From: Dave Burstein <dave at dslprime.com> Date: Sun, 16 Feb 2003 21:58:09 -0500 To: dave at farber.net Subject: Technologies of the New York march
Dave
Three technologies played a crucial role Saturday.
* I was surprised old-fashioned radios were everywhere, some small transistor models and some boomboxes. The police contained most of the demonstrators, myself included, up to a mile away from the speakers,without any way to hear the event. WBAI-FM, New York's community radiostation, suspended all other programming and carried the event live. That proved to be the only way most could hear.
* The web was crucial for the organizers of the march. I remember traveling 20 hours in crowded car to get together to organize an eventyears ago; many political people I know now do most work by email.
* Wireless phones coordinated the field people trying to keep the demo in some order, despite twice the expected attendance and police regulations that were very counterproductive, creating a false security. Howard Rheingold in Smart Mobs tells remarkable stories of how the anti-Estrada movement in the Philippines was pulled together by cellphone text messages.
Resurgent community radio brings the issues of "media concentration" at the FCC into sharp relief. While WBAI reported from the left, Rupert Murdoch's New York Post had a front cover with doctored photos of the French and German U.N. ambassadors with a weasel replacing their heads. I hope that even many of those who believe that war opponents are weasels can agree with me that a country is better off with media that covers both opinions.
Concentration in an industry like vitamins of telephony leads to higher prices; in broadcasting, the stakes are whether our democracy hears diverse opinions.
These freedom of speech issues carry over and may become the next battleground over the fast internet. The technology is ready to deliver the third internet, fast enough to watch. But it looks like most homes will only have a choice of two providers, one cable and one telco. They have a financial interest - and active plans - to restrict your reliable internet connection to less than the meg or so required for TV quality video. (That includes those advertising 1.5 meg but designing a network that makes that false advertising much of the time.) Instead, SBC, Comcast, Nortel, and Cisco talk at industry events about revenues they expect to gather from "content delivery" - a toll on the internet that will effectively limit choice.
With four comments on the march already posted, I would have saved that thought for another time. But your last posting
"they proceeded to attack and destroy the Starbucks"
was very different from the crowds I spent several hours among. All I saw were peaceful marchers, singing and chanting slogans. With probably 200,000 people, many of them young and desperate to stop a war, I'm not surprised some broke windows and signs. But people like that were perhaps one in a thousand.
Dave Burstein