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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"Why wasn’t I consulted is the fundamental question of the web,”
It is the rule from which other rules are derived. Humans have a fundamental need to be consulted, engaged, to exercise their knowledge (and thus power), and no other medium that came before has been able to tap into that as effectively.
This need, Ford went on to explain, was the thing people talk about when they talk about nicer-sounding things like the wisdom of crowds or cognitive surplus.
Ford, in his funny and slightly cynical way, was identifying a quality so profound to the Internet its people usually didnt even realize it was new. This idea that participation was more important than qualification, that what made your opinion important was that you had an opinion. This was a new thing in the world, with its own magic. The Why-Wasnt-I-Consulted faction showed up as open source and free software. It was there when bloggers took on the hoary greats of the news business. It powered Wikipedia, which shocked the world by doing better than anything the old world of accredited expertise could do. The un-consulted could not only appear as a creative force; they could appear as critique, suddenly coalescing into an Anonymous DDOS, or a street protest. They began to make their demands known, from Spain to Cairo to New York, talking across borders and ideological divides, creating distributed media, and above all, having opinions on things.
In January of 2011, Tunisians were exercising their need to be consulted with a word: Dégage! Meaning, roughly, Get out!, directed at Ben Ali from Facebook profiles and Twitter accounts and most importantly, hundreds of thousands of human voices on the street.
If this is democracy, it is a democracy the world has never known. A kind of kudzu of democracy, small, tenacious, and demanding its way into every crack of the edifices of the old world.
Why wasnt I consulted? is the fundamental question of post-network democracy, and the fundamental question of the Internet, to which the state mechanisms have so far replied: Who the hell do you think you are?
This need, Ford went on to explain, was the thing people talk about when they talk about nicer-sounding things like the wisdom of crowds or cognitive surplus.
Ford, in his funny and slightly cynical way, was identifying a quality so profound to the Internet its people usually didnt even realize it was new. This idea that participation was more important than qualification, that what made your opinion important was that you had an opinion. This was a new thing in the world, with its own magic. The Why-Wasnt-I-Consulted faction showed up as open source and free software. It was there when bloggers took on the hoary greats of the news business. It powered Wikipedia, which shocked the world by doing better than anything the old world of accredited expertise could do. The un-consulted could not only appear as a creative force; they could appear as critique, suddenly coalescing into an Anonymous DDOS, or a street protest. They began to make their demands known, from Spain to Cairo to New York, talking across borders and ideological divides, creating distributed media, and above all, having opinions on things.
In January of 2011, Tunisians were exercising their need to be consulted with a word: Dégage! Meaning, roughly, Get out!, directed at Ben Ali from Facebook profiles and Twitter accounts and most importantly, hundreds of thousands of human voices on the street.
If this is democracy, it is a democracy the world has never known. A kind of kudzu of democracy, small, tenacious, and demanding its way into every crack of the edifices of the old world.
Why wasnt I consulted? is the fundamental question of post-network democracy, and the fundamental question of the Internet, to which the state mechanisms have so far replied: Who the hell do you think you are?
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"Why wasn’t I consulted is the fundamental question of the web,” (Original Post)
Luminous Animal
Aug 2013
OP
msongs
(67,395 posts)1. "why wasnt I consulted" = NSA et al nt
Luminous Animal
(27,310 posts)4. Yep. I hope you read the entire piece. It is beautiful and worthy
to be repeated as a narrative of our times.
Hekate
(90,648 posts)2. Fascinating.
Luminous Animal
(27,310 posts)3. I've read the entire piece 10-12 times over the past 2 days
and have tried to figure out how to present it here. It's a deep reading and worthwhile.
And yes, fascinating.
PowerToThePeople
(9,610 posts)5. closed source vs open source
It is the battle. The battle for information.
RainDog
(28,784 posts)6. great article n/t