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Howard Rheingold
Smart mobs emerge when communication
and computing technologies amplify human talents for cooperation. The
impacts of smart mob technology already appear to be both beneficial and
destructive, used by some of its earliest adopters to support democracy
and by others to coordinate terrorist attacks.
The technologies that make smart mobs possible are mobile communication
devices and pervasive computing—inexpensive microprocessors embedded
in everyday objects and environments. Already, governments have fallen,
youth subcultures have blossomed from Asia to Scandinavia, new industries
have been born, and older industries have launched furious counterattacks.
Street demonstrators in the 1999 anti-WTO protests used dynamically updated
websites, cell-phones, and "swarming" tactics in the "battle
of Seattle." A million Filipinos toppled President Estrada through
public demonstrations organized through salvos of text messages.
The pieces of the puzzle are all around us now, but haven't joined together
yet. The radio chips designed to replace barcodes on manufactured objects
are part of it. Wireless Internet nodes in cafes, hotels, and neighborhoods
are part of it. Millions of people who lend their computers to the search
for extraterrestrial intelligence are part of it. The way buyers and sellers
rate each other on Internet auction site eBay is part of it. Research
by biologists, sociologists, and economists into the nature of cooperation
offer explanatory frameworks.
The people who make up smart mobs cooperate in ways never before possible
because they carry devices that possess both communication and computing
capabilities. Their mobile devices connect them with other information
devices in the environment as well as with other people's telephones.
Dirt-cheap microprocessors embedded in everything from box tops to shoes
are beginning to permeate furniture, buildings, neighborhoods, products
with invisible intercommunicating smartifacts. When they connect the tangible
objects and places of our daily lives with the Internet, handheld communication
media could mutate into wearable remote control devices for the physical
world.
Media cartels and government agencies are seeking to re-impose the regime
of the broadcast era in which the customers of technology will be deprived
of the power to create and left only with the power to consume. That power
struggle is what the battles over file sharing, copy protection, and regulation
of the radio spectrum are about. Are the citizens of tomorrow going to
be users, like the PC owners and website creators who turned technology
to widespread innovation? Or will they be consumers, constrained from
innovation and locked into the technology and business models of entrenched
interests?
About Howard Rheingold
Howard Rheingold has a proven
record of accurate technology and social forecasting over two decades
of syndicated columns, bestselling books, and pioneering online enterprises.
Now he's on to the next and biggest thing: the marriage of mobile phone,
PC, and wireless Internet that is changing the way we meet, mate, entertain,
govern, and conduct business.
No armchair futurist, Rheingold was founding Executive Editor of Hotwired,
the first commercial webzine where the web-based discussion forum and
the online banner ad were invented. In 1996, Rheingold founded Electric
Minds, one of Time magazine's "ten best websites of 1996." He
sold Electric Minds to Durand Communications in 1997.
Books by Howard Rheingold
Smart
Mobs: The Next Social Revolution
A merger of mobile communications, pervasive computing,
and the Internet is triggering new forms of collective action. Governments
have fallen. Industries have emerged. And novel forms of social communication
and public have erupted around the globe. Published in 2002 (Buy
on Amazon)
- The Virtual Community
The first book about the social uses of cyberspace led predicted the
Internet explosion. Published in 1992. (Buy
on Amazon)
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