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30 Nov 2008 06:40 pm
The Flickring Mob
Schneier reviews Clay Shirky's new book Here Comes Everybody:
No one coordinates Flickr's 6 million to 8 million users. Yet Flickr had the first photos from the 2005 London Transport bombings, beating the traditional news media. Why? People with cellphone cameras uploaded their photos to Flickr. They coordinated themselves using tools that Flickr provides. This is the sort of impromptu organization the Internet is ideally suited for. Shirky explains how these moments are harbingers of a future that can self-organize without formal hierarchies.
These nonorganizations allow for contributions from a wider group of
people. A newspaper has to pay someone to take photos; it can't be
bothered to hire someone to stand around London underground stations
waiting for a major event. Similarly, Microsoft has to pay a programmer
full time, and Encyclopedia Britannica has to pay someone to write
articles. But Flickr can make use of a person with just one photo to
contribute, Linux can harness the work of a programmer with little
time, and Wikipedia benefits if someone corrects just a single typo.
These aggregations of millions of actions that were previously below
the Coasean floor have enormous potential.
But a flash mob is still a mob. In a world where the Coasean floor is
at ground level, all sorts of organizations appear, including ones you
might not like: violent political organizations, hate groups, Holocaust
deniers, and so on. (Shirky's discussion of teen anorexia support
groups makes for very disturbing reading.) This has considerable
implications for security, both online and off.
We never realized how much our security could be attributed to distance
and inconvenience -- how difficult it is to recruit, organize,
coordinate, and communicate without formal organizations. That
inadvertent measure of security is now gone. Bad guys, from hacker
groups to terrorist groups, will use the same ad hoc organizational
technologies that the rest of us do. And while there has been some
success in closing down individual Web pages, discussion groups, and
blogs, these are just stopgap measures.
In the end, a virtual community is still a community, and it needs to
be treated as such. And just as the best way to keep a neighborhood
safe is for a policeman to walk around it, the best way to keep a
virtual community safe is to have a virtual police presence.
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Inconvenience as a Security Blanket
Excerpt: The question is, does the technology ratchet up the tension, making violations and conflict more frequent? Or does it pre-empt and head-off many of the flash-points, before they become a problem?
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Weblog: Robert Sharp
Tracked: Dec 1, 2008 7:17:44 AM