Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Super 8 Movies of a Modern Family Vacation


I dug out some Super 8 movies that I filmed in 2005 while on a road trip with my wife Myah. This was our first trip together before we were married. I borrowed a 15 foot Aloha travel trailer from my neighbor. There's nothing quite like a camping/road trip to find out if you're compatible or not!

We ended up buying the trailer from my friend last year and spending over a month camping in it this past summer.

I found this old Canon autofocus super 8 camera and decided to shoot with it. I think it's interesting to get the old feeling of a classic family vacation from the I Love Lucy television era. I can picture my mother and father making this trip with dad wearing plaid shorts and black socks.

The juxtaposition of the old technology, including an old trailer with a more modern car towing it and using final cut pro to edit it. I couldn't afford a telecine for this so I just projected the movie on a white wall and captured it on my Sony VX 2000 video camera. The movie projector sound is from the actual projector I used when projecting.

I think it's an interesting blend of old and new and my own way of exploring the notion of family films that my parents era used to break out at every family function or party. It was also interesting to have only 12 minutes of film stock for a one week trip. I wasted the first cartridge figuring out how to use the camera. I wish it wasn't so expensive to get film processed these days because I think it's beautiful. Perfect for a fleeting memory...

I decided to add titles without narration to keep with the idea of a silent film. I couldn't resist the music though. There's something about a road trip and George Jones country music as well as a little travel music.

I guess you could call this a mashup of eras, film and video technologies, and music. Just perfect for the Web 2.0 era.

Monday, December 8, 2008

The End of Newspapers?


The impact of user generated content on the newspaper industry is profound. Classified ads are being replaced by Craigslist and Ebay, and circulation numbers are dropping as a new generation of students leaving high school and college no longer rely on printed news media.

In addition to this, media production is now available to anyone with a computer and Internet access. Online media is no longer a specialized industry, but rather is a social phenomenon where the current generation is actively participating in the creation of content such as visual media production (i.e. photos and videos on Flickr and YouTube), consumer product ratings and comments, (i.e. Amazon) and self published blogs. 1

“Citizen media are also growing in ways unmistakable and engaging . Web sites run by citizen journalists are multiplying – rapidly approaching 1,500 heading into 2008 – offering stories, blogs and videos. And that trend is considered a healthy one by professional journalists, who call on citizens more frequently to inform their reporting.” 2

The newspaper industry is in economic decline. Recently Gannett Newspapers, publisher of USA Today and over 80 regional papers has laid off over 3000 employees (10 percent of their workforce) in the largest cutback in the 102 year history of the company. 3

One of the worlds most respected international daily papers, the Christian Science Monitor, recently stopped print production and has become an online daily newspaper that publishes a weekly magazine in print. 4

Causes of the decline in newspapers:
Newspapers are funded primarily through advertising revenue. Subscription revenue only covers the cost of distribution. Up to 40 percent of revenue has traditionally come from classified ads. Most of that revenue has disappeared due to the widespread use of websites like Craigslist and Ebay.

As circulation numbers decline, traditional print advertising has evaporated from many pages. Newspapers have resorted to emphasizing special insert advertising that costs more to produce and distribute and yield a lower profit margin. Spokesman Review editor Steve smith explains in his blog,“Ad inserts are not a boon, they are part of the problem. As advertisers move from in-paper advertising to inserts, they pay less, much less. As inserts represent a decline in what we call ROP (run of paper) advertising, revenues decline.”11

Many newspapers have tried to make the switch to New Media by retraining reporters and photographers in the field of digital filmmaking. Staff Photographer Colin Mulvany, from the Spokesman Review became a national figure by becoming an early adopter of video and blogging technology. His video blog was an immediate hit by attracting over 10,000 hits per day. His blog was featured in the Wall Street Journal and he was invited to give training workshops all over the country by the National Press Photographers Association.1

The development of online media however, has not led to the growth of newspaper advertising. The online version of the Spokesman Review has been unsuccessful in converting web circulation into advertising revenues. Among the problems Colin notes, is the ability for a web surfer to click away from content that is too slow to download, or too full of advertising messages. Print media’s attempt on online media followed a traditional broadcast television format of using advertising pre-roll and post roll with news content presented in between. Early video posts had 30 second ad spots in front of the content, in a manner similar to the 30 second spot on television. Web surfers would bypass these ads and exit the website altogether. Today, Gannett and The New York Times utilized 12 second pre-rolls and the Spokesman Review is experimenting with 7 second pre-rolls and are still seeing their audience taking an early exit from the ad-heavy messaging.

