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http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2009/062509-bradner.html
The
Internet and revolution
'Net Insider By Scott Bradner ,
Network World , 06/25/2009
It
is too early to know if what is now going on in Iran is actually the start of a
revolution in that country. Much of the western media and many commentators
seem to think (or, maybe, hope) that is the case.
Many
of these news folk and commentators are pointing to Twitter as a primary
enabler of the current unrest. A number of the commentators have also mentioned
the title and refrain of Gil Scott-Heron's spoken song "the revolution will not be televised"
as if this phrase somehow explains what is going on. It does not appear that
these commentators have bothered to read the lyrics
or tried to understand what the piece was all about.
The
song title sprang to my mind when I started reading all the stories about the
impact of Twitter on the Iranian
situation. While Googling for the lyrics I noticed I was far from the only one
who has made the same connection. But does the connection actually hold?
The
concept of the "Internet revolution" is not generally applied to the
Internet as an enabler of revolutions other than in technology.
But
it clearly has been in some cases.
But
is it fair to say that the Internet is the primary enabler of what is going on
in Iran? Clearly it is an important factor, not just Twitter but also Facebook,
My Space and the other social networking sites. But, just as clearly, the fact
that cell phones are now nearly ubiquitous has also been a factor.
What
about Scott-Heron's work? Does it fit here? I think it does but not in the way
that most commentators assume. The key is not television. The Iranian is being
played out on all of the television news channels. Mostly pathetically -- the
newscasters are reduced to reading tweets and e-mail from people they do not
know -- over and over again.
Scott-Heron
was not saying that the revolution would not be on TV.
He
was saying that the revolution would not be packaged and polished the way that
television tends to do. There are "highlights on the 11 o'clock
news," which Scott-Heron said would not be the case -- but that is not the
only news we can get. The last two lines of the work summarize the message:
"The revolution will no re-run bothers; The revolution will be live."
Whatever is going on in Iran we are seeing and hearing about it live -- over
the Internet and on the TV news channels, which seem to mostly forward
information from the Internet.
Scott-Heron
was also saying that the revolution would be participatory -- "you will
not be able to stay at home, brother." Outside
of Iran this event, revolution or not, is mostly voyeuristic rather than
participatory. It seems that the situation is different within Iran -- the
surreptiously transmitted pictures and videos show masses of people directly
involved.
At
this point it does appear that the Internet is making it much harder for the
current Iranian government to restrict what the rest of the world, and what
their own citizens, know about what is going on. That may wind up facilitating
a revolution or just frustrating those that would like to see one.
Disclaimer:
Harvard is more often a chronicler of social revolutions that an enabler of
them and I have not heard a university opinion on the role of Internet
technology in this case so the above song review is my own.
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