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Monthly Archives: January 2011

Has the Online Privacy Backlash Begun?

25 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

technology + society

Though some may like to believe that the age of privacy is dead, recent developments in Do Not Track browser options would suggest otherwise.

Microsoft recently announced a new feature for Internet Explorer 9, called Tracking Protection Lists, enabling consumers to limit the data third-party sites can collect about them. Yesterday, Mozilla announced they will incorporate a Do Not Track header into the upcoming Firefox 4.1, which would essentially notify each website the user visits that they want to opt-out of third party, advertising-based tracking. And Google just made a new Chrome extension available called Keep My Opt-Outs, which permanently opts your browser out of online ad personalization via cookies.

While these efforts are underway for our browsers, tools are also being developed for our social networks. WSJ just covered a new tool called uProtect.it, whose tagline is “Protection from Facebook on Facebook.” The free app encrypts your comments and posts, making them inaccessible to unwanted viewers, including Facebook itself.

This flurry of recent activity indicates a larger trend:

People may finally be ready to demand intuitive privacy settings, ownership of personal data, and opt-out rather than opt-in as a default.

While many would argue that openness and transparency are a good thing, it should be at an individual’s discretion to decide how public they want to be, and to have control over who gets to see what. In that positive vision of the future, we’re able to choose how we share and exchange information on a peer to peer level, and actually create value together, instead of having it extracted from us.
If that battle is lost, the web may continue to devolve into a playground for advertisers, embedded with increasingly fine-tuned mechanisms to exploit our preferences, behaviors, and social graph.

A Tool for Building Resilient Cities

08 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 62 Comments

Tags

sustainability

Yesterday, this tweet by @thesuperfluid went through my stream:

(Superfluid is a site that enables people to collaborate and exchange favors using their virtual currency, Quids.)

Apparently they will be here in NYC on Monday, demo-ing thier product at the NY Tech Meetup, and wanted a cool idea they could bring to life in front of the crowd. So, I emailed them with my idea, something that’s been filed away in my mind as “The Resilient City Project.”

the one line description would be something like:

a tool that helps local communities share resources and reduce expenses using geolocation, interactive mapping, and visualization

To unpack that a bit, let’s start with the components of a resilient city.

I found a cool Community Resilience Toolkit that was put together for the San Francisco Bay Area, which breaks down aspects of resilience into these topic areas:

  • food
  • water
  • energy
  • transportation and housing
  • jobs and economy
  • civic preparedness and social services

Ok, so the idea is, how can we strengthen those things so that a community can weather tough economic times or uncertainty?

I was thinking something along the lines of Ushahidi meets sustainability. Ushahidi is an open source platform that was originally used to map incidents of violence and peace efforts in Kenya, and has since expanded to be a customizable tool for information collection, visualization, and interactive mapping. With just a mobile phone, you can upload info that gets transformed into a real-time visualization.

the original web mash-up

So, how could this be used to help people within a community display their resources/assets, needs, or initiatives towards resilience?

I live in Beacon, about 60 miles north of NYC, a small city of around 15,000 people. I’ve always thought it would be a perfect testbed for something like this. Basically you have a Google map, and everyone can ‘claim’ their property/residence, and make stuff visible so that it can be made more efficient/effective. (we care about the stuff we can measure). For instance:

Energy example –

How could we reduce the energy used citywide? Having dabbled in real estate here, I know that I can call Central Hudson (our utility provider) and find out the average monthly electric bill on any property. So the information is publicly available. What if we could map those numbers on every property, and have a dashboard that displays the overall energy usage in the city.

Then, what if we organized, say, a light-bulb exchange initiative, where we began getting the city switched over to energy star bulbs/CFLs. When a household/business converts, they get a “badge,” that can then be displayed on the site when you scroll over that property. (we could also make actual stickers that could be displayed in the window of storefronts and people’s homes showing they’ve gotten the energy badge…. i saw something like this in Boulder, Colorado several years ago.) The real-time city data would also reflect the change, showing some kinds of graphs or pie charts displaying the increase in efficiency.

Food example –

We had many local farms in the area and options for food co-ops. We also have a lot of people who have gardens and have excess produce in the summer that they’d be happy to swap for other goods. We have a lot of people who brew beer. We have people who would be happy to go in together to get a deal on buying a ¼ steer or some quantity of grass-fed beef from a farm, or dairy products, or whatever. What if people could make this information available, so they could more easily make arrangements to invest in local food?

Transportation & Housing example –

I’ve been inspired by all the “collaborative consumption” services I’ve seen spring up over the past few years. There’s car sharing (ZipCar), bike sharing (Bcycle), land rental for gardening (landshare), or room rental for travelers (Airbnb). How could we implement similar services, or use those existing services as plugins? (getting a car or bike sharing program going is clearly a large initiative, and trickier than just offering a plot of your backyard as common gardening ground, but you get the idea.)

Jobs and Economy example –

If economy is about the exchange of goods and services, what are the peer to peer services out there that could duplicated/implemented? For instance, there’s Freecycle for reuse of goods, Swap for trading, and Zilok for renting out any kind of thing you might have – electronics, tools, whatever. Can we hook into these services or make a simple local version? Google map + stuff that’s for offer + stuff that’s available. Same idea for exchanging services and collaborating on projects… using something like superfluid, perhaps?

We already have a great coworking space here in town, BEAHIVE, that’s been itching to be a catalyst to coordinate more real-world local initiatives and projects. It seems like we have a lot of the things necessary to be a prototype city for resilience building.

Where You Come In

Well, the guys at superfluid suggested I provide as much info & visuals as possible to reinforce the idea. And they want it within 24 hours. (eek!)

So…… what can we whip up?

If anyone has suggestions for a name for this, logo ideas, better description, etc, please pass em along. Any kind of video / graphical / text assets to communicate the vision also appreciated. My Illustrator skills are pretty amateur, but at the least I’ll take a screenshot of a google map and overlay an info bubble on top of it to convey some of the elements I’ve described above.

If this thing manifests, the intention is for it to be a free tool for any community us utilize, so I hope it’s intriguing! I’m eager to prototype it in Beacon.

Looking forward to your input, as always.

–

via @yodelheck

– list of mapping software

– Community Impact Through Mapping

via @Deborah909

– A community garden as a use case for interoperable capacity mapping and resource matching tools

2010 in review

03 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

community

wordpress delivered these stats to my inbox the other day… cool to see how the community blossomed this year!

–

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

The Louvre Museum has 8.5 million visitors per year. This blog was viewed about 170,000 times in 2010. If it were an exhibit at The Louvre Museum, it would take 7 days for that many people to see it.

 

In 2010, there were 69 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 98 posts. There were 208 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 53mb. That’s about 4 pictures per week.

The busiest day of the year was February 2nd with 5,297 views. The most popular post that day was iPad: Overhyped Flop or a case of Great Design Thinking?.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were twitter.com, stumbleupon.com, wordpress.com, facebook.com, and Google Reader.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for emergent by design, venessa miemis, collaboration, ipad flop, and design thinking.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

iPad: Overhyped Flop or a case of Great Design Thinking? February 2010
153 comments

2

The Rise of Collaborative Consumption October 2010
83 comments and 86 Likes on WordPress.com

3

What is Design Thinking, Really? January 2010
98 comments and 3 Likes on WordPress.com

4

who’s the architect? March 2009
37 comments

5

36 Awesome Idea Hubs to Spark Creative Thinking, Innovation, & Inspiration November 2009
7 comments and 2 Likes on WordPress.com

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