Archive pour la catégorie ‘Politics’

YouTube gate

Jeudi 31 mai 2007

Maroc Telecom

As you may know, I am currently in Morocco for my internship in a publishing company.

While surfing on the web yesterday, I got amazed by the breakdown of Youtube servers. For the very first time since I know this site, not a single Youtube videoclip was working (neither embedded videos, nor those on YouTube website). As a customer-care maniac, I was quite upset by this. I tried Dailymotion (which was perfectly working), but unfortunately, the videoclip I was looking for was not available on it.

Investigating the web for more information about this, I learnt that YouTube had been blocked by my ISP. Only Maroc Telecom (the historic telephone operating company in Morocco, subsidiary of Vivendi) customers were concerned, the two other ISPs kept granting access to the website and its videoclips . Resistance against this was organizing, many websites linking to proxies to access YouTube. The buzz around this case was so high (crossing borders to France), that Maroc Telecom brought back access to the website yesterday evening.

To protest against censorship, I show you the dissident video I was looking for, another excellent live performance of Ben Folds (during the concert he gave broadcasted live on his MySpace page):
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9qa_c-UYSs]

French Presidential Election: Democracy 2.0

Mardi 2 janvier 2007

2007 will be a crucial year in France, since for the first time, both favorite candidates are running their first presidential campaign. Ségolène Royale, 53, used to be an outsider facing her fellow elders in the Socialist Party, and Nicolas Sarkozy, 52, came out with his presidential ambitions only 3 years ago. It is a real revolution in the french political landscape, where presidents often run several polls before being elected. On top of inherent good communication skills, both of them knew how to benefit from new communication channels.

New generation of candidates brings new means of communication. My friend Jeremy (the Tech IT Easy guy) found a good definition of Web 2.0 : “Web 2.0 companies are companies smart enough to make users do the job.” That’s exactly the point of this presidential campaign. The UMP (Sarkozy’s rightwing party) website provides the militants with free space and interface to create their own campaign blog. On Royal’s Socialist Party website, you can subscribe to take part in the pre-election socialist participative debates.

Well, make users do the job, but be receptive to their signals. Remember your economics lessons: There’s no such thing as a free lunch. The internet is not simply a mean to reach more audience. Allowing bilateral communication, it needs to be used bilaterally. There’s nothing more disapointing than a politician’s blog only fed by militants (and most of them are in this case). Such websites only reach a militant base already convinced (pro or con). That’s precisely what Royal understood starting her controversed participative debates. On the internet, Sarkozy (who early pointed at new media assets) posted a comment on Mathieu Kassovitz’s blog defending his policy as Minister of the Interior.

The web will play a major role in this presidential campaign, as it has been playing so far. Remember Royal controversed off the record videos posted on YouTube, Sarkozy advertising on Google, new year greetings on their respective websites. All these processes are not new, the new thing is the buzz it generates (and which, for sure, is not gonna decrease). You now can adress directly your policy-makers, they can answer your questions. You can contribute to the debate on your blog, be a journalist posting your own videos on Youtube. Good or bad shift, welcome to Democracy 2.0.