Some newspapers, including the LA Times and the Spokesman Review are retreating from their online strategies and laying off their newest multimedia employees. 1

What are newspaper’s doing wrong?
The paradigm shift in news reporting has been underway for the past 10 years. The concept of a “citizen journalist” was introduced by the American Media Institute in their groundbreaking book “We Media.” The concept behind citizen journalism is that non professional journalist (the public) can use modern media technology to fact check mainstream media articles, comment on articles, and report breaking news. During the London Tube bombing in July 2005, over half of the news photos that were published came from passenger cell phones.

In addition to this, the internet has introduced a new level of fan based community building that has emerged as a major source for information about companies, products, teams, etc. These fan sites have become major sources for news items.

“According to a recent Sports Illustrated story, "there is little doubt that fan websites are breaking — and making — news and dramatically reshaping the relationship between college coaches and the public. Mainstream news media, SI included, monitor website message boards to take the public's pulse and, in some cases, look for news tips."

According to Technorati there are over 7 million blogs. We live in a time where not only are newspapers presenting the news, their employees are self publishing personal blogs that give us insight into the daily operations of the news media.

“From a journalistic perspective: Blogging and other conversational media are entering a new phase when it comes to community information needs — they're growing up. Traditional media are using these tools to do better journalism, and are beginning to engage their audiences in the journalism. Entrepreneurial journalists are finding profitable niches. Advertisers are starting to grasp the value of the conversations, and so on. The big issues remain, including the crucial one of trust. Here, too, we're seeing progress. The best blogs are as trustworthy as any traditional media, if not more.” - Dan Gillmor, Director, Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication, Arizona State University startupmedia.org

The Challenge newspapers face is two fold. First, participatory journalism operates in direct opposition of the traditional gatekeeper role of mainstream journalism. The idea of a “informed public” that follows a hegemony ideology within news narratives has been wiped out by the internet technologies that have reduced the cost of publication and distribution to the point where anyone with a computer and online access can have a voice. The separation of news and conversation (see we media footnote) has been smudged by online web 2.0 tools that enable the audience to actively participate in story making. User generated content is also tapping into traditional advertising revenue. 6

“The majority of bloggers we (Technorati) surveyed currently have advertising on their blogs. Among those with advertising, the mean annual investment in their blog is $1,800, but it’s paying off. The mean annual revenue is $6,000 with $75K+ in revenue for those with 100,000 or more unique visitors per month. Note: median investment and revenue (which is listed below) is significantly lower. They are also earning CPMs on par with large publishers.”9

The second challenge to newspapers is the fact that advertisers themselves have been able to capitalize on the development of fan based online communities. Viral marketing on social websites and corporate sponsored websites have marginalized traditional news media’s influence on advertising. 10 & 12

New media and user generated content has emerged as a social practice that has overwhelmed the professions it was built upon. The picture is not clear as to what will become of media professionals and journalist.


Sources:
  1. Author interview of Spokesman Review media manager, Colin Mulvany, September 26th, 2008
  2. http://digitallearning.macfound.org/atf/cf/%7B7E45C7E0-A3E0-4B89-AC9C-E807E1B0AE4E%7D/JENKINS_WHITE_PAPER.PDF
  3. http://www.stateofthenewsmedia.org/2008/narrative_online_intro.php?cat=0&media=5
  4. http://www.nppa.org/news_and_events/news/2008/10/gannett_layoffs.html
  5. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/29/business/media/29paper.html?fta=y
  6. http://masteringmultimedia.wordpress.com/2008/10/03/layoffs-hit-the-spokesman-review-hard/
  7. http://www.hypergene.net/wemedia/weblog.php
  8. http://www.hypergene.net/wemedia/weblog.php?id=P41
  9. http://technorati.com/blogging/state-of-the-blogosphere/
  10. Williams, M. (2007). “The Cult of the Mohicans: American Fans on the Electronic Frontier”. The Journal of Popular Culture, 40:3, pp 526-554
  11. http://www.spokesmanreview.com/blogs/conversation/archive.asp?postID=18823
  12. Wiertz, C., de Ruyter, K., (2007). “Beyond the Call of Duty: Why Customers Contribute to Firm-hosted Commercial Online Communities”. Organization Studies, 28:3, pp 347–376

Friday, December 5, 2008

The structuring of linguistic sign and signifier-signified relation according to Saussurian semiotics


The linguist Ferdinand de Saussure describes language as consisting of two representational systems. The first is a system of mental representations that are our interpretations of the external and internal worlds. These mental representations become a conceptual map of our experiences. In order to communicate with others we must each have conceptual maps with enough similarity to have common references. This similarity is the foundation for our self-identities and culture.

