Categories
Library Issues

Responding to comment…

…from the ever-insightful Eli over at Mad Librarian. She left a thoughtful comment on my post about Gormangate, and I wanted to get some thoughts out in response.

Eli in blockquotes:

Digitization can democratize information, it does allow for greater, broader and for the end user, cheaper access to information [my cynical side says that very little information is truly free and it’s more a question of how much gets subsidized, and whether the costs spread across a given community, but that’s what I get for hanging out with special librarians].

Of course, “free” here means something like “of such low individual cost as to be non-important” but your point is taken. I do believe, however, that digitization is a democratizing force in information interaction in much the same way that the printing press was a democratizing technology for information interaction. Potentially moreso.

I suppose my point (other than the one on top of my head) is that the devil is in the details when it comes to digitization, particularly in the current climate. There are many and great benefits to the process, but not all of them are automatic. Digitizing content doesn’t help people on the other side of the digital divide get to it, our current copyright climate encourages content owners to make material less available for the exercise of fair use rights (and first sale seems to be a dead issue entirely for digital material) and on the whole, it’s about as easy to lock down or “disappear” digital content as it is to do the same with “analog” works. And I have a one-word example for you: Elsevier.

I suppose that I am just enough of an optimist to see these hurdles as short term, given a wide view of the problem. The digital divide is there, of course, but is shrinking daily (and of course I believe that libraries have an enormous role in this…providing open computer access to patrons, playing the lead role in the cost spreading of the information in digital repositories, etc…). You have a pretty good idea how I stand on copyright issues, and any longtime reader of my blog should know (if not, I’ll refer you here or here). I cannot imagine a situation where, over the next 20-30 years and our generation begins to move into positions of power within the country, that the current copyright regime can hold. There will be a radical overthrow of the current legal understanding of copyright, and it will involve a re-definition of fair use with digital content at the core of the understanding of it, first sale rights will be reimagined…I left a comment on Justin‘s blog a while ago that underlined a bit of what I think is coming:

Add in the bit about “Content creators will rise up against the business interests of the RIAA/MPAA and demand that copyright law be brought into a more sensible form. The next generation of lawmakers will incorporate the Creative Commons licenses into US Copyright law, adding provisions for code as well as consumable media. This will spawn a remix culture that will sweep the globe, pushing the US out of the center of the entertainment industry and relocating it in China, India, and the former Soviet Union.”

I completely agree that Elsevier is the devil, though.

Categories
Digital Culture

Where did all my traffic go?

So over the last two weeks, I’ve noticed a HUGE drop (like…75%) in traffic to my blog. I used to average 40+ a day, and the last week or so I’m down to 10-15 hits a day. I’ve check my google ranking, and looked over my referrals…but I’m not seeing anything obvious. Clearly I fell off someone/somethings radar.

Whats up with that, Intarweb? (thanks for the spelling correction, Justin).

Ah well…we’ll just work on doing better, and not post anymore about the blog itself. 😛

Categories
Digital Culture Library Issues

Michael Gorman vs Blogosphere

Well, the ALA President_Elect has certainly stuck his foot in an orifice with his recent comments on blogs and bloggers in Library Journal. He’s getting feedback from all over the ‘net, including Instapundit and Slashdot, arguable the two most read blogs in the world. LISNews has covered it, of course, and it’s all the rage on the various library listservs that I’m subscribed to. Other places of note: Jessamyn, Karen Schneider, and FrazzledDad. EDIT: More great stuff from Jessamyn. FURTHER EDIT: Here’s Metafilter’s take on it, with comments from all over.

Gorman’s response is that it was supposed to be satirical. Here are just a couple of noteworthy quotes from his “satirical” writing:

Until recently, I had not spent much time thinking about blogs or Blog People…I had heard of the activities of the latter and of the absurd idea of giving them press credentials (though, since the credentials were issued for political conventions, they were just absurd icing on absurd cakes). I was not truly aware of them until shortly after I published an op-ed piece in the Los Angeles Times (“Google and God’s Mind,” December 17, 2004).

Yeah…press credentials. Absurd idea. Bloggers have had no real impact on news stories this year or anything. Much less bloggers covering political conventions. And don’t get me started about his comments on Google from the article that is mentioned above. He’s as profoundly mistaken about that as he is about blogging. I hope that he’s aware that Google and OCLC are working together, and that Google can point people to libraries in order to find the book they need.

It turns out that the Blog People (or their subclass who are interested in computers and the glorification of information) have a fanatical belief in the transforming power of digitization and a consequent horror of, and contempt for, heretics who do not share that belief.

I’ll admit that his use of “Blog People” instead of the correct term, “blogger” might be support for his claim of satire. It just comes across sounding condescending. And I’ll be proud to count myself in the numbers of those that “have a fanatical belief in the transforming power of digitization and a consequent horror of, and contempt for, heretics who do not share that belief.” Many, many people have shown that digitization changes everything about access to information. It democratizes information, it allows for nearly costless access to information that previously would be impossible to use, it allows for transformative uses that no one ever considered before…I’m again just befuddled at his lack of understanding of the power of this stuff. It comes across like the people who, upon the invention of the telephone, couldn’t begin to understand why people would ever use one (originally it was thought that telephones would be used for educational and entertainment..piping in lessons or music to the home).

Given the quality of the writing in the blogs I have seen, I doubt that many of the Blog People are in the habit of sustained reading of complex texts. It is entirely possible that their intellectual needs are met by an accumulation of random facts and paragraphs. In that case, their rejection of my view is quite understandable.

