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|||GET||| Here Comes Everybody the Power of Organizing Without HERE COMES EVERYBODY THE POWER OF ORGANIZING WITHOUT ORGANIZATIONS 1ST EDITION DOWNLOAD FREE Clay Shirky | 9781594201530 | | | | | Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations He acknowledges that many individuals seek to disrupt cooperative efforts look at spammers, or "trolls" on mailing lists, for instance. It's a serious lack in the book that this doesn't come up. An extraordinary exploration of how technology can empower social and political organizers For the first time in history, the tools for cooperating on a global scale are not solely in the hands of governments or institutions. Categories : non-fiction books Community building Group processes Penguin Press books Technology books Works about Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition information economy. Escape the Present with These 24 Historical Romances. If you give them more Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition a reason to do something, they will do more of it, and if you make it easier to do more of something they are already inclined to do, they will also do more of it. In the end, though, the book is a collection of sharp, highly readable thinking about not just the possibilities, but also the hard truths, surrounding new communication technologies. He employs the widespread adoption of the printing press and moveable type as an example of a previous world-changing technological Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition, which has been one of the most contentious historical examples with which social scientists examining technology have bludgeoned each other. Highly recommended for anyone interested in how the web is impacting social interaction. They tolerate them because they have to; the alternative is institutional collapse. They share their story online, in order to vent. There's a whole lot more going on there, and people of all generations are beginning to figure that out. Here, we encounter a whoman who loses her phone and recruits an army of volunteers to get it back from the person who stole it. Here Comes Everybody is an important counterpoint to those who think that social networking is just a popularity contest for kids, or who bemoan the "narcissism" of people who put their information into MySpace. Clay Shirky has a very good grasp of how the internet, and particularly social media, is changing society. Society is not just the product of its individual members; it is also the product of its constituent groups. This "failure"concept first occurred to me in about, oh or so, when I went to the Newport Music Hall in Columbus to see Nazareth. To view it, click here. Drawing from anthropology, economic theory and keen observation, [Shirky] makes a strong case that new communication tools are making once-impossible forms of group action possible. The hallmark of revolution is that the goals of the revolution cannot be contained by the institutional structure of the existing society. Condition: New. A discussion of media channels completely failed to even hint at the existence of community-based and -generated media pre-Internet. This book argues through stories what people thought technology was going to do back inbut it never exactly did. A book that describes the exciting new text-messaging service called Twitter can only be described as quaint, but I see how it would have been revolutionary at the time of publication. Those tools are still the leaders in social media but he could just as easily have written this five years ago using Friendster, Yahoo Group This may be one of the best ethnographies of our time. There is the entire book in a nutshell. As we saw in the saga of the lost Sidekick, getting the free and ready participation of a large, distributed group with a variety of skills—detective work, legal advice, insider information from the police to the army—has gone from impossible to simple. Shirky's academic background shines without him being smug and obfuscating. Shelves: nonfiction. The author addresses the way social media sites give people the tools to act, but emphasizes its the design of the tool, along with other sometimes unforeseen circumstances, that allow people to mobilize and create an impact. Another thing I found fascinating is that a lot of its pages start out as 'stubs'. Another aspect of modern communication that was explored was the collapse between amateur and professional in several areas of life. Convert currency. This is a very good book to inform people about the way that the internet changes how people Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition. Views Read Edit View history. In that case, we can't Perhaps one of the most important things that I garnered from this book is the switch we are undergoing from a vertical hierarchy to something much more spread out and amorphous. But watching people try is always enlightening. Seller Rating:. In my observations, this is turning us lazy and relegating us to the lowest common denominator. Yes, this will probably change how our society functions. There is massive disparity between those on the internet whose work is popular verus not so popular. From Facebook to Wikipedia to Goodreads, smart people are putting out these ingenious structures for users around the world to discover. I've now returned it to the library. He uses this analogy only talking about people sitting through bad movies for the same reasons people don't pull the plug on projects that obviously aren't working. We have always relied on group effort for survival; even before the invention of agriculture, hunting and gathering required coordinate work and division of labor. ISBN 13: 9780143114949 This includes not only our business relations but extends insidiously to all our relationships, including our intimate ones. Clay's a great storyteller, and chooses his stories wisely to drive home the points of how much things have changed in a decade. We haven't had all the groups we've wanted, we've simply had all the groups we could afford. The link to the site gets passed from friend to friend, then on to Myspace, and then to Digg. These changes will transform the world everywhere groups of people come together to accomplish something, which is to say everywhere. He suggests that our control over technological adoption is limited—comparing the progress of the information age to steering a kayak. It's a great overview of the various movements and episodes they've inspired who thought I'd look upon Twitter with such respect? Even cults, the high-water mark of surrender of individuality to a group, can't hold a candle to a beehive in terms of absolute social integration; this makes us different from creatures whose sociability is more enveloping than ours. A dissatisfied airline passenger who spawns a national movement by taking her case to the web. I am personally always blown over by the generosity of people on the internet, and the amazing access to information that is there for the asking, and Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition enjoyed these parts of the book. Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition, we are bombarded with evidence that people are fearful and greedy and mean-spirited and that many people couldn't give a flying fuck about meaningful connection. This book argues through stories what people thought technology was going to do back inbut it never exactly did. Shirky doesn't Here Comes Everybody The Power of Organizing Without Organizations 1st edition much with inequities in access to these communications tools. Move past the somewhat clickbaity beginning and you'll discover a thorough, well argumented, and accessible commentary of why social media isn't like traditional media, and a balanced, non The book starts with a story on how some guy retrieved his friend's stolen phone through the power of social media. Jan 27, Bernard O'Leary rated it really liked it. I hope he writes a book about what just happened in Showing Shirky was the original Professor of New Media in the Media Studies department at Hunter College, where he created the department's first undergraduate and graduate offerings in new media, and helped design the current MFA in Integrated Media Arts program. Readers also enjoyed. In a way, every institution lives in a kind of contradiction: it exists to take advantage of group effort, but some of its resources are drained away by directing that effort. The beauty of open source and the socialistic nature of the Web allows the next generation of social media to learn from the first generation and create increasingly effective tools. Shelves: nonfiction. Welcome back. This article is about the book. This led the book to be dry and boring to me. All in all I found this an interesting read. New technologies and social media sites may be changing the globe, but that change is top down, from wealthy countries to poor countries; from certain classes within countries, and there's a set of power relations being appropriated and expanded there that Skirky's book doesn't address. You don't need to read it any further everyone! Jan 18, Diego Leal rated it it was ok. We've already seen this effect in the tools that Evan used—a webpage for communicating with the world, instant messages and e-mails by the thousands among his readers, and the phone itself, increasingly capable of sending messages and pictures to groups of people, not just to a single recipient the historical pattern of phone use.
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