Attenion Deficit Disorder: China Blog Conference 2007
November 4, 2007 | Category: China
中文网志年会2007: My first blogger conference and my first try at real-time blogging. I feel so 2.0, my attention so divided I’m incapable of sustaining a single thought for longer than it takes to say “wireless.”
The drill seems to go something like this: Grab seat, take out camera (preferably one embedded in your phone), plug in computer, bring up Firefox and IM software, commence taking photos and posting them on Flickr, chatting with friends, checking email, writing on personal blog, checking email, monitoring others’ blogs, checking email, and, occasionally (if there are any nerve cells in your brain not already firing like the pistons of a neon-equipped rice rocket) listening to what the speaker of the moment is saying.
To make it all worse, a Chinese website called Jiwai.de has set up a real-time micro-blog message board, projected onto a screen next to the main stage. The screen provides an endless and engrossing stream of shout outs and smart ass comments beamed in wirelessly from laptops in the crowd. [Jeremy Goldkorn, founder of Danwei and the foreign face of China's blog world, has spent nearly every moment with eyes locked on this screen, paying little to no attention to what's happening on stage.]
Of the events I’ve actually managed to concentrate on, so far the most noteworthy panel (for foreigners at least) has been a debate, moderated by Rebecca MacKinnon, on the relationship between blogging and traditional media. An old topic, yes. But still relevant in China, where blogs count as virtually the only independent source of news. Talk quickly turned from whether bloggers are journalists to blogs as guardians of free speech arrayed against a soul-snuffing government, whereupon the Jiwai.de message board lit up: “Why get talk about such sensitive things?” “Chaos on the stage!” “Is bloggers’ responsibility really so grand?” Most interesting bit came when someone in the audience questioned whether bloggers, who use pen names, don’t manage to evade responsibility for what they write. The answer came from Bei Feng (北风 ) , a former TV journalist from Guangzhou: “Actually, a regular journalist makes a mistake, his newspaper or TV station usually takes most of the heat, or makes the problem disappear. A blogger takes the heat himself. The law makes it possible to hold people responsible for what they write online. For that reason, you’re even more careful about what you publish, you’re your standards are even higher. Bloggers have more of a sense of responsibility than regular journalists.”
A bit simplified as arguments go, but not without its merits. It’s common knowledge the Chinese news industry is nearly as corrupt as the government officials it purports to cover. Paid articles and hong bao bribes (explained away as “transportation fees”) are standard salary supplements for regular journalists. Chinese bloggers, at least at this point, don’t seem to be in it for the money.
Ah, my laptop battery warns it is about to die…
My photos from the conference are available here. Photos from others here.
And John Kennedy from Global Voices is providing an actual real-time English blog for the conference here.
Tags: beijing, bloggers, China, cnbloggercon, internet, journalism
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