DIGITAL AND ONLINE ACTIVISM
Increasing accessibility and the ability
to communicate with thousands of citizens quickly has made the internet a tool
of choice for individuals or organizations looking to spread a social message
far and wide. Independent activists the world over are using the internet and
digital tools to build their community, connect with other similar-minded
people outside their physical surroundings as well as lobby, raise funds and
organize events.
The Tools
The tools used by digital activists are vast and the list
changes constantly in line with the rapid general evolution of technology.
Online petitions.
Websites such as Change.org and MoveOn.org are hubs of online
activism, where people can communicate with others worldwide regarding their
cause. MoveOn.org initially grew from a small petition that two Silicon Valley
entrepreneurs sent to some family and friends in the late ‘90s, asking for
their support in telling the White House to “move on” from the Bill Clinton and
Monica Lewinsky scandal to more pressing issues facing the country.
Social networks.
Sites with high usage numbers such as Facebook and YouTube have
proven beneficial in spreading a message, garnering support, shining
information on a subject that might otherwise be overlooked by mainstream
media. Protests in 2011 in Tunisia and Egypt against their respective
governments were in part organized and promoted via Facebook.
Blogs.
Essentially a form of citizen journalism for the masses, blogs
provide an effective means of non-filtered communication with an audience about
any topic and have been used in numerous online campaigns.
Micro-blogging.
Micro-blogging sites such as Twitter are used to help spread
awareness of an issue or activist event. Twitter's hash tag function, which
allows people to have their tweets contribute to a multi-user conversation by
typing a keyword or phrase preceded by a hashtag, is used frequently as a
digital tool for spreading a message. The Chinese equivalent to Twitter, Weibo
is subject to scrupulous government censorship however people circumvent this
blockade by using code words when writing about issues that might be
government-sensitive.
Mobile phones.
Controversy surrounding the 2007 presidential elections in Kenya
led to the introduction of Ushahidi Inc., a company which developed a piece of software that
allowed people to send texts and pictures of violence following the elections
which were plotted geographically on a Google map. The software has since been
used to plot activity in disaster zones following earthquakes in Haiti and New
Zealand and flooding in Australia and the USA.
Proxy servers.
As a means of circumventing government intervention when it
comes to online protesting, many people employ proxy servers, which act as
intermediaries between a user and a site, thus essentially circumventing national
restrictions on any site. In 2009, student protesters in Iran took to social
media to voice their concern over the contentious reelection of President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. This led to a cat and mouse game of the government trying
to identify which media were being used by the protesters to communicate
(social networks and then eventually proxy servers) and shutting them down.
BY WILBROD REGINA
BAPRM 42683
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