In order to share our interpretations of the world we utilize a system of linguistic codes (letters) and rules (grammar), which is the second system of representation at work. Codes are put together to form signs that represent the meaning (actual object or idea). Language is a system of signs that represent the relationship between meaning and the codes used to signify that meaning. De Saussure labeled these two components of a sign as signifier (symbol), and signified (concept) and developed the semiotic field of study. Signs are a system (LANGUE) of representation that binds meaning to the expression (PAROLE) of that meaning.

De Saussure’s work focused on the structure of language (LANGUE) rather than the meaning of individual words (PAROLE). Within the two systems of representation there are two principles at work: association and differentiation. The mental representation system relies on associations that correlate signs to meaning, while language relies on a system of codes that require differentiation. No two symbols or words can be identical. Differentiation is abased upon the idea of binary opposites. We establish what a word is by comparing it to another word it is not, and since language functions in a linear manner of time and space we can only compare one word to another at a time, thus creating a binary pair. For example, the letter ‘s’ differentiates the binary pair dog/dogs.

Words can only be spoken or written one at a time in a linear manner. Each sentence represents a chain of words whose meanings are impacted by the word order. For example, the sentence, “the dog ate the bird” has a different meaning than if you changed the word order and wrote “the bird at the dog.” The position of each word creates a SYNTAGMATIC relationship.

While written or spoken language is linear and dependent upon syntagmatic relationship, signs themselves are stored in memory through associative relationships. Mnemonic memory devices may associate words with a similar sound such as, celebration and castration or any other word that ends with ‘tion’. Associative relations are maintained only in our mind while syntagmatic relations are a function of linguistic structure.

Individuals cannot affix the meaning of a sign. In order for signs to be communicative, there has to be agreement among the members of a culture as to what values (signifier and signified) are represented by the sign. People who speak Chinese have to all share the same understanding of what the symbolic characters (codes of language) represent and in what word order (grammar structure) they are expressed in order to form a shared understanding.

Signs are culturally specific and arbitrary. Signifiers can be changed and attached to different concepts. An example of this is the word Gay. Historically the word gay has been used to depict an emotion. The contemporary definition of the word within the English language is that of a sexual orientation. This transformational process compels us to view language in terms of its historical reference. Meaning is not affixed permanently and can be changed during any period of time.

When you think of signs in terms of representation you realize that any form of expression (music, writing, painting, architecture, photography, etc) can be viewed as a language of signs.

A Review of Robert McChesney viewpoints on the media landscape


McChesney makes note of four major trends in media:
• Corporate concentration
• Conglomeration
• Hypercommercialism
• Globalization

Corporate concentration occurred after WWII and represented the classic “buying of market share” through horizontal integration. Media markets became Oligopolies that operated within distinct media markets such as newspaper, radio, magazines, books, television, film, and music. Within each of these markets there were a small number of firms who had control over market share.

As technology developed and the number of media outlets increased one would think that the number of media firms would also rise, but in fact the market reaction to the growth of media is one of greater corporate concentration and the emergence of conglomeration and vertical integration into two or more media markets. Newspapers took ownership of television stations and radio stations. Film Studios took over Theatre chains. With advertisers having a growing number of options to market their wares, media companies responded through mergers and acquisitions to create 10 top tier media companies (now perhaps only 6). News Corp President Pete Chenin described the benefits of conglomeration as “regardless of where the profits move to, you’re in a position to gain.”

Consolidation and Conglomeration allows corporations to cut production costs and control prices in order to maximize profits. Oligopolies tend to work together and keep prices as high as the market will bear (similar to OPEC).

“What is clear is that the option of being a small or middle sized media firm barely exists any longer: a firm either gets larger through mergers and acquisitions or it gets swallowed by a more aggressive competitor.”

Media conglomeration is driven by the need to cross promote brands which is extremely profitable. The effort to ever increase profits has led media towards Hypercommercialism. Cross marketing (through product licensing and development of spinoffs) movies into television shows and video games or household products such as children’s flatware with a graphic of Nemo on it has become the norm. Television shows like Star Trek have been cross sold as books and blockbuster movies as well as holloween costumes, and just about any commodity that can support a graphic image. As the number of companies controlling the markets decreases, the need for product differentiation through branding has increased.

It is important to note that although vertical integration is extremely profitable, it does not guarantee a profit. Some mergers don’t work. There needs to be a unifying factor such as when a newspaper buys television and radio stations that supply news content and Film companies by music companies that supply entertainment.

The larger the conglomerates become the more hyper commercialized they become due to the insatiable appetite for profit. Thus there are ever more pervasive innovations in advertising such as product placement deals that blur the lines of advertising.

McChesney sees several negative factors to these trends in the cluttered media landscape. First of all, editorial integrity is compromised. Journalism is in decline. Large media firms have boards of directors who are also affiliated with the boards of Fortune 1000 corporations. This has created a climate that is adverse to investigative journalism.

