Posts Tagged ‘twitter’

Google Buzz is a mess!

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Early last week Google began to roll out their new social sharing service “Buzz” to all of their Gmail users. Buzz is a “lifestream” (a lot like your News Feed in Facebook) where everything you are doing is combined with everything those you are “following” are doing, allowing for real-time sharing of Web content, images, status updates, and so forth. It’s pretty nifty in and of itself, considering that Google had also recently created social profiles of all their Gmail users and placed them in Google search results – basically, everything that’s already publicly available about a person through search brought in to one simple profile page (which users can control for privacy, of course). With the profile roll out and Buzz, users can now easily find and follow other people and see what they’re tweeting, what pics they are posting to Flickr, what music they are listening to on Pandora, and on and on.  Almost overnight, Google became one of the largest social networks in the world by turning their search engine in to a makeshift social network.

The only problem is, Google Buzz, the flagship and most critical functional element of this new Google social network, is a horrible mess!

(more…)

California’s Prop 8, Mormons, Twitter, and the wisdom of crowds

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Last week or so I was fortunate enough to get a quick email interview together with Internet personality Drew Curtis of FARK.com, which I posted to both my blog and Flip The Media. One thing Drew touched upon was, as he put it, the “bogus media creation of the ‘wisdom of crowds’.” This was also brought up again during Hanson Hosein’s latest lecture in our COM529 Research 2.0 course. The question is, essentially, is the sharing, collaboration, and collective action facilitated by social media always focused upon achieving a wise purpose? As Drew put it, crowds are “stupid, horny, and hungry”. There is an echo of this sentiment in Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody; he asks the question: who decides which cause is right? As old media gives way to new, this becomes an increasingly important question. Like your mother always told you, just because everyone else is doing it, or in this case saying it, doesn’t mean it’s right.

Photo used from the Stranger Blog

So, I come to a matter of personal importance, which I have been following closely since last week’s historic election. In California, bellwether state of the nation, the electorate voted roughly 52% to 48% to remove the rights of gays to marry in their state. Some proponents of Prop 8, a constitutional amendment, argued that they were protecting the traditional definition of marriage. Many of the “Yes on 8″ supporters were of religious persuasion, and may have felt to ban gay marriage perhaps largely for religious reasons. Detractors of Prop 8, on the other hand, may have felt that the amendment was discriminatory towards gays and represented an affront to civil rights. It appears many of these detractors have pointed to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, typically called “Mormons”, as a primary factor in the measure’s passing. I know that many individual members of the LDS church, acting as citizens, campaigned for and contributed, individually, sometimes large sums of cash to the “Yes on 8″ cause. But, the legal entity that is “the church” did not. Notwithstanding, leaders of the church state that they exercised their rights in encouraging these activities from the pulpit. These efforts and the money raised, it’s alleged, directly led to the 53% win. I don’t wish to necessarily debate the rights or wrongs of such broad-based assumptions, of the ballot measure itself, the outcome, or the issues of religion or homosexuality in general here, but I do wish to highlight some of the interesting, and perhaps disconcerting things I have seen in the “crowd’s” response to the measure’s passing. Twitter, in particular, seems to be a social media tool contributing to the fervor and organization of the response from some of those individuals and groups that are opposed to the amendment, but there is no guarantee that what is found on Twitter is ever certifiable fact.

(more…)


Bad Behavior has blocked 669 access attempts in the last 7 days.