in less than 4 hours thousands of Odessans gathered on the steps made famous in the movie Potemkin (the massacre depicted never actually happened, but that montage sequence inspired the famous Baptism scene in the Godfather) and made the Russian Revolution a reality – how did the participants know to gather? In fact, how did they know where to go? Have we missed the early origins of tweeting?

In fact, we have! And worse – way too many continue to do so in pursuit of GMOOT thinking.

What we are missing is the human need that drives it all. It only took a month for half of all Harvard undergraduates to join Thefacebook.com – the first rendition of today’s largest global social network. The lightening speed adoption was because Zuckerberg understood – clearly he understood – the deep need, desire, drive we all have to share and the baked-in-our-DNA behavioral triggers associated with that need. Facebook works because we have human needs – not because the technology application evolved us into a new form of life.

So when I see headlines like “Are Still Able to Mobilize,” I worry – I worry for our humanity and just as much I worry for our technology – because without the two intertwined, neither will get as far as they should. And both will suffer.

Seems to me that as we lurch about listening to so-called experts in social digital communications and the like, we are emulating the following – listen:

“I know a lot about cars. I can look at a car’s headlights and tell you exactly which way it’s coming”. Mitch Hedberg

If we are going to take advantage of the true power of the Internet – blocked or not – we had better do better than merely looking at the “headlights.”

And one more thing…

Check out Instagram – a new app for the iPhone (so far only iPhone) –  one of a new group of apps that are about “the Social Web embracing sharing of moments.”

Glad it’s the social Web driving that behavior…

Now check out the Kodak Brownie – and go back further to Ancient Egypt and the development of papyrus…

Want to hear from you!!!