Dear nettimers,
I wonder how many of you follow the 'Kathy Sierra' case and what you
make of it. My first response was that this scandal was the final
chapter of the A-list, the presumed consensus culture of prominent
US-bloggers that got famous by linking to each other in the time when
blogging was still (relatively) new. It was a cozy scene, an elite in
the true sense of mainly conservative techno-libertarians that were in
the unique position to have opinions. As one could expect, some were
lefty-liberal whereas others supported George W. Bush. So far nothing
to write home about. When blogs got hip and hot, around 2002-2003,
this culturally homogeneous group lifted each other up during the
growth era of what a little later Tim O'Reilly coined Web 2.0. It may
sound inward looking but the good side of this self-referentiality
was that there was social control, some 'culture' and a 'community'
to take of certain rules. Over the past two years, with global blog
numbers rising to 100 milllion, the A-list core fell apart with the
Sierra cyberbullying case as a late manifestation of this trend.
Another reading is one that Kathy Sierra has given over the past days.
There are tons of stalkers, and always have been on the Internet.
Receiving death threats is probably as old as the medium email. Male
geek culture that preaches freedom and does not believe in regulation
can't respond very well to cyberbullying and rather not like to talk
about it. But this is also old news, at least for nettimers. So what
other interpretations are there? Shocklogs finally arriving in the
USA? An Iraq war that escalates within US borders, four years late?
Geert
--
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6502643.stm
Call for blogging code of conduct
Kathy Sierra went public on her fears in her blog
The support for a blogger hounded by death threats has intensified
with some high profile web experts calling for a code of conduct in
the blogosphere.
The female blogger at the centre of the row has been shocked to
discover that hers is not an isolated incident.
It has led her and others to question some of the unwritten rules of
blogging.
It could force a re-examination of the way the tight-knit blogging
community behaves.
Among those calling for a bloggers' code of conduct is Tim O'Reilly
- one of the web's most influential thinkers. The fact that there's
all these really messed-up people on the internet is not a statement
about the internet. He told BBC Radio Five Live that it could be time
to formalise blogging behaviour.
I do think we need some code of conduct around what is acceptable
behaviour, I would hope that it doesn't come through any kind of
[legal/government] regulation it would come through self-regulation.
While condemning the bloggers who issued the threats, Mr O'Reilly was
keen that the whole blogosphere should not be tarred with the same
brush.
The fact that there's all these really messed-up people on the
internet is not a statement about the internet. It is a statement
about those people and what they do and we need to basically say that
you guys are doing something unacceptable and not generalise it into a
comment about this is what's happening to the blogosphere.
Cyber-bullying rife
Ms Sierrra has personally witnessed the usually harmless feuding that
is part and parcel of blogging take on an altogether more sinister
tone, with threats of a violent and sexual nature gathering pace over
the last month.
She agonised over whether to publicise what had happened to her, she
told the BBC News website.
Since describing the campaign against her, she has been shocked to
discover that cyber-bullying is widespread.
As well as around 900 comments on my blog and hundreds of comments on
other blogs, I have received around 300 personal e-mails and about 70%
of them say they have been through a similar thing, she told the BBC
News website.
Among the messages is one from a blogger Ms Sierra described as far
more prominent than me who has been avoiding industry conferences
because of persistent online threats.
Ms Sierra herself pulled out of a planned appearance at ETech in San
Diego this week.
She believes it is time the technology blogging community sat up and
took notice.
I think there is a culture of looking the other way. When other
prominent people look the other way it is creating an environment that
allows this type of behaviour, she said.
She also thinks it could be time to re-examine whether the blogosphere
needs to be completely uncensored.
There is an unwritten rule in the blogosphere that it is wrong to
delete nasty comments. It suggests that you can't take criticism but
now there is a sense that this is nonsense, she said.
Tough on women
Denise Howell, a US lawyer and blogger, believes that the blogosphere
is no place for legal requirements.
The tools of the Live Web have made it easier than ever for
ordinary people to communicate and express views in their individual
capacities, and to