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Wednesday, August 11th, 2004

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Blogging & General   11 Aug 2004 02:28 pm

Furling When I Should Be Blogging?    

Tom says:

I find it very frustrating that Will has gotten all wrapped up in furling things he should just be blogging, I think in part because with furl there is no implicit need to turn every page you’d like to bookmark into a mini-essay.

He was responding, in part, to Alan’s thread on what makes for real blogging, and to be honest, his comment kind of took me by surprise. Is he saying that everything we find interesting or relevant on the Web needs to be blogged? (If he had comments enabled I’d ask him directly on his site…) And that assumes, of course, that by blogged we mean mini-essayed. Which, of course, I think it should.

Although I have come to rely on this space as a place to react and link and archive ideas and thoughts, a blog doesn’t do what Furl does when it comes to saving a piece of the Web for later use. And frankly, there is a lot of stuff that I find interesting that I don’t find blog-worthy, especially in the context of the narrow focus of this space. Besides, Tom or anyone else can subscribe to my Furl feeds if they really didn’t want to miss anything.

Eventually, a tool will bring all of this together. Ken has a vision for a blog/wiki, and how hard would it be to throw an aggregator and a bookmarking software piece onto it?

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One year ago: Ed Tech Wiki, Coming Soon--AOL Blogs and Adding to the List
General & Literacy   11 Aug 2004 01:34 pm

Figuring Out What’s True    


“It’s hard to know what’s true online.”
–Dan Gillmor

Not exactly sure why, but as the rest of the carload slept yesterday during our drive home through the Berkshires, I decided to indulge in an hour of Sean Hannity and Bill O’Reilly on the radio and the experience was, in a word, unsettling. Not because of the politics; spinning is a fine art that both conservatives and liberals have mastered. No, what was really scary is that both of them opined that it was basically the job of the listener to find where truth lies.

Hannity, as he interviewed the authors of the latest anti-Kerry tome regarding his service as a swift-boat captain, basically said it was his duty to raise these issues because his audience needs to have all the “facts” in order to make up their own minds and come to their own conclusions. O’Reilly, at the end of his show, responded to a caller’s concerns about the general ignorance of the electorate with a quote that went something like “hey, the Constitution protects everyone’s right to be a moron.” Nice.

My angst here lies in the fact that it is REALLY hard to figure out what is true and not true these days. The whole swift boat affair is a perfect example. Way too many charges and counter charges. Unfortunately, most people would rather take the word of Hannity and O’Reilly and Franken than do the heavy lifting (and most likely get all confused in the process.) Used to be that we could somewhat trust the major newspapers to give us the straightforward scoop on what was happening, but now even their motivations and biases are in question.

So where do we find truth? And where do we find it if we don’t want to do the heavy lifting? And how do we teach our kids to figure it all out for themselves?

My instinct wants to say that blogs and bloggers are an answer here, somehow. That reading blogs and writing in blogs and becoming part of the discussion is a good start. I keep thinking about I-Law when Lawrence Lessig basically said that everyone should start a blog and read blogs, simply because of the democratizing potential they have. This is heavy lifting…reading, writing. But potentially it’s also a new way of teaching our kids to make sense of a increasingly difficult and complex world. While blogs and the like may add more static to the signal, I also think they get us closer to a collective truth. It’s not easy, I know, and a lot of the same issues apply to blogs as to other media. But there is that social aspect of all of this, the reputation that readers and users assign to products and ideas. That’s kind of an unexplored but important part of this in my brain.

Dan Gillmor, in an interview at Wired about his new book, said:

“It’s hard to know what’s true online. We’ve evolved a fairly good BS test in the analog world: I know the supermarket tabloid story about George Bush’s latest Martian love child is almost certainly false. But one website looks as good as another, and some people perversely believe — and can then spread easily — anything they see online.

The opportunity for outright fraudulent behavior is also greater, with Photoshopped pictures, phony press releases, pump-and-dump chat room schemes and the like. Again, the lies can spread at the speed of light and rumor.”

The need to help our students sort all of that out is just becoming more and more acute.

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One year ago: Ed Tech Wiki, Coming Soon--AOL Blogs and Adding to the List

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