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<id>tag:www.pbs.org,2009:/idealab//31/tag:dipsy.pbs.org,2008:/idealab_test_blogs//31.4302-</id>
<updated>2009-10-19T21:48:48Z</updated>
<title>Comments for Fragmentation of Media is Democratization of Media: Retaining Reach</title>
<subtitle>Idea Lab is a group blog by innovators who are reinventing community news for the Digital Age.</subtitle>
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<published>2008-03-17T11:50:23Z</published>
<updated>2009-01-05T22:14:30Z</updated>
<title>Fragmentation of Media is Democratization of Media: Retaining Reach</title>
<summary>Oso uses a German pilot&apos;s statement that he would not have shot down the author of the Little Prince, had he known, to ask: Will Global Voices&apos; coverage of Iranian bloggers have any influence one way or the other on a potential US invasion? It is comforting to think that it could, but realistically, I doubt it. (I&apos;m going to project a little there and clarify that it&apos;s comforting to think it could prevent a U.S. attack- which would probably be in the form of Guernica-esque bombing, rather than a land invasion.) Oso concludes: the fragmentation of media is part...</summary>
<author>
<name>Benjamin Melançon</name>
<uri>http://agaricdesign.com/</uri>
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<category term="Government &amp; Politics" />

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<![CDATA[<p>Oso <a href="http://el-oso.net/blog/archives/2008/03/16/the-death-of-saint-exupry-the-death-of-the-little-prince/"> uses a German pilot's statement that he would not have shot down the author of the Little Prince, had he known</a>, to ask:</p>

<blockquote>Will Global Voices' coverage of Iranian bloggers have any influence one way or the other on a potential US invasion? It is comforting to think that it could, but realistically, I doubt it.</blockquote>

<p>(I'm going to project a little there and clarify that it's comforting to think it could <em>prevent</em> a U.S. attack- which would probably be in the form of Guernica-esque bombing, rather than a land invasion.)</p>

<p>Oso concludes:</p>

<blockquote>the fragmentation of media is part of the democratization of media, an important step forward. But as more and more and more content comes to us, will we ever form a relationship with it like we did with the Little Prince?</blockquote>

<p>This blurs relationship and reach a little.  Yes, some of us are getting information from so many sources we may be less likely to form a relationship with any of them.  However, more of us will probably form a close connection, a relationship similar to and potentially richer than that of readers of the Little Prince, with one or more of these many sources.</p>

<p>For me the real question is how many people will a given voice, a voice that may really matter, reach?</p>

<p>If Global Voices and other media providing connections to the people of Iran reached most people in the United States - as many who hear the Bush regime's ghost tales -  it could stop another tragic, chosen war of aggression.  </p>

<p>To have both democratization - with its fragmentation - <em>and</em> reach, I propose (tirelessly, I think is the polite way to say it) a solution in which we all take responsibility to do a little bit of the filtering.  A fresh sample of people drawn from a wider network can decide for each item what will have the widest reach.  Democratic communication, publishing by jury - call it what you will - a network for news and information controlled by nobody and everybody is a unifying force necessary to make more media from more sources a transformational force.</p>]]>

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<id>tag:dipsy.pbs.org,2008:/idealab_test_blogs//31.4302-comment:41305</id>
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<title>Comment from Jeanmarie Amend on 2008-03-20</title>
<author>
<name>Jeanmarie Amend</name>
<uri>http://www</uri>
</author>
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Creativity requires intense concentration; love, power of mind.
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<published>2008-03-21T02:37:58Z</published>
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