Secondly, while demand creates supply, the control of supply in a monopolistic manner can create demand. Consumers are not receiving quality programming more often than not and are stuck with art that is controlled by business with in turn blocks out new talent because it is too risky. While commercialism affords artist to make a living and gives consumer access to the art, hypercommercialism creates cookie cutter media that is increasingly cheaper (i.e. reality television and NBC’s move to eliminate dramas and put Jay Leno in the 10pm slot) that is coded to a hegemonic culture.

Control of media is a political decision that has been forgotten by most. Media is vested with responsibilities to fulfill public service. However, deregulation has allowed for greater corporate control and stronger corporate alignments that serve advertiser interests instead of viewer interest. The establishment of professional journalism and a supposed separation of editorial content from commercial interest has masked the deregulation and consolidation of media. Professional journalism is purported to neutral but when you look at its origins, its development of a neutral bias was seen as a way to increase marketability of media by not antagonizing advertisers and consumers with partisan politics. It was simply more efficient to have the appearance of neutrality even though the media represents and targets the middle and upper class.

Media is now taking its socio-political economic system to a global scale. The advent of the Internet and user generated content would seem to offer a counter force, but when you look at the gatekeepers like Google, Myspace, and YouTube, you see yet another example of Oligopoly that is benefitting from extremely cheap production costs (free user generated content) and control over advertising distribution to the exclusion of any small firms.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Lit Review - Rough Draft

The following is a draft of a literature review submited 12/1/2008. The author would like to thank Shannon Mattern and Sanja Trpkovic for their advice and feedback. A revised version will be constructed that more fully details the arguments presented.

New School University
Media Studies
Fall 08
Understanding Media Studies
Dr. Shannon Mattern
Literary Review

COMMUNITY INFORMATICS: Is it an agent for sustainability in a globalized economy?

With the Industrial Age well underway, it seems as if Walter Benjamin was prognosticating in 1928 about globalization and the Internet when he wrote:
Men as a species completed their development thousands of years ago; but mankind as a species is just beginning his. In technology, a physis is being organized through which mankind’s contact with the cosmos takes a new and different form from that which it had in nations and families. One need recall only the experience of velocities by virtue of which mankind is now preparing to embark on incalculable journeys into the interior of time… (Benjamin, 1996: 487).

Globalization is the result of technology’s ability to collapse time and extend communication beyond local and regional boundaries. In 1964 Marshall McLuhan wrote, “Today, after more than a century of electric technology, we have extended our central nervous system itself in a global embrace, abolishing both space and time as far as our planet is concerned(McLuahan, 1964).”

In the modern sense, globalization is a process that began with the development of the telegraph and radio (Naughton, 2006) and has resulted in the concentration of production and wealth in a relatively small number of communities (Goodwin, 2008) and the fragmentation of society (Turkle, 1995). As an economic term, globalization began during the 1980’s with the expansion of market economies worldwide and the beginning of widespread outsourcing (Supply Chain Management 2008). Globalization has resulted in many communities sinking into economic depression, especially rural resource based economies (Margolin, 2006, Young, 2008). For the last two decades there has been a trend in government to increase access to digital media as a means of counter balancing the negative effects of globalization. The assumption has been that universal media literacy and access will insure economic success in the modern economy (Alkalimat, 2001, Williams & Wallace, 2005).

There is no data to support the idea that media literacy by itself is a silver bullet that will offset the increased worldwide poverty brought about by the shift from dispersed modes of production to globalized markets (Feenberg, 2004). The literature I have reviewed identifies three significant concepts relative to sustainable communities:
  1. The potential for Information and Computer Technology (ICT) systems to build strong communities through the practice of Community Informatics (CI).
  2. Empowerment within online communities comes from active participation rather than passive consumption, which is creating a cultural convergence that challenges corporate control of economy and culture.
  3. The importance of social capital in building sustainable communities.
In studying the current literature on community development and new media as a change agent it has become evident that there is a need for a more complex framework for analyzing the success of Community Informatics projects relative to the enhancement of social, physical, and financial sustainability within a given community .

Community Informatics (CI) is a relatively new field of study that is approached from multiple disciplines including sociology, computer science, education, management, and development studies. Community Informatics is the practice of combining information and communication technology (ICT) with the intent to support local communities that have been marginalized by globalization through the empowerment of individuals by providing universal access to ICT. The development of Community Informatics is a direct response to the corporate led development of ICT systems that have centralized and concentrated economic capital within a select group of communities (Fox, 2004).

