I got a last minute invitation from the lead opposition party in Athens, Greece - named PASOK - to do a couple of sessions at their
bi-annual party conference about online advocacy, and specifically, how American political parties, and bloggers, were using the Internet to impact the elections. I've only been here for less than 24 hours, so am still a bit groggy, but beyond the never-ending pall of smoke everywhere (these people smoke like chimneys, no, chimneys don't even smoke like these people), it's already been quite interesting. To some degree, a political conference is a political conference is a political conference. The language changes, the venue may have a few fewer flags than we'd use (hell, there isn't a Greek flag anywhere to be seen), and yeah, there's the never-ending-smoke-thing, but it's very much your standard political conference. And there's even a blogger row. I'm told 37 bloggers have asked for, and gotten, credentials. The bloggers are pretty much what you'd expect - male, young, and geek-oriented.
Panayotis Vryonis, my Greek blogger friend and host, has finally introduced me to Twitter. It's a, well, I'm not sure what to call it. It's micro-blogging, as Panayotis calls it, or as I put it, haiku-blogging. With Twitter you post quick messages about what you're doing or thinking at that moment, and you only get 140 characters (maybe 22 words). For political blogging, especially blogging while on travel, it's a potentially useful concept. It's hard to break open your laptop when you're running around a conference, and it's equally hard to blog the small tidbits of info you glean, experiences you have, ideas you get, that might not be worthy of an entire blog post. For example, yesterday my Greek taxi driver on the way in from the airport was talking to me about work and people who work too much, and he told me a Greek saying: "Work never ends; life does." It was a great quote, and worth of something smaller than a blog post. Now I have Twitter for that purpose (and you can Twitter via email or text message, so I can do it from abroad on the road via my cell). Anyway, very interesting stuff, I think, and hope. I've posted our
Twitter feed in the right-most column, beneath the fundraising box.
We had an interesting discussion about "making money by blogging." I'm told there are two blogs that have done well enough to earn a living blogging. One is a tech blogger, who also dabbles in politics (most of his revenue is from ads, and the advertisers come to him), and the second is a gossip blogger who has caused quite a stir here, if by "stir" you mean 100 lawsuits (or so they say). The blogger writes a site called
Press-Gr. And the controversy is, to an American's eyes, quite absurd, and scary.
In a nutshell, the guy runs a successful gossip blog. One day, a reporter receives an email from a stranger saying that if the reporter doesn't pay the stranger X amount of money, the stranger will say horrible things about the reporter
in the comments section of the blog. This rather odd threat led the police to raid the blogger's office, and his home, confiscate his computer, his files, etc. The parliament is now considering legislation to clamp down on people like this blogger, including holding bloggers legally responsible for what anonymous strangers write in their comments.
Wow. We had some similar issues in the states years ago, but the courts decided that bloggers, and Web site operators more generally, would not be responsible for the comments people left on their sites (or for the "diaries" that visitors created on your blog, a la DailyKos). The general theory was that we wanted to provide an incentive for people to use the Internet creatively and productively, and holding them to an impossibly high standard would effectively shut down the Internet. No one could blog if they were legally responsible for every anonymous nutjob who posts a comment.
There is some sympathy in Greece, at least from what I'm hearing on the sreet, to clamping down on bloggers. Which is really quite sad. Aside from the trite "birthplace of democracy" argument, Greece could use a few more incentives to spur creativity and productivity and overall the creation of more business and more wealth. Clamping down on free speech, clamping down on what is still a very nascent Internet, may help reporters who receive anonymous threats from commenters, but it does nothing to help Greece enter the 21st century.
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