Join us for the San Francisco Net Tuesday on September 9:
Involver: How Nonprofits Can Create Video Campaigns for Social Networks.
What happens when the social web collides with campaigning? How can we think about the new potential for advocacy? What happens when the cause escapes from the organizational box? is it something like Cloud Campaigning?
Social Innovation Camp - The Movie! You can almost smell the coffee and the over-heating laptops. Starts with credits to Netsquared for inspiration...
More backgound on the Camp at speed-startups for social impact and Live from Social Innovation Camp, the laboratory of buzz.
Social Innovation Camp happened this weekend, and it rocked.
Inspired by a mashup of netsquared, barcamps and seedcamp, it brought together a diverse bunch of hackers & social change activists to cook up prototype projects over the space of a weekend.
And it worked. People brought dedication, passion and skill. They had some fun. They went without much sleep.
Two things stood out for me; first, it proved (again) that the social web is a generative platform for social impact; and second, that it's possible to do events that go beyond talk and lead to real projects and social businesses. But of course, that's the business of netsquared as well :)
Our small organising collective is now recovering, er, aiming to help the projects sustain and grow. There'l be a lot of write-ups, inteviews, videos etc coming out of the camp - more of this later. In the mean time here's a flavour;
Posts by Bobbie Johnson, our embedded Media Guardian blogger:
My late-night half-way analysis; Live from Social Innovation Camp, the laboratory of buzz
A view from Yahoo Developers Network.
All the feeds from our backnetwork (warning: includes tweets!)
Videoclips and mini-interviews by David Wilcox at Qik
YouTube videos tagged with “sicamp” and “sicamp08“ (mostly by The People Speak team)
"Teamwork, Quick!" by participant Huey Nhan
Enthusiasm from a sponsor (which is nice!) at Accelerating Social Innovation: lessons from SiCamp where Roland Harwood says "On of the big lessons for me of the weekend was how limited organisation can unleash ideas, which is counter-intuitive for many".
A moment of mashup scepticism from the old skool activist side of my brain: The Unbearable Lightness of Mashups.
But I haven't read through the N2Y3 Mashup Challenge entries yet and I know i'm going to be knocked out by their inventiveness and impact. Keep it real.
Dan
What connects Saul Alinsky, Egypt and Twitter? An alternative take on Best of the Nonprofit Social Web for 2007.
Categories include:
This year's Scrooge Award goes to YouTube for their shameful suspension of Wael Abbas's account.
Watch out for the BarCamp-like 'Social Innovation Camp' in London in early March 2008, with it's Netsquare-inspired aspiration to 'remix nonprofits for social change'. Hopefully some of the ideas cooked up there will make it to next year's 'Best Of...'
"What do you think is the return on investment (ROI) of the social web for nonprofits?" is Britt Bravo 's latest Net2ThinkTank question. It's a hot topic for nonprofits and companies alike because of the time soaked up by tending social networking sites, but I think there's at least three dimensions to social web ROI for nonprofits, namely metrics, the paradigm shift and the new enclosures.
Non-profits aren't focussed on a financial return but they have a duty to use donations effectively. So it's good to see initiatives like frogloops ROI calculator for social network campaigns, which uses the tried & tested perspective of email marketing to calculate value for money. Metrics may be harder for the social web but nonprofits would be unwise not to try it - in part because the social web also leading to greater pressure for transparency.
Even when the return rates are low, nonprofits should be investing in social web experiments because they herald a paradigm shift in how people will organise to have a social impact. In Participatory Web for Development I described how an era of mass collaborative innovation will lead to new ways of tackling social issues. Either nonprofits take part, or they risk being left on the beach.
The big feature of the web 2.0 boom is the way that value generated by users is being cashed in by the site owners. As I warned in social networking and social change, one consequence can be nonprofits getting booted out if they get too 'controversial'. Monetisation of the social web is often done in a way that ignores the mass of contributors and threatens it's nature as a kind of common ground. As well as making creative use of this space we'll need to find collective ways to defend it. Mass investment of time, creativity and content implies a return for the common good.
One of the things that energised me about last year's Netsquared conference was buzz of community activity around Drupal. i had already experimented with Drupal as a basic CMS, but at Netsquared I met Drupal developers who shared a passion for web activism, and social activists who wanted to use Drupal in cool new ways. Looking back, I can see that my experiences of advocating for open source in NGOs seems to have been leading up to the Dot Org Boom that Netsquared represented (see also the blog post Drupal and the Dot Org Boom). However, a comment from David Geilhufe points out that
across the landscape of all these NGOs using open source software, there is no real open source strategy. No strategy for: (1) Ensuring your organization does not bear the maintainence/upgrade burden of your innovations exclusively. (2) Leveraging other groups with similar needs to jointly produce and maintain functionality needed by all.
i can see some signs that the twitter debate is moving beyond the cappucino-digerati and in to the world of social movements.
andy carvin's done a good post at Can Twitter Save Lives? and i've focussed more on field use in africa in Urgent Action IM Bots and Twitter for Darfur.
And i just heard today from a friend that social campaigning / subversive use of twitter was discussed over the w/end at Barcamp Bangalore
If anyone has any other ideas / examples then please leave a comment or contact me.
dan
I came away from last year's netsquared conference with the mashup bug; I wanted to see mashups for human rights. But one of the practical lessons i learned was that you need to expose structured data to seed a mashup, and that wasn't going to be easy at my work.
Just recently I've been mulling over the contrast between the neat way sites like Edgeio and Eventful pull together event listings, and the pretty random way that info about cyberdissidents gets scattered across the blogosphere. As I understand it, the event sites use microformats so I'm proposing the development of a Prisoner of Conscience Microformat.
I'd be interested in any feedback, especially on the geek aspect (will it work?). But, as the original post says, "The whole point of this somewhat geeky exercise is something very non-technical; to make it easier to construct online communities around prisoners of conscience, and to have ways of visualising and connecting that stir peoples' affinity and will to act".
I remember from last year's Netsquared conference my sense of excited anticipation at how the rest of the world would use all these groovy new tools once they spread beyond Silicon Valley :). I've just written a blog post about digital diasporas & human rights and I'd like to follow it with a look at the non-Western use of web 2.0 for social change. If you've got any good examples then please leave a comment or contact me.
Of course, one of the most interesting things about the architecture of participation is that people are just going to do it anyway, without waiting for NGO's to catch up. So allow me to draw your attention to Egypt and the way brave individuals like Wael Abbas & others have used Youtube to help leverage the first ever prosecutions of Egyptian police for torture. Sadly, this goes alongside the rather more widely known prosecution & imprisonment of Egyptian blogger Kareem Amer.
p.s. on a lighter note, I've been mulling over a quote from Celine Petrossian (who's research ‘Liberating the Silenced: Iranian Bloggers in the Diaspora’ I've referenced in my digital diasporas post). She says "Iranian bloggers serve as 'merchants' of culture and information, trading cultural knowledge and news from both Iran to the outside world and from the West to the Iranian people living in Iran." Does that mean that blogosphere maps like these show the new Silk Routes?