The development of the internet as a ubiquitous means of communication and commerce via websites, email, blogs, and the public sharing of privately produced content (i.e. photos and videos) has created a dramatic increase in research around community development by design. The seminal (pre-Internet) work of Anderson (1991) introduced the concept of the imagined community and is the foundation for understanding the formation of ‘virtual’ communities. Online communities sprouted up before the Internet through the use of modems and BBS bulletin boards (Fernback, 1995). Unlike broadcast television that leaves the audience isolated,

“People in virtual communities use words on screens to exchange pleasantries and argue, engage in intellectual discourse, conduct commerce, exchange knowledge, share emotional support, make plans, brainstorm, gossip, feud, fall in love, find friends and lose them, play games, flirt, create a little high art and a lot if idle talk. People in virtual communities do just about everything people do in real life, but we leave our bodies behind” (Rheingold, 1993 p. 3).


Kim (2000) articulates the properties necessary in the design of a vibrant online community that closely mirrors the characteristics of a physical community organization that serve as secondary associations (Putnam 2000). Both Kim and Putnam stress the importance of active participation. A scan of CI projects reveals a trend towards projects that are intended to increase universal access to digital media (Parkinson, 2006) or to improve access to social services from government and non-government organizations (NGOs). The initial theory that universal access can empower individuals is coming under criticism. Ripamonti (2005) notes that access by itself may do little more than to reinforce a consumer’s relationship with a business and Williams (2007) illustrates the strong ties formed between fans and cultural commodities through the formation of online communities in support of existing businesses. It seems that large corporations are in the best position to benefit economically from the expansion of the Internet.

Jerkle (2001) represents the trend towards trying to build sustainability through e-commerce business models that are woven into online communities. Thus far, there are too few successful case studies to be able to draw any conclusions on the effectiveness of ICT projects in sustaining marginalized communities. Although there has been explosive growth in the number of participants in online communities (Urstadt, 2008), there is little evidence of any significant implications from the innate formation of virtual communities (Feenberg, 2004).
The most direct impact members of an online community have on shaping community is through active participation. Participation consists of content production in the form of user feedback, blogging, mashups, and other forms of independent media production. User comments have a direct impact on sales of products (i.e. Amazon.com user ratings, travel website comments and ratings), and are forming new relationships with broadcast mediums. New genres of entertainment are being formed based upon audience participation in plot design such as the phenomenon of LonelyGirl15 on YouTube(Space Shank Media, 2008).
Peer to Peer network traffic (used for file sharing, i.e. music files) will soon exceed traditional web traffic (Naughton, 2006). The music industry is imploding, and the open source movement is the poster child for participatory models. However, the largest amount of participation on the Internet thus far is in support of online communities built around commercial interests with little positive impact on the economic condition of marginalized communities (Wiertz, 2007).

The work of Elizabeth Ellsworth (2008) and the DIY movement in media seems to offer the greatest optimism for empowering individuals and communities. Born out of the Arts and Crafts movement, DIY media production is creating a convergence of community based subcultures and hegemonic corporate culture. Working in tangent with Community Informatics, with an emphasis on digital media production, active participation in content production has shown potential for growing social capital as a means of countering the influence financial capital has on public policy and control of physical capital through privatization (Birner, 2000). “Media is a place of social struggle. Images are privileging certain meanings and making others invisible “(Ellsworth, 2008). New trends in media activism acknowledge that there isn’t a need to “make change” but rather recognize that change is already occurring, and to assemble the ideas that are emerging and give them agency through their mass publication via modern technology that is accessible and affordable.
ICT projects around distance education and media literacy may not show direct economic benefit, but are key components in growing the potential for increased social capital by harnessing media’s ability to transmit cultural symbols and to interpolate a fragmented society into tight-nit community groups.

The concept of Monitorial Citizenship (Schudson, 1999, ExtremeMedia.Org, 2008) and place based narratives (Lippard, 1997) merge together in a post modern world that seeks to eliminate the ‘misinformed’ consumer and replace it with a change model based upon networks of micro knowledge from a multicultural and multicentered perspective. The idea of oppositional texts has been displaced in favor of a system of flow and modulation where content producers can amplify and give agency to new ideas (Ellsworth, 2008).
While there are some case studies that illustrate how the development of social capital can be utilized to create political capital (Birner, 2000) for the purposes of environmental conservation, It is too early to tell what the long-term impacts of community informatics and DIY media initiatives will have on the global marketplace. More research needs to be done to develop a meaningful index of measurements in this area.

What we do know is that online communities have the potential to enable social interaction and embody a shared value system and a shared symbol system (Rheingold, 1991). We know that active participation can directly impact business by shaping consumer attitudes and behaviors, and we know that social capital is a key development element within the global economy.

