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Building new communities learning from weblogs

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Title: Building new communities learning from weblogs


1
Building new communities - learning from weblogs
Building new communities - learning from weblogs
  • How weblogs straddle personal and social spaces
    and the potential implications for developing new
    communities
  • Tom Coates plasticbag.org

2
What is an online community?
  • Were all familiar with online communities like

3
Community bbc chat boards
A huge number of simple threaded message boards
and java chat rooms.
4
Community popbitch.com
Ludicrously badly behaved and incredibly active
discussion board
5
Community barbelith.com
Threaded discussion forum, 1000 members, private
messaging
6
Centralised Communities
  • Were used to this model of communities -
    centralised spaces in which people come and
    participate.
  • People who visit these spaces might be able to
    modify their experience of the place, but the
    spaces are financially and culturally owned and
    run by people in power.

7
Centralised Communities
  • The word used for people participating in these
    communities is generally users, occasionally
    visitors, but infrequently citizens and
    almost never owners. Their real life equivalent
    is the town hall, the pub, or all to often the
    youth club

8
Other centralised communities
  • It may seem ridiculous to say, but community
    technologies that seem like real-world telecoms
    technology are in a way also centralised.
  • Instant Messaging
  • IRC
  • Napster
  • Limewire

9
why?
  • Because the decisions about what is possible to
    do with them are centrally made.
  • Because the software is only concerned with a
    centrally governed conceptual space through which
    certain kinds of sanctioned transactions can be
    made.

10
Centralised weblog communities
  • There are many communities of this type built
    around the concept of the weblog too. But while
    these group weblogs have extended some of the
    functionality of the normal discussion board

11
Centralised weblog communities
  • these are not sites that Im going to be talking
    about today
  • Metafilter.com
  • Plastic.com
  • Slashdot.org

12
Im going to be talking about sites like..
  • Content

Ultrasparky.org Run by Dan Rhatigan, a New-Yorker
in his thirties.
13
Im going to be talking about sites like..
  • Content

kottke.org Run by Jason Kottke, a designer and
web guru in San Francisco.
14
Im going to be talking about sites like..
  • Content

Trabaca.com Run by a young man getting used to
the idea of being gay.
15
And what Im hoping to answer today?
  • Is there a community of webloggers?
  • How did this community emerge?
  • Why has it been so successful?
  • What lessons we can learn from weblogs and weblog
    culture when we try and build new communities?

16
And in the process I hope to explain why this
quotation is so true and so useful
  • The web teaches us that we can be part of the
    largest public ever assembled and still maintain
    our individual faces. But this requires living
    more of our life in public. On the Web, the
    notion of a diary has been turned inside out
    weblogs are public diaries. It is likely that the
    neat line we draw between our public and private
    selves in the real world will continue to erode,
    grain by grain
  • David Weinberger, Small Pieces Loosely Joined
    (Perseus 2002, p. 177)

17
But what exactly is a weblog?
  • Meg from notsosoft.com asked Google this
    question And it said that weblogs are
  • a Natural for Librarians
  • ... probably the next logical evolution of print
    zines, and zines are always nice
  • ... the new Borg.
  • ... my friend!
  • ... just lists of short blurbs documenting
    pedestrian events in the writer's life, usually
    with links to other pages the author finds
    interesting.
  • ... journalism for the future.
  • ... destined to become a powerful, dirt-cheap
    tool for e-learning
  • ... what some would call the Web's equivalent of
    a sophisticated early warning radar system.
  • ... a GAL's best friend!
  • ... also often called a news page.
  • ... "useful" because they enable informational
    sorting and distribution.
  • ... mostly used to broadcast information.
  • ... a learning tool.
  • ... gut-simple to set up.
  • ... mostly personal diaries. ...
  • ... a form of communication hitherto unknown.
  • ... so bad
  • ... almost as old as the web
  • ... quick and easy to publish
  • ... updated often and may contain profanity

18
But what exactly is a weblog?
  • For our purposes today, a weblog is
  • A site maintained by an individual.
  • Regularly updated.
  • Organised in a newest writings at the top style
    chronology.
  • Often run using a tool that automates the process
    of posting (cheap / free low-grade CMS).

19
Weblog tools and stats
Weblog applications transformed personal
publishing by automating many of the less
interesting jobs. Publishing to a weblog suddenly
only involved typing in your comments and
pressing a publish button - from there - like any
other CMS, the content was inserted into
templates and FTP-ed to a server. Applications
include centralised ones like Blogger, pitas.com
and software you install on your own server like
Greymatter and Moveable Type. Over 1,000,000
weblogs have been created to date although how
many are regularly updated is unknown
20
But where is the weblog community?
  • After all the vast majority of weblogs are
    maintained by individuals.
  • They for the largest part contain content only
    developed by those individuals.
  • Is this not - in essence - a very low-power
    broadcast medium?

21
Evidence for the community
  • Links panels (weblogs favourite weblogs) -
    one-way vs two-way
  • The via phenomenon - a mark of mutual
    readership, respect and courtesy
  • Weblog web-rings
  • Weblog mailing lists
  • Centralised sites and portals

22
How did this community form?
  • Read out answers to the survey question
  • What made you decide to start your own weblog?

