Monthly Archives: March 2008

Blog-testing

New media’s role in political protesting isn’t new, not by far. It’s not even new when it comes to inciting violence. You only have to look at the examples of the Philippines and Cronulla, right here in Australia.

In 2001 thousands of protesters were mobilised by text messages received on their phones to bring down the government of President Joseph Estrada. In 2005, a text message that was passed around incited racial violence on the beaches of Cronulla as Anglo-Australians moved to reclaim the beaches from Lebanese Australians.

Now Chinese bloggers are revealing their anger towards Tibet, where unrest has led to the deaths of seven Tibetan protestors. One Chinese blogger has been quoted as saying;

‘If you behave well, we’ll protect your culture and benefits…if you behave badly, we’ll still take care of your culture..by putting it in a museum.’

Using new media as a means for political agitation is something that interests me, because it is so well suited for it. Blogs are unedited and uncensored (unless they belong to Olympic athletes) and mobile phones can be used to create networks that bypass government control and any censorship that might come with that. But as new media becomes increasingly prevalent, will government agencies look to find ways to control what happens within the blogsphere and other supposedly private new media networks?

New Media Mogul has already thoroughly presented the case study of the IOC and blogging athletes at the Beijing Olympics, but there is news that the Indian government wants access to the email network of Research In Motion (RIM), makers of the popular Blackberry mobile emailing device. Apparently the encryption used by RIM is too strong for security agencies to hack into a user’s Blackberry email and the Indian government wants them to lower it because they are concerned that terrorist activity is taking place and they need to stop it.

The point is that the use of new media is ever increasing, and at a rapid rate too. So is this move by the Indian government just the beginning of a movement to try and control new media sites of dissemination like blogs, and mobile networks? It is difficult to discern what the ultimate possibilities of an increasingly unregulated media landscape will bring us, but certainly an opportunity for greater free speech is one of them. And while free speech may not always be positive, it is the sign of a healthy democracy.

The other point is that the sheer volume of information flowing on these networks is surely too much for any media regulator to cope with. This is an issue that New Media Mogul will continue to watch, and it will be interesting to see what develops in this area.

Citizen media and the Beijing Olympics

In ‘Blogging for gold at Beijing’ I’ve previously outlined the IOC’s plan on New Media Mogul to let athletes maintain personal blogs surrounding the games, provided they don’t comment on the performances of other athletes or upload audiovisual content they have created of an Olympic event.

Speaking more generally, it would appear that the IOC considers blogging to be ‘a legitimate form of personal expression’ rather than journalism. To quote the IOC’s official statement on these blogs;

‘Therefore, the IOC does not consider that blogs by Accredited Persons, in accordance with these Guidelines, will compromise paragraph 3 of Bye-law to Rule 49 of the Olympic Charter which states that “Only those persons accredited as media may act as journalists, reporters or in any other media capacity”.

It would appear then that blogs of personal commentary surrounding the Olympics by citizen journalists are also permissible, but that posts appearing on sites such as Nowpublic and Wikinews may contravene the IOC’s bylaws. But then again, what exactly is the difference between personal expression and journalism? The IOC’s only attempt at clearing this up is to say that a blog is a type of website where entries appear in a reverse chronological order. Entries also tend to appear in reverse chronological order on the aforementioned citizen news sites.

In the same document, the IOC puts forward its policy on audivisual recordings being made at the games;

The dissemination of moving images of the Games through any media, including display on the Internet, is a part of the IOC’s intellectual property rights. No sound or moving images (including sequences of still photographs which simulate moving images) of any Olympic events, including sporting action, Opening, Closing and Medal Ceremonies or
other activities which occur within any zone which requires an Olympic identity and accreditation card (or ticket) for entry – e.g. competition and practice venues, Olympic Village, Main Press Centre – (“Accredited Zones”) may be made available, whether on a live or delayed basis, regardless of source.

This prohibition also extends to still images, which must also be taken from within accredited areas. It is unclear just how the IOC plans to police this, because with technology the way it is, 90% of people entering a stadium could be carrying a camera built into their cellular telephones. No information about entry conditions to the Olympics appears to be available on the official site at this point in time, but a cursory look at the ‘audiovisual policies’ of major Australian sporting grounds reveals they’re out of step with modern technology.