Clearly Mr. Gorman is not particularly familiar with Sturgeon’s Law, because if he was he would know that given the quality of writing of ANYTHING, 90% of it is terrible. As well, Jessamyn points out that this seems to imply that we’re all running to random places and soaking it all in as the One Truth. Yes, lots of blogs are terrible. But if you actually use some information literacy skills and seperate the wheat from the chafe, you end up with the ability to stay current on much, much more than was ever before possible. RSS and aggregators are intrinsically changing the way that information is presented, filtered, and absorbed. Failure to realize this fact will leave someone like Mr. Gorman happily fiddling while Rome burns around him.

Finally, my favorite comment from the Slashdot conversation on this debacle:

A blog is a species of interactive electronic diary by means of which the unpublishable, untrammeled by editors or the rules of grammar, can communicate their thoughts via the web.

If the President of the ALA has such a low opinion of bloggers, perhaps his organization should stop giving so many major awards to them.

I think what he actually meant to say was something along the lines of:

“A blog is a species of interactive electronic diary by means of which the unpublishable — except for ALA literary award winners such as Orson Scott Card [ornery.org] or Neil Gaiman [neilgaiman.com] or Sherwood Smith [livejournal.com] or David Brin [blogspot.com] or Jane Yolen [janeyolen.com] or Dianne Duane [blogspot.com] or, oh, bugger, you know, all those other ALA award-winning authors who also blog, not that I want to imply that ALA award-winning librarians who blog, like Kathleen de la Peña McCook [blogspot.com], are bad either, and oh, yeah, I definitely don’t want to seem to be criticizing PLABlog [plablog.org], the brand new blog of the Public Library Association [pla.org], especially not when we put out a nifty little press release [ala.org] crowing about it, just last month, because that would look pretty stupid, now, wouldn’t it — er, um, what was I saying, again?”

EVEN FURTHER EDIT: So people are now digging up different quotes that Gorman has made in different publications about blogging/bloggers. Here’s one found by Rachel Singer Gordon on the NEXTGEN list:

“Unfortunately, if there are writers of genius, or talent, or even basic competence out there blogging, I have yet to find them. In the early heady days of the Internet, we were promised that, in the future, everyone could be published. Alas, that promise is being fulfilled, which should remind us all to be wary of what we wish for” (Our Own Selves: More Meditations for Librarians. Chicago: ALA, 2005:208).

And this guy is an example of a librarian that the rest of the world is going to use to judge our profession. *sigh*

Categories
Digital Culture

The path to learning starts…

…when you realize you know nothing.

*sigh*

I’m actively working as a “web specialist” for whatever that title is worth. But when I read about things like ajax web development, or PHP image functions, or even just browse through Justin’s blog and see what some people are doing with web design (this site is unreal…transparency, animated background, variable graphics on posts, and all with XHTML and Javascript…no Flash or other plugin necessary. All that is necessary is a standards compliant browser [sorry IE]). I could no more write this stuff than juggle elephants. I feel like I understand it, and I can champion it, even find novel ways to use it and instruct people about it…but I feel like I should learn how to DO it. Any tips on teaching a logical but otherwise underqualified web guy how to learn ajax, or even javascript in general?

Categories
Digital Culture

I give you…

The WikiPod. Such a great idea, especially if we can do specialized wikis, then tie them together with the wikipedia or something. A web of wikis…a WikiWeb. Or perhaps a Webiki.

Categories
Digital Culture

What’s up with the numbers?

The new hot title thing seems to be using non-round numbers for your lists on the web. We have 43 Folders, 11 Cool things that you can do with PHP, the 46 Best Freeware Utilities…I’ve noticed this for some time while browsing the del.icio.us popular list.

So I ask you, Interweb…WTF?

Categories
Digital Culture

Comments

I’m still struggling with comments here after the upgrade. If anyone reading would do me a favor and try and leave a comment. If it doesn’t go through, drop me a line and let me know. Gotta get some feedback and tweak settings on the damn thing.

Thanks in advance.

Categories
Digital Culture

Terry Gross is my hero!

Listen to Terry Gross verbally smack Lynn Cheney around on Fresh Air. Lynn Cheney (the wife of Dick Cheney) has written a couple of children’s books, one on history. Terry calls her out on a number of issues, from revisionist history, patriotism, the women’s movement to gay marriage and Lynn’s gay daughter. Terry actually gets Lynn Cheney to say, on the record, that she does not support a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Very interesting stuff.

Originally seen on Bookslut.

Categories
Digital Culture

Our new visitor…

Indi

Say hello to our new housemate, Indi. She’s a rescue that one of Betsy’s students found in the parking lot of a Wal-mart of all places. We agreed to foster her since the student got caught with her in the dorms, but I’m beginning to think that it may turn into an adoption more than a fostering. She’s soooooooooo cute! So far, she’s been wonderful. Once we see if the cats ever forgive us, we’ll have a better idea how she’s working out. EDIT: Here’s a few more pictures.

As to the name…lots of people have asked us about it. It originally sprang from a line from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, where Sean Connery tells Harrison Ford “We named the dog Indiana.” So…we named the dog Indiana. Plus, Indi can be short for Indigo, Indie music, or Indie Film, or just independent. So…Indi it is.

In reality, I just wanted an excuse to use my Sean Connery impression anytime someone asks me about her name. 😛

Categories
Digital Culture

The essense of my blog

As told by my search engine queries:

Feb. Referal log