Social Media – Rioter’s Dream and Government’s Nightmare?

Don't know who made this, but some "Hot Fuzz" is probably needed right now.

A local news broadcast* covering the recent London riots concentrated on the destruction of a Sony warehouse storing CDs for a European release of a local band. Sensible angle for Music City, USA (a.k.a. Nashville).

The reporter made the point though that the rioters were using “social media” to organize and galvanize the riots. Just as this band and many others use social media like Facebook, Twitter and MySpace (well, at least Facebook and Twitter) to organize and galvanize their fan base. It’s as if the

Whatever. It’s just a silly news grab to make international headline events relevant to us local folk. Right?

Turns out, British Prime Minister David Cameron also finds it suspicious that rioters are using social media tools to coordinate themselves. The New York Times reports he and the British Government trying to work out a meeting with Facebook, Twitter and RIM (did Google say no?) to figure out how to best hamper this activity.

Newsflash: the rioters probably also use “telephones” to organize themselves, just like your local  bands or governments or grandparents do. We better clamp down on phone usage, especially since I hear they’re going cordless. Might want to watch who we sell pens and paper to as well. Don’t want these crazy rioters abusing the mail service either.

This seems overboard, if not bordering on authoritarian. In the article, Cameron mentions that these social media tools help fuel the riots, as if they wouldn’t happen without them, or at least not at this intensity. That’s not how things work. Tensions spread regardless of communication tools at hand.

Despite that, these individuals do have the right to communicate. Facebook is quoted in the article as removing “credible threats of violence” from its site. Which is as it should. The businesses can be left to filter their users (typically not a side I’d expect myself to be on with Facebook). Governments punish after the fact.

While this is technically a US thing, unless there’s really a threat of imminent lawless action, government shouldn’t step in. While “imminent lawless action” is arguably the textbook definition of a riot, such speech shouldn’t be prevented but instead discouraged and then punished afterward. Not stopping people from speaking but delivering the consequences when they are shown to incite such harmful activities.

It seems the Manchester Police are using their own tools against them, tweeting out arrests of rioters in an online perp walk of sorts. Listing name, age and where they’re from, in my opinion, is a bit too much, but if it works, it works.

A more altruistic and peaceful example is @riotcleanup, a Twitter account dedicated to spreading info throughout the riot-stricken communities about how to help clean the damage.

The take-away from all this is that communication tools, from Twitter to writing a letter, are neither good nor bad. They are simply tools. If Twitter or Facebook decide to delete accounts for such content, that’s fine. It’s not a government’s place to tell them to do so.

People’s stupidity and tensions were massively contagious before social networks, after all. Now they’re just limited to 140 characters.

*Fox 17, either make your site more easily searched, or actually put up all your news clips.

New NikoScream Theme

The previous "Contempt" theme

I’m trying out a new theme for the NikoScream site. This one is called “Chateau” on WordPress. I like the look and killing the header image for now. Still need to work on a logo though…

Included above is an image of a post on the previous theme. Thoughts?

DC’s 52 Title Pick-Up

The world was set ablaze earlier this month when DC Comics announced that they would be restarting or debuting 52 titles this September. Finally, with the announcement of Grant Morrison tackling the perennial super hero title Action Comics, the world now knows what books to expect this fall.

(Click here for Comic Book Resources complete list of new DC titles this fall, with creative teams and plot  synopses.)

Restarts of long-running ongoing titles seem silly to me, simply a cheap marketing gimmick. So do revamps simply for the sake of revamps and for other reason. These first issues may be a good starting point for new readers, but they’ll be inconvenient or annoying interruptions for current ones. Not to mention that restarting a book for new readers is only a temporary fix, as the titles will become convoluted and impenetrable again within a couple of years. Is that really worth screwing up over 900 issues of continuous publishing?

With that said, this whole debacle presents specific opportunities and sadly dropped balls. Here’s what I picked out from my own views. What about you?

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NikoScream @ MTAC

This weekend is the 11th annual MTAC (Middle Tennessee Anime Convention), and I’ll be busy here all weekend. As such, there won’t be a pull list this week. I encourage everyone local who hasn’t already pre-reged to come down and check the con out.

Here are the events I’m hosting:

  • Tokustatsu Heroes – Saturday 9pm in Panel 4: From spandex to scarves to rubber robot suits, Japan loves their live-action super heroes. We do too, and here’s why.
  • Forum Meet ‘n Greet – Friday 7pm in Courtyard: Put some faces to the names and meet the characters from MTAC’s very own web forums (which you can find at mtac.net/forums)!
  • Anime Clubs 101 – Sunday 2pm in Panel 3: As anime fandom grows, more and more anime clubs tend to pop up. If you want to learn about starting, running or finding clubs, this is the place for you.
Definitely stop by and say hi.

The Pull List – Week 13 & 14, 2011

And yet again I missed a week. I didn’t actually buy anything last week, so oh well. At least I’ve had my last two twitter spree posts to keep you entertained. But now, it’s all about the comics, and with not getting last week’s books until this week, there are a lot of them. What did you pick up that I should check out?

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Slow Down on the Update Button

(Some may think I’m doing multiple posts about Twitter just to play with WordPress’s embedded Tweet feature.)

I had a Twitter-spree of sorts this afternoon during a tornado warning at my workplace, a local newspaper company. Not much else to do when being shuffled down to a storm shelter and your work is interrupted. Although for some shown below, that’s not entirely true.

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To Tweet or Not to Tweet

I recently registered a Twitter account under my real name (@nicholasqualls), mostly because it’s a good idea to own my own name (before any of those greedy mirror versions of myself get to it). But now I arrive at an impasse, as I don’t know what to really use it for.

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The Pull List – Week 10 & 11, 2011

I finally missed a week. Didn’t even make it to the big 1-0. Oh well. Now I get to put more titles in one post, including this week’s Pick of the Week. Did I miss something these past two weeks? Do you have a book you want to talk about? Talk about it in the comments.

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