Under the Melbourne Cricket Ground’s conditions of entry audio recording equipment and video cameras are prohibited, except in cases where the parents of Auskick participants are trying to enter the ground with this equipment and in these cases it is permissible (presumably with some sort of proof that the person does have a child participating in Auskick). Telstra Dome prohibits professional cameras, audio recording equipment or video cameras. The SCG Trust, which operates the Sydney Cricket Ground and the Sydney Football Stadium, prohibits anyone to have or operate television, cinematographic or photographic equipment for commercial purposes.

Under the MCG’s conditions of entry, almost every patron should be barred from entering the ground, seeing as the majority of mobile phones are capable of recording video and audio. Under Telstra Dome’s policy it would depend what was considered professional; but the cameras found in some of the latest mobile phones are 5 megapixel, so while they may not be operated in a professional manner, they are certainly capable of capturing a decent picture. The SCG prohibits any commercial use of audiovisual equipment, but with citizen media increasingly gaining recognition, this might be a redundant distinction in a few years time.

There isn’t so much of an issue in Australia as none of the major sporting codes seem as hellbent on maintaining complete control of their intellectual property as the IOC. But certainly the Olympics will be an interesting fortnight for watchers of citizen media like New Media Mogul. Because the only way the IOC is going to maintain complete control over the content that is disseminated from the Olympics is by insisting that every patron check his or her mobile phone at the entry gates. Otherwise there will be thousands of devices capable of capturing and disseminating Olympic content outside of the accredited zones of Olympic stadiums. Television stations have this policy when you go and see a show being recorded, but while this may deprive someone of their mobile phone for a two hour period where they have to be quiet anyway, Olympic events go all day and in this age mobile phones are first and foremost vital communication devices.

So you can be sure that New Media Mogul will keep watching this issue.

To look at the full statement from the International Olympic Committee, click here.

The truth about social networking

If you read back to my very first post on New Media Mogul you’ll find my thoughts on Facebook and the way social networking is changing our lives and the way we communicate. Now in a competition sponsored by Sprite called ‘The Truth’ a satirical and humorous take on life in five years time is presented, as we run our lives exactly like we run our Facebook and MySpace pages. The scary thing is that I think these guys are onto something, but anyway, enjoy!

(Sports fan) culture

Fan culture is becoming an increasingly important element of the media landscape. Much of Henry Jenkin’s work has explored the driving force that fan culture can be in the popularity of shows like Survivor and movie franchises like Star Trek and Star Wars. Indeed Jenkin’s book, Convergence Culture details how fan culture propelled the popularity of Survivor and ultimately, producers of the show were engaged in a cat and mouse game with fans who would populate online message forums and try to ‘spoil’ Survivor. Yochai Benkler’s book, The Wealth of Networks, also deals briefly with Star Wars fan culture.

Now sporting organisations are starting to realise that fan culture can drive their new media offerings and have a flow-on effect to the popularity of their teams and the presence of the sport within the mainstream media. The Atlanta Falcons recently premiered a new website that was designed to empower millions of visitors to engage with each other in a shared fan experience, and provide them with visually stunning content. Not only was the site designed for fans with the integration of social software so Falcons fans could keep in touch with each other and swap information and media, but fans were also involved in designing the website. The Falcons engaged a Fan Advisory Panel to get direct feedback from website visitors.

None of the major Australian sporting codes have embraced fandom and social software in the way that the Atlanta Falcons have. Cricket Australia’s website cricket.com.au is probably the most fan friendly, with visitors to the site allowed to submit their opinions on various pre-nominated topics. However the other codes just offer the standard fare of wallpapers and pictures to download so visitors can indicate their fan status.

New Media Mogul has already highlighted the under-representation of women’s cricket in the media but for smaller sporting organisations in Australia, embracing fandom and make use of available social software might be a way for them to grow their brands without having to rely on support from the mainstream media. Otherwise larger sporting organisations will catch on to the work of the Falcons, and allow their fans to become as emersed in their media experience of the team as they are at the ground.

