A very interesting discussion...

M

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Anna
Sent: Wednesday, March 02, 2011 6:42 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: <nettime> Twitter and the resignation of Germany's minister of
defense

Hi,

not that that would be a truly liberating step, but it's interesting
nonetheless:

Germanys extremely popular minister of defense Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg
resigned from office yesterday. There are two or three interesting aspects
which make this resignation different from others.

The starting point was an article about his doctoral thesis (law) containing
a number of plagiarisms, published maybe three weeks ago. This led to a vast
wiki-based online collaboration of many people looking for pieces in the
thesis that were in fact copied from elsewhere. Within days it turned out
that approx. 70% of the 400+ pages didn't have the necessary footnotes. The
collaboration on this was started on Google docs but was moved to a proper
wiki shortly after: http://de.guttenplag.wikia.com/wiki/GuttenPlag_Wiki

Guttenberg and his political allies - including the chancellor - tried to
belittle the whole affair as irrelevant to his being minister of defense.
Alongside wild public debates an open letter was set up by doctoral students
protesting against the belittlement of their academic work. Within days
30.000 signatures were collected online and handed over to the chancellor.
Almost - the students were refused at the entrance of the Office of the
Federal Chancellor and told that because of terrorism dangers the signatures
couldn't be accepted.. (not sure if this is really true but it could be).
They were all over the news anyways.

Lastly Berlin's first demonstration took place last saturday that was
organised solely through Twitter and social networks. Some 500 people
gathered in Berlin's commercial center and marched to the ministry of
defence holding up shoes - a reminiscence to the Arab shoes. This got
attention in virtually all of Germany's news, major tv news included. I've
never participated in a demonstration that small - there wasn't even music -
that got this much national attention. (Some pictures here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/guttbye/interesting/)

Another Twitter revolt, style: western industrialised country? I don't think
so. Both tv and big printed papers played the decisive role. But what's
interesting is how public attention is moving 'our' way. Why would less than
500 people protesting against a corrupt defense minister play any role at
all? Because 'the net people started it', via Twitter.

The fact that the amount of plagiarism in the dissertation was detected so
fast by using a wiki played a role. It was noted widely that online
collaboration can be very different and very effective in campaigning
against politicians who didn't have to fear this kind of attack so far.

Both the plagiarism detectives and the doctoral students wouldn't have been
able to get together, do something and go public this waybefore.

We've had Twitter, wikis, open letters online for a while. What's new is the
way this is being discussed. And the resignation of the most popular
politician Germany's had for years.


Best
Anna

---
http://about.me/annalist





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