Tuesday 27 September 2011

Prepare for change

Digital Life: Today & Tomorrow from Neo Labels on Vimeo.


This infographic about 15 facts about the internet in 2015 made me think about the forecasting of change and how it has become a cultural convention we live by. I wonder, why does everything have to change? Technologically speaking, why the future has to be different?

Gadgets have their own features and programmes, and these are languages. Interactive media changes in relation to how the user uses it, so the language changes all the time and we have to adapt to it. Communication gets broken all the time. Some people adapt and some give up in the process. For example, some good friends I used to communicate via Facebook with have stopped using it because they didn't want to invest time in learning the new rules and our connection broke up. I ended up communicating with those who didn't give up and adapt.

All these constant changes, are they needed? Maybe it's just because information technology has hit the consumer market so then media is treated as a commercial product at the mercy of the laws of competition, and that promotes constant innovation. But at what cost? Changes on the flavour of a soda doesn't affect us much, but changes in the tools and languages we use to communicate online jeopardizes the construction of our identity and our social relations.

Sunday 25 September 2011

Saturday 24 September 2011

A matter of perspective

"We shape our buildings, then they shape us", said Winston Churchill. The same we can say about technology, which, among other things, took us into space. Look at these astonishing images, they definitely have the power to shape on us a new way of thinking.



YouTube video description:
A time-lapse taken from the front of the International Space Station as it orbits our planet at night. This movie begins over the Pacific Ocean and continues over North and South America before entering daylight near Antarctica. Visible cities, countries and landmarks include (in order) Vancouver Island, Victoria, Vancouver, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles. Phoenix. Multiple cities in Texas, New Mexico and Mexico. Mexico City, the Gulf of Mexico, the Yucatan Peninsula, El Salvador, Lightning in the Pacific Ocean, Guatemala, Panama, Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Lake Titicaca, and the Amazon. Also visible is the earths ionosphere (thin yellow line), a satellite (55sec) and the stars of our galaxy.

Monday 19 September 2011

A not so useful perk

I like Klout. I think it clearly epitomises the state of the current web, with the significant incorporation of metrics for individual interactions. Metrics that have become a measure for social performance, and in some ways, a vanity score. Klout is deeply connected with what the web demands from us that makes it the powerful tool that it is today: information. As you interact with social media you upload information onto the web, you're monitored and awarded a score for your performance. But because you want to perform better and score higher, you then upload more information and interact more, which in turn gives you a better score and rewards or perks. And the cycle goes on and on.

The same dynamic can clearly be seen in searches. If you can find a result on Google, for any word you can imagine, it is mainly due to the fact that information was uploaded by millions of companies and people like me who write blog posts like this one. The uploading of that information is in turn fuelled by the demands and metrics of SEO practices that ask for more optimised content to rank better in the result pages.

What companies and advertisers do with the data they get from our social interactions is to collate it as knowledge to use to target consumers more accurately, like the email I recently received form Klout shows: 


The email announced that I had received a perk. That's great, I like perks. Nevertheless, although I appreciate being labelled as a 'key influencer', my Klout score doesn't reflect that. As for today my score is 27 and I am labelled as a mere 'Explorer', which makes perfect sense since I'm not very active on Twitter. Anyway, out of curiosity, I decided to 'claim my perk' and this is what I saw next:

 
The perk I was awarded was an Axe Hair product. It all seemed perfectly well if it wasn't for the fact that I am bald. So the perk wasn’t really one for me. If it wasn't for the fact that I'm relaxed about my condition, instead of seeing it as a perk, I could have taken the email as a bad joke or felt like if I was being bullied.

But don’t get me wrong, as I said I like Klout. It's just that this little commercial misunderstanding is a great example of how today's highly praised automatisation can have its flaws. It shows that no matter how much information about myself I have uploaded on all the social media channels I use, in the form of videos I share or things I say, I am still not 'there'. My baldness, my insecurities, my vulnerabilities, my motivations to 'like' something or buy a product are still difficult to decipher by algorithms and other types of technological practices and I still cannot be properly 'known' as a person. In today's digital, social and interactive media automatisation, labels and generalisations collide with feelings, life experiences and human complexities. And that is when commercial actions can have undesired results, for the marketer and for the consumer.

I think identity and consumer behaviour are still underestimated in today's digital landscape. Technical advances don't let technocrats see the very thing that hasn't changed: human nature. The people at Klout know this very well when they offer users a way to measure their social influence, which is something we do online and offline, everywhere, everytime and by different means. But the problem is, as always, the urge for 'monetisation', and that is when you start giving hair products to bald people.

Klout is a very clever idea. And I like it because just as it’s amazing features are a faithful representation of the wonders of the Internet today, so they are its mistakes. These mistakes also say a lot about the flaws of today's interactive media and the overrated expectations that companies, marketers, consumers and users have about technology.

Saturday 17 September 2011

Buy and tell?

I recently discovered Payvment, the social ecommerce platform for Facebook, through this article in Fast Company (worth reading to understand how Payvment works). This application is fuel for an issue I've been currently thinking about, which has to do with online identity profiles. For example, it's easy to recognize our Facebook profile as our social profile, and Linkedin as our professional profile - which makes sense for them to be separated in different platforms, as those worlds are made of different rules of behavior, etiquette and content. But what about our profiles as consumers? Does it belong to our social sphere, or it has to be a separated one? Do we want to share everything we buy with others? Are we defined socially by what we buy? The answer seems pretty simple in today's world... but I'm still thinking about it.