Fukuyama (2002) writes, “Social capital directly affects the ability of people to organize for economic ends; it supports the creation of institutions and the rule of law; and is a vital underpinning of democracy, which is the source of legitimacy for the political framework in which development increasingly takes place.” Fukuyama stresses that the absence of social capital is an impediment to economic sustainability.

Both Fukuyama (2002) and Young (2008) describe the process of “Neo Liberalism” as one where there is an emphasis on privatization and decentralized control of physical resources. Literature about globalization makes note of the fundamental change from a system where there is centralized control of dispersed production (Young, 2008), such as the limitations placed upon timber harvest and agriculture production prior to the 1970’s (Woolf, 2007), to a market based system with new international ‘actors ‘entering the market with mass production facilities consolidated into smaller geographic regions. The net result of globalization has been one of consolidation of small producers into large corporate conglomerates with many communities unable to support a diverse marketplace of stores and services. While Young expresses a viewpoint that Neo Liberalism is responsible for destabilizing local economies by removing government and corporate responsibilities to local communities, Fukuyama argues that the failure of Neo Liberalism is due to a failure to understand the significance of social capital in the adoption of change. A survey of social-economic literature on the topic globalization reveals the complex interplay of social, physical and financial capital that is controlled through political processes. It seems that electronic communication technology has led to consolidated industrial production and the loss of social capital in communities where unemployment or under employment has increased. In addition to this, the entertainment aspect of broadcast media has interrupted leisure time and decreased levels of participation in fraternal organizations (Putnam, 2000)

From a media studies research perspective; the realms of social and political capital are the spheres in which Community Informatics can have the greatest influence. The most critical element within social capital is that of trust. Fukuyama explains that Latin American communities are based upon strong family networks of businesses that are distrustful of any outside investment, which makes it difficult for these countries to actively participate in the global economy and leads to political corruption because their community is built upon a system of nepotism. This example illustrates how a region may have strong community institutions and yet still fail economically due to an inability to interconnect with outside organizations.

Most developing countries actually have an abundance of social capital in the form of kinship groups or traditional social groups like lineages, tribes, or village associations. What they lack are more modern, broad-radius organizations that connect across traditional ethnic, class, or status boundaries and serve as the basis for modern political and economic organizations. Seen from this perspective, many traditional groups embodying one form of social capital can actually be obstacles to development, because they are too insular or resistant to change(Fukuyama, 2002).

The United State’s own success within the global economy is questionable and currently receiving strong criticism. Economic data points to a polarity of wealth among communities and individuals and a general decrease in social capital(Margolin, 2006, Putnum, 2000). Putnam attempts to quantify the decline of American social capital by measuring the level of active participation within social organizations and charting the increase of distrust within the general population. Putnam theorizes that some cause of our own lethargy comes from,” the changes in scale that have swept over the American economy in these years--illustrated by the replacement of the corner grocery by the supermarket and now perhaps of the supermarket by electronic shopping at home, or the replacement of community-based enterprises by outposts of distant multinational firms--may perhaps have undermined the material and even physical basis for civic engagement.”

While Fukuyama argues that financial capital cannot be developed without the cultivation of social capital and cites Putnam extensively, Casey (2002) disputes the importance of Social Capital by itself. His research indicated that social capital had no measurable impact on economic growth within American communities. He argues that too much emphasis has been placed on social capital rather than financial and physical capital. He concludes that an entrepreneurial human spirit is the single most significant factor in determining economic vitality within a community. Young (2008) illustrates how Governments are adopting entrepreneurial community development policies as they pull out of direct control over communities and their physical resources. ICT projects are increasingly charged with developing entrepreneurial components such as e-commerce sites that promote local products and services (see Shopthefrontier.org). A bottom-up model has replaced the top-down corporate and government management structure of communities. Neither has proven overly effective in sustaining the well being of the citizens within these disadvantaged regions.
Without agreeing with any of these theories we can deduce that a new framework for evaluating the sustainability of any community must include an evaluation of the social, physical, financial and political capital within the community. From the research we can see how financial capital translates into political influence, and the assertion of control over physical capital through privatization of resources, and we can now see examples of where a high degree of ‘interconnected’ social capital can be transformed into political capital in defense of public space (Birner 2000).

