Big Brother is watching you

March 25th, 2009

Having just got 5 minutes to check my RSS reader I’ve been catching up on the events of the day and the Guardian Media feed has informed me that my social networking contacts could be being watched.

A Home Office spokesman this morning announced that the government will be looking at monitoring all internet sites that allow users to communicate. That means Facebook, Twitter, Myspace, even Skype.

Apparently there are already plans to store every phonecall, email and internet hit made in the UK on a database and these social networking observations would be added to that plan.

In a quote I find probably inappropriately funny the spokesman points out “We have no way of knowing whether Osama bin Laden is chatting to Abu Hamza on Facebook. Or terrorists could be having a four-way chat on Skype”.

Oh dear. I suppose there’s no reason that this couldn’t be true (apart from the lack of wireless signal in caves) but it does seem a little OTT.

I agree that it makes sense to consider communication on social networking sites as on a par with more traditional forms but it does strike me as more than a little hysterical to suggest an ‘axis of evil’ Facebook group.

Speak to a geek

March 3rd, 2009

Last Friday I found myself in the headquarters of the MDDA (Manchester Digital Development Agency, although I will agree that it sounds like a Bond baddy benevolent trust).

I was there to meet a couple of the chaps involved with ‘Speak to a geek’ – an event created to help charity organisations look at ways to use social media and the internet to develop communities beyond their existing website.

Social media and digital communications are becoming increasingly important to the charity sector – they offer a low cost option to reach out to a much wider audience and it was great to see more than 15 charities turn up for the event, ready to pick the brains of the “Geeks” on everything from WordPress and Twitter to RSS feeds and google apps.

Our own work for the Niall Mellon Township Trust project, will be using many of the social media channels open to us alongside more traditional PR tactics and with a pre-launch event due to take place on the 17 March 2009 (yes – that’s St Patrick’s Day) we’re quickly getting our plans up and running.