Today there’s a big push to make Internet Access a basic human right. In the US, the majority of us take freedom of speech (online and offline) for granted and we tune out the debates on heavy censorship that is commonplace in other countries. If you’re not aware of the kind of control and manipulation that’s happening in other places in the world, these two video interviews (back to back in the same video) will help bring you up to speed quickly. The first interview is with Rebecca MacKinnon, who is a former CNN journalist who headed the CNN bureaus in Beijing and later in Tokyo. Before leaving television to become a blogger and co-founder of Global Voices Online. She is now an Assistant Professor at the University of Hong Kong’s Journalism and Media Studies Center and lives in Hong Kong. The second interview is with Evgeny Morozov, who is currently a fellow at the Open Society Institute in New York. Previously, he was Director of New Media at the Prague-based NGO Transitions Online (TOL) and a columnist for the Russian newspaper Akzia (2003-2008).
Here’s a summary of the content that’s covered in the interviews. Enjoy.
- Internal Web Censorship In China & The Great Firewall of China
- Blogging In China
- Chinese Internet Police
- How Humor Slips Through The Cracks of Censorship
- Russian Internet Censorship
- Russian New Media and Government Manipulation
- In Depth on Hidden Censorship in Russia
- Economic Crisis’ Impact on China and Russia
- The Global Network Initiative
- Moving to Other Blogging Platforms, How Informed Citizens Are
- Humor can lead to Meaningful Action
- Web Questions
- Knowing Fake Commenters
- The Use of Anonymizers
- Web Use and the Secret Service on Web in Russia
- Penalty for Companies Not Censoring Content
- Mobile Trends
- Data Integration, Search Capacity In China
SlideShare announced the winners of its 3rd annual “Best Presentation in the World” contest today. A panel of business presentation expert judges selected one deck as the grand prize winner out of 3,750 entries from over 130 countries. That grand prize winner was titled Healthcare Napkins All and was created by visual communication specialist Dan Roam and Dr. Tony Jones. Whether or not you agree with the political perspective of this 51-slide presentation, you’ve got to admit it’s an impressive way to deliver information.
Enjoy.
Couldn’t make the Gov 2.0 summit or Expo this year? No sweat. O’Reilly has posted 76 videos from the event on YouTube, and they’re free as free can be. How much do you love the social web?! Seriously.
In these videos you’ll find brilliant people discussing remarkable new possibilities and business models for reshaping our political culture, our economy and our government. The emerging themes across all of the Gov 2.0 topics this year focus around principles of participation, collaboration, transparency, and efficiency to address the challenges facing our country and the world. I hope the video channel embedded below will wet your appetite and encourage you to open up to new ideas and new ways of thinking about how government works and how we can make it better. If you really want to dive in with both feet first (and why wouldn’t you?), head over to gov2summit.com and drink from the firehose.