One role of new media is creating and exchanging cultural symbols that give agency to marginalized subcultures. The success of Community Informatics rests on the cultivation of ‘interconnected’ social capital. Essentially the research has revealed the need for community informatics initiatives to expand beyond universal access, distance education, and the enhancement of services within individual agencies. Design of ICT projects should be fundamentally based on the development of social capital through the expansion of access to external networked communities. The strength of a church (or social services agency) should not be measured by the participation of its congregation, but rather by its interactions with other churches of other denominations. The expansion of media content production within a CI initiative will have its greatest effect through the amplification of diverse voices. Fukuyama expresses this best by writing:
“Sociologist Mark Granovetter has observed that it is often the heterogeneous member of a network, or the individual within it with weak ties and broken affinities, who serves as the conduit for new ideas and information into a closed group.9 A society with many loose and overlapping networks may be more economically efficient than one with many static, self-regarding ones.” (Fukuyama, 2002 Pg. 31)

A criticism of Putnum and Fukuyama could be made that previous measurements of social capital were limited to homogenous institutions, which lack the ability to translate their social equity into political or financial capital. I propose that there should be a new comprehensive framework for evaluating the sustainability of a community and subsequently the success of community development initiatives based upon Community Informatics. This framework for assessment would include:
  1. Active participation within a community (physical and virtual)
  2. A more effective measurement of social capital would look beyond the level of active participation, and emphasize trust, and the strength and variety interconnections with other networked communities.
  3. Evaluation of the public policies that control the physical capital within the community. Measurements would include looking at the balance between public and private influence over political processes and the potential conversion of social and financial capital into political capital.
  4. Evaluation of financial capital markets in terms of its capacity to nurture growth of social capital and public physical capital within the communities they operate.
  5. Evaluation of entrepreneurial potential through a measurement of education, access to financial capital, and physical resources.
  6. Creation of a statistical “empowerment” index similar to PARECON’s balanced job theory (Albert, 2003) that compares communities based upon a more complex measurement as outlined above in addition to the standard economic measurements for employment, productivity, and personal income.
The online community is an expansion of the imagined community that is fostering new forms of sociability and is offering new opportunities for interactively defining our identities, with the potential to effect change through the growth of social capital. Early efforts to create financial capital through e-commerce models have had minimal positive results in terms of empowering individual Internet users and marginalized communities and have merely represented a further expansion of existing capital markets into cyberspace. Thus far, we are unable to effectively measure the potential for change through online community development because we currently lack a full understanding of the dynamic interplay of social, political, financial and physical spheres within mediated environments. By developing a more complex framework for measuring community development through CI initiatives we will better understand how to more effectively utilzie ICT systems for the development of sustainability within physical communities that have been marginalized by globalization.

Sources:
Albert, M. (2003). PARECON: Life after Capitalism. New York and London: Verso Available: http://www.zcommunications.org/zparecon/pareconlac.htm

Alkalimat, A., Williams, Kate (2001) “Social Capital and Cyberpower in the African American Community: A Case Study of a Community Technology Center in the Dual City”. In Keeble, L., Loader, B. (Eds.) Community Informatics: Community Development Through the Use of Information and Communication Technlogies. London: Routledge

Anderson, B. (1991) Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of
Nationalism. London: Verso. Available: http://books.google.com/books?id=4mmoZFtCpuoC&printsec=copyright&dq=Imagined+communities:+Reflections+on+the+origin+and+spread+of+nationalism - PPA9,M1

Benjamin, W. (1996) “One Way Street,” trans Edmund Jephcott, in Walter Benjamin: Selected Writings, Volume 1, 1913-1926, ed Marcus Bullock and Michael W. Jennings, Cambridge and London: Harvard UP

Birner, R., Wittmer, H. (2000). “Converting Social Capital into Political Captal: How do local communities gain political influence? A theoretical approach and empirical evidencefrom Thailand and Columbia”. Paper submitted to the 8th Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property (IASCP). Bloomington, Indiana

Bourgeois, D., & Horan, T. (2007). “A Design Theory Approach to Community Informatics: Community-Centered Development and Action Research Testing of Online Social Networking Prototype.” The Journal of Community Informatics [Online] 3:1. Available: http://www.ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/article/view/308

Casey, T. , (2002)."Social Capital and Economic Performance in the American States" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Boston Marriott Copley Place, Sheraton Boston & Hynes Convention Center, Boston, Massachusetts Online , November 28, 2002. Available: http://www.rose-hulman.edu/~casey1/US Social Capital (Casey-Christ).pdf

Ellsworth,E. (2008). “Extreme Media Studies”. Presentation to Understanding Media Studies Class on November 17th, 2008. New York: New School University.

