democracy

Thomas Jefferson

Information is the currency of democracy.

Direct Line To The White House on Innovation

The White House has opened up communication - maybe even dialogue - with us. In this particular instance, there are two questions being asked (3, really):

  • How is American innovation affecting your community?
  • What are the obstacles to innovation that you see in your community? And what steps can be taken to remove them?

I urge you to try answering the questions that are posed here, and to give your own perspectives - even if I find them disagreeable.

The idea here is that we all get to have a say in what we need to innovate as American businesses, now and in the future - be it broadband penetration, network neutrality, or anything else that one could see necessary for increased innovation.

The buzz phrase is, "Win The Future" - but I find that phrase inept. The future wins no matter what we do. 'Winning our future' seems to be more appropriate, but no one pays me to write speeches, much less the State of the Union address by the President of the United States.

Sound off. Be heard. Maybe you think it's useless - but if it is useless, make it their fault - not yours or mine.

Personally, I used the opportunity to ask about the status of Network Neutrality, particularly how it seems that the FCC keep saying it is a priority while it remains an unresolved issue that makes small business innovation dubious by virtue of the potential of large corporations to determine the size of the fish bowls small businesses are forced to exist in.

As other ideas come to mind, or even with feedback from other people, I'll go back and write in the concerns. But really, this is a numbers game to them at that level - so let the numbers be counted, heard and democratically represented.

The Hedgehog Project Idea

Pliny with DualShockThis project, by necessity, is collaborative and so I'll write something about it here and see if anyone bites.

The Hedgehog Project, on the surface, is pretty straightforward: Standardized communication between content management systems that transcends simple aggregation, allowing individuals and businesses to share information specifically with those that they wish to share information with.

If you look at Facebook and other similar social networks, you see individuals given simple blogs centralized on one site. The technology isn't as difficult as people make it out to be and those of us who have worked with content management systems know this. The magic of any of these social networks is really in the community that supports them, akin to what made The Huffington Post successful. With server hosting becoming more flexible and issues of privacy almost always on the forefront of social networking issues, the feasability of democratizing social networks from de facto 'monarchies' increases. As people become more educated on technologies surrounding the Internet and these same technologies becoming easier to use, it also becomes more feasable.

That's the center of the Hedgehog Project idea. A philosophical root of it remains Schopenhauer's 'Hedgehog Dilemma', where there is a constant dance of intimacy between hedgehogs on a cold winter's night - too far, they do not share warmth, too close, they get pricked by each other. Present systems of social networking don't allow for this very well, if at all - at one time, one might be intimate with someone on a social network, but you may drift from them as your focus shifts. Yet the weight of the relationship in the software itself does not adjust to this and it is unlikely that such minute adjustments can be done through one company.

Further, instead of one company making lots of money off of the content users provide, and the privacy that users sacrifice, people could capitalize on their own content and set the price for their own privacy - be responsible for their own privacy. This, of course, will require users of social networking tools - and even social media tools in a larger sense - to take that control. It's the price of freedom.

That, in a nutshell, is the Hedgehog Project Idea. I'd touched on it previously and more verbosely on the previous incarnation of the site but it was a little too verbose and meandered too much because it was only then crowning. Being approached as a project now, it will become more standardized and focused.

As a collaborative project that is *open source* content management system agnostic, I'd be interested to hear what other people think of the idea. I have some technical requirements already fleshing out on the open standards, but it is possible that this idea is ripe enough for others to wish to collaborate on it. And it will require collaboration from all open source content management systems, at least to a degree of modules or their analogs.

 

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