Media sport

In Sport, Culture and Society: An Introduction, Grant Jarvie argues that sport and the media is not sport per se, but sport that has been mediated for the sports media complex. Many if not all aspects of media-sports are social, economic and political constructions that carry messages, are controlled by human beings, and provide selected representations of reality, Sports through the media carry messages about gender, race, class, nationhood, violence and what is good and what is bad sport.

So far in my analyses of mainstream media and citizen media on New Media Mogul I’ve more or less concluded that the citizen media sphere mirrors the mainstream media. Citizen journalists are interested in the same sports that their professionals counterparts in the mainstream media are, and they are more or less interested in the same issues within those sports, although they tend to devote more time and space to them than the mainstream media. However how representations of different sports are constructed within the citizen media sphere and whether these constructs come from the homogenised world of the mainstream media or an individual citizen journalist’s beliefs and morals is an interesting point. In order to test out any differences that may exist, I am going to present a content analysis of boxing this time, a sport that polarises sports fans, and seemingly polarises those within the mainstream media too.

The content analysis will concentrate on the recent bout between Anthony Mundine and Nader Hamdan, where Mundine defended his WBA title. The analysis concerns articles from The Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph and The Age, as well as the fan site boxingnews24.com.

The mainstream media seemingly construct the media sport of boxing along lines of violence, crime, religion and intelligence. In the first article I studied from The Sydney Morning Herald, Anthony Mundine’s use of the English language is seemingly commentated on in a derogatory manner. Mundine is directly quoted as saying that, ‘He is tougher than them two because this guy is a lionheart’. While this is undoubtably what Mundine said, I feel that quoting him like this was probably unnecessary and is part of the mainstream media construct that boxers are dumb thugs.

A feature article on Nader Hamdan also in The Sydney Morning Herald perpetuates this construct. Hamdan is quoted in the article as saying, “Who would have thought 16 years ago when I was hanging here and terrorising these streets that I would be fighting for a world title?”. It’s also pointed out that Hamdan has a long-time friend named Jimmy Barakat, ‘a huge tattooed man likely capable of staring down an agitated gorilla. The two spent juvenile detention together after a fight with police in which Hamdan grabbed an officer’s pistol. Barakat has survived gunshots, comas and jail but hopped from one foot to the other like a nervous child’.

Whether this construction of boxing within the mainstream media is due to a belief that its ‘outlaw’ side is sexy would be interesting to know, but it also seems to extend to an unnecessary focus on the Islamic religious views that many boxers have. It is explicitly stated that Hamdan’s day begins with a ‘ritualistic prayer at 5am’ and the names of his close friends, who all have Arabic sounding names, are mentioned in the article. While this is a ‘colour piece’ on Hamdan, it seems like there is an uneasy emphasis on his Muslim background, as though this is a further element of the mainstream media’s media sport construction of boxing.

In contrast, a report on the bout by a citizen journalist focuses on the contest between the two boxers instead. At one point Eric Shmidt criticises Mundine as he has ‘yet to face a hard challenger, instead going up against Pablo Daniel Zamora Nievas, Jose Alberto Clavero and now Hamden. Missing are names like Edison Miranda, Jean Pascal, and Jean Paul Mendy, to name just a few opponents that I consider much better than the utterly soft opposition that Mundine has chosen to defend his title against so far’. But Schmidt’s report doesn’t deal with either opponent’s Muslim beliefs, or their previous life of crime or the apparent poor English grammar that Mundine possesses. Instead this report criticises Mundine for his cowardice in not defending his title against quality opponents.

In On Television and Journalism Pierre Bourdieu argues that any sporting event is produced twice; the first time being in the stadium and the second time being on the television screen. Perhaps this rings true for all media to some extent; that any sporting event is reconstructed as media sport along selected lines of reality. Although in this case study it would seem that for the sport of boxing, the reality of the sport is far more specifically constructed within the mainstream media with overtones of thuggery and violence accompanying articles on boxing. In contrast the citizen media report analysed seems a far ‘truer’ account of what boxing really is – two men engaged in a sport that requires skill, strength and endurance.

It isn’t really a case of saying the mainstream media is wrong in their portrayal of boxing, but it is interesting that they choose to construct the sport in the manner they do, and it seems that fans don’t take away the same constructs from the sport as the mainstream media does.