Extreme Media Studies. (2008). Scans: Monitorial Citizenship. Retrieved November, 19th, 2008, from: http://www.extrememediastudies.org/extreme_media/3_monitorial/index.php

Feenberg, A., Bakardjieva,M. (2004). “Virtual Community: No ‘Killer Implication’ “. New Media & Society, 6:1, pp. 37-43

Fernback, J., & B. Thompson. (1995). Virtual communities: Abort, retry, failure? Based on a paper presented at the annual congress of the International Communication Association, Albuquerque, NM. Available: http://www.well.com/user/hlr/texts/VCcivil.html

Fox, S. (2004). “The New Imagined Community: Identifying and Exploring a Bidirectional Continuum Integrating Virtual and Physical Communities through the Community Embodiment Model”. Journal of Communication Inquiry. 28:1, pp. 47 – 62

Fukuyama, F. (2002). “Social Capital and Development: The Coming Agenda.” SAIS Review - Volume 22, Number 1, Winter-Spring 2002, pp. 23-37
Available: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/sais_review/v022/22.1fukuyama.pdf

Goodwin, I. (2008) “Community Informatics, Local Community and Conflict: Investigating Under-Researched Elements of a Developing Field of Study”. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Studies, 14:4, pp. 419 – 437

Hearn, G., Kimber, M., Lennie, J., & Simpson, L. (2005) “A Way Forward: Sustainable ICTs And Regional Sustainability.” The Journal of Community Informatics [Online] 1:2. Available: http://ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/article/view/201

Kim, A. (2000). Community Building On The Web. Berkely: Peachpit Press

Jerke, N. (2001). E-Commerce Developer’s Guide to Building Community and Using Promotional Tools. San Francisco: Sybex

Lippard, L. (1997) Lure of the Local: Senses of Place in a Multicentered Society. New York: The New Press

Margolin, V. (2006) “Designing for a World in Need”. Position Statements & Resource Reviews. Australian Graphic Design Association (AGDA) Retrieved November 20th, 2008. Available: http://research.agda.com.au/library/group/1202871812_document_01_margolin.pdf

McLuhan, M. (1964) Understanding Media: the Extensions of Man. New York: McGraw-Hill

Naughton,J. (2006). “Blogging and the emerging media ecosystem”. Background paper for an invited seminar to Reuters Fellowship, University of Oxford, November 8, 2006.

Ong, W. (1982) Orality and Literacy: Technologizing the Word. New York: Methuen.

Parkinson, S., Ramirez, R., (2006). “Using a Sustainable Livelihoods Approach to Assessing the Impact of ICTs in Development”. The Journal of Community Informatics, 2:3

Postman, N. (1985) Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Showbusiness. New York: Viking.

Postman, N. (1994) The Disappearance of Childhood, New York: Vintage Books

Proulx, S., & Latzko-Toth, G. (2005). “Mapping the Virtual in Social Sciences: On the Category of ‘Virtual Community’”. The Journal of Community Informatics [Online] 2:1. pp 42-52 Available: http://ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/article/view/237

Putnam, R. (2000). Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American
Community New York: Simon and Schuster

Rheingold, H. (1993). The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier. New York: Addison-Wesley. Available: http://www.rheingold.com/vc/book/

Ripamonti, L., De Cindio, F., & Benassi, M. (2005). “Online communities sustainability: some economic issues’ . The Journal of Community Informatics [Online] 1:2. Available: http://ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/article/view/221

Schudson. M (1999) The Good Citizen: A History of American Civic Life.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press

Simpson, L. (2005). “Community Informatics and Sustainability: Why Social Capital Matters.” The Journal of Community Informatics [Online] 1:2. pp. 102-119 Available: http://ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/article/view/210

Space Shank Media. (2008). LonelyGirl15 Creators Not So Lonely Anymore. Retrieved November 27th, 2008 from: http://www.spaceshank.com/blog/2008/10/01/lonelygirl15-creators-not-so-lonely-anymore/

Supply Chain Management. (2008). A Brief History of Outsourcing. Retrieved November 27th, 2008 from: http://scm.ncsu.edu/public/facts/facs060531.html

Turkle S. (1995) Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet. New York: Touchstone

Urstadt,B (2008, July/August) “Social Networking
Is Not a Busmness”. Technology Review. MIT pp 36-43

Wenger, E., R. McDermott, and W.M. Snyder (2002). Cultivating communities of practice - A guide to managing knowledge. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.

Wiertz, C., de Ruyter, K., (2007). “Beyond the Call of Duty: Why Customers Contribute to Firm-hosted Commercial Online Communities”. Organization Studies, 28:3, pp 347–376

Williams, J., Wallace, C., & Sligo, F. (2005). “Free internet as agent of community transformation”. The Journal of Community Informatics [Online] 2:1. Available: http://ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/article/view/234

Williams, M. (2007). “The Cult of the Mohicans: American Fans on
the Electronic Frontier”. The Journal of Popular Culture, 40:3, pp 526-554
The development of fan sites (virtual Communities)

Woolf, A. (Producer), & Cheney, I, & Ellis, C. (Screenwriter/Director). (2007). King Korn [Motion Picture]. United States: Mosaic.

Young, N. (2008) “Radical NeoLiberalism in British Columbia: Remaking Rural Geographies”. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 33:1