23
Weblogs build relationships
The red dots in this diagram represent people
some with weblogs, some without. The figure in
the middle starts a weblog for whatever reason
and starts talking about his life or about
something that specifically interests him.
24
Weblogs build relationships
Gradually he starts to link to weblogs that he
shares an interest with and if hes producing
interesting content in turn, will get linked to
in return. He begins a dialogue with some of
these people, becoming part of one or more
overlapping Communities of Interest.
25
Weblogs build relationships
Over time he may introduce friends and family to
some of the sites that he has seen or tell them
about the site that he is running bringing an
already existing community in contact with
weblogs in general, and his own weblog in
particular. Some in turn may start weblogs of
their own
26
Weblogs build relationships
Because of the personal diarist nature of
weblogging, people often feel engaged enough with
someone to be interested in meeting them in the
flesh these meetings often involve meeting in
turn other people geographically nearby whose
interest groups may be connected by a mutual
weblogging friend to yours.
27
The three main communities
28
Overlapping communities
  • In the example we saw the weblogger participate
    in three types of community
  • Communities of people sharing similar interests
    to him- or herself, whose weblogs they read or
    are read by. They are likely to be a member of
    multiple, overlapping interest communities.
  • A community of people located nearby
    geographically who are also invested in the
    medium, even though they may not be in the same
    interest groups.
  • A pre-existing community of friends and family
    who may become interested in the medium because
    of their friend / family-members use of it.

29
Weblogs spread virally
  • Each one of these axes is not only a community
    that the weblogger belongs to, but also one of
    the directions in which the idea of starting a
    weblog can spread.

30
One example
  • Again from my survey
  • 1) Where did you first hear about weblogs?
  • There was this site that I used to go to, in
    order to keep abreast of certain goings on in
    the world of comics. One day, I noticed that it
    had become a web log. Everything else, I found
    by links from that.
  • 2) What made you decide to start your own weblog?
  • The realisation that I was travelling through
    South East Asia, mainly with a computer, and that
    this was an easy way of letting my family know I
    was out of town without writing to tell them
    about it individually.

31
One example
  • This represents quite a leap
  • From reading a specific site about a specific
    subject, the reader began to recognise the format
    weblog
  • They moved from reading sites maintained by a
    specific interest group to reading sites from
    several different interest groups through link
    panels, via links and explicit references.
  • When he decided to travel, he recognised the
    format as something good for helping to maintain
    a radically different site that would maintain
    relationships with friends and family and help
    himtalk about the experience.
  • This story was far from unique despite
    completely changing context and subject matter,
    the idea of writing a weblog seems to spread like
    wildfire

32
So what is it about weblogs?
  • The rapid uptake of weblogs, therefore, isnt
    just because of media coverage, but instead
    because of inspiration by people who already
    maintain them.
  • That there is some kind of attraction to READING
    weblogs that means that people continue to do so.
  • That the individuals who are doing the weblogging
    seem to be very real to the people reading them,
    and act as some kind of inspiration.
  • That there is something obviously interesting
    about weblogging as a phenomenon that inspires a
    I could do that kind of ethos.
  • That the barriers to entry in terms of doing it
    are very low.

33
So lets go back to that quotation
  • The web teaches us that we can be part of the
    largest public ever assembled and still maintain
    our individual faces. But this requires living
    more of our life in public. On the Web, the
    notion of a diary has been turned inside out
    weblogs are public diaries. It is likely that the
    neat line we draw between our public and private
    selves in the real world will continue to erode,
    grain by grain
  • David Weinberger, Small Pieces Loosely Joined
    (Perseus 2002, p. 177)

34
The public and personal merge
  • Weve been building communities centralised
    communities that are like town squares or pubs
    or youth clubs.
  • But the lines between public and personal
    online are becoming very fuzzy indeed.
  • The explosion of interest in weblogging points us
    towards ways to make our sites less like youth
    clubs and town squares and more like actual
    communities.

35
The lessons
  • Individuals like their opinions to be heard
  • Individuals dont want the work they put into the
    web to disappear they want to be able to show
    it to people.
  • Individuals like control over their local
    environment and want to show off their
    creativity.
  • Individuals dont identify with sites anywhere
    near as much as they identify with other people.
  • Individuals will be creative if given a medium
    which makes it easy to be so.
  • Individuals are prepared and intelligent enough
    to adapt easy-to-use functionality to a wide
    variety of uses.

36
And most importantly and counter intuitively
  • The best, the strongest, the most creative
    communities can emerge out of the interconnected
    nature of individual spaces.
  • Making great communities is about celebrating
    the individuals within them and giving them all
    the scope you can manage to show themselves off
    in whatever ways you can

37
APPENDIX Some of these ideas in action
  • Three examples of online communities where this
    motion towards splicing individual spaces and
    public spaces can be seen
  • Very brief case study (one slide) for each of
    the following
  • Habbohotel.com
  • Epinions.com
  • B3ta.com

38
Thanks
  • Notsosoft.com
  • Brainsluice.com
  • Kottke.org
  • Megnut.com
  • Trabaca.com
  • Blackbeltjones.com
  • Ultrasparky.org
  • Cyberpumpkin.com/zeitgeist
  • Metafilter.com

39
Building new communities - learning from weblogs
Building new communities - learning from weblogs
  • E-mail me tom_at_plasticbag.org
  • Tom Coates plasticbag.org

40
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