geert lovink on Fri, 20 Jul 2001 14:23:44 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Webby Awards 2001: anarchists steal award |
via DeeDee Halleck (dhalleck@weber.ucsd.edu): ANARCHISTS STEAL NEWS AWARD AT THE WEBBY'S SAN FRANCISCO - Corporate media was both glorified and protested tonight at the Webby Awards in San Francisco, CA. Billed as the "Oscars" of the internet, the Webby's is a high-glitz awards show designed to highlight and promote websites and the web industry. Many of the highly-visible sponsors and nominees represent corporate media and media consolidation, including CNN, ABC News, and more. Indymedia was nominated for an award in the "Activism" category. An anarchist who showed up at the awards ceremony spoke anonymously, saying that "indymedia is news, and it shows the corporate media takeover of the internet to say that indymedia is activism, not news." Another anarchist present said that if Indymedia is an activist site, mainstream media like CNN or ABC are "activists for corporations and rich elites." A vocal minority in the crowd, wearing masks associated with anarchist black blocs at recent anti-capitalism protests, loudly booed when CNN and other corporate media conglomerates, like Microsoft, were mentioned. As the winner was announced for the "News" category, two masked people ran onto the stage. One, wearing a gasmask, grabbed the "News" award from the host, and shouted, "fuck corporate media!" Then he ran off the stage, taking the award with him. The host fumbled and said, "someone just took off with the award..." The other person, wearing a bandana mask, took pictures and identified himself as an Indymedia reporter. Sam Donaldson, ABC News personality, was sitting a few rows away and could only shake his head in confusion. Another anonymous anarchist present said, "corporate media does not belong on the internet. As dot-com valuation continues to plummet, we hope to save our wonderful co-operative global network from insidious, patent-grabbing, idea-owning megacorporations which despise free speech and privacy." Featured speakers also included San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, who gloated in the changes that the dot-com industry have brought to the city. Mayor Brown is frequently targeted by housing activists for allowing dot-com companies to illegally rent residential spaces, creating one of the worst housing crises in San Francisco since the 1906 earthquake. --- via so and so I Stole The Webby News Award The Webby Awards are a celebration of corporate domination over the internet. The whole purpose is to take a popularly created participatory and democratic medium and laude the work of people who are squeeze profit out of it. Sure there are some categories such as activism, the arts, and weird, but the focus, in their rhetoric and during the ceremonies, are the profit hungry dot com's. I stole the webby award in the news category to protest the corporate domination over the news media both in the traditional and online mediums. When I got up to the stage I placed a copy of Noam Chomsky's Manufacturing Consent on the podium, grabbed the news award, and yelled "Fuck the corporate media!" in to the microphone. Unfortunately they had already turned off the podium microphone speakers and only the online audience heard my message. With the award in hand I ran back down the stage and tried to leave the opera house. One of the webby security guards grabbed the award out of my hands as I pushed through the doors. He said something like "oh no you don't" and I didn't feel like fighting over, and breaking, the spring so I gave it back to him. He ran it back down the hall and gave it to winning news corporado. Let me say that it wasn't an official 'stunt' and the webby people really didn't like my action. They apparently do like my website, protest.net, as it's been nominated for the activism award both times they've had the category. Some other higher up in the webby hierarchy came over to chew me out for "messing up their well planned event" and that they'd had to get the inside.com guy to fly out at the last minute from New York. After hanging out in the back of the theater for a while, not thinking it wise to walk back up to my third row seat, the security guards found me and tried to kick me out. They said "that was not cool, not cool." I wanted to see more of the ceremony, maybe get people's reactions to my action, so I pled that I was a nominee and that worked, they let me stay. They said something about how if I'd be ANYTHING other than a nominee they'd kick me out. I highly doubt that if I'd been a corporate sponsor they'd even threaten to kick me out, but that's what he said. I ran in to one of the judges in the hall, who I'd been talking to before. He again went off about how hard they worked to pull of this highly scripted event and I was messing it up for everybody. When I quipped that Webbies even have a tradition of disruption and I hadn't even thrown the webby at the audience like jodi.org had, he said "well that was a long time ago." Implying that things had changed, now at the webbies. Jodi.org had called them "greedy corporate bastards" back in 1999, and they still are greedy corporate bastards. Only now they're whining about the dot bomb deflating their portfolios. The webby awards have celebrated sites that pioneer the breaking down the wall between advertisers and news content such as amazon, inside.com, cnn, beliefnet, babycenter and many others. This is the wrong direction to take our collective technological development. We have a choice, either we can use this amazing new medium to become a truly popular mass medium where everybody has a voice or we can use it to drive hyper consumerism and friction free capitalism. For example, the technical achievement award went to Microsoft Windows Update and not projects that have been both major technical achievements and fulfill the internet's potential as a libratory medium. I see such projects as FreeNet, Ogg Vorbis, Gnutella, Apache, *BSD, and Linux itself as all being much more important technical achievements. MWU is a clever way for Microsoft to send you bug fixes! Bugs they created and bugs that are a result of their top heavy corporate development model. When the television, radio, and cable were introduced there was a struggle between people who wanted to use the medium for the common good and people who wanted to use the medium for profit and to reproduce the conditions of inequality and domination. The question was, do we use this new technology to reduce social, economic, and information inequality, or do we use it to create a new class of wealthy. This struggle has played out across the world. In the US we have the most corporate and profit driven society and our media systems have been shaped to reflect and reproduce those values. Quickly we saw the rhetoric of the 'information superhighway' be replace with the ecommerce gold rush. The internet is a creation our society, like all communications mediums it is communal property. We must not let the internet go the way of the newspaper, radio, television, and cable. The communications commons must not be partitioned and sold for private profit. Perhaps this collapse of the hyper inflated internet stocks will help us take the internet back from the VC's, dot commers, marketing spin miesters, and ecommerce biz dev stiff's. This is a medium that can allow us to radically change the balance of information power. Foucault said "Power is not possessed, rather is exercised." We must exercise our power as creators of technology, consumers of news and culture, people who are willing to think critically about the world to fight for the liberation of our internet. DotCom's Burn: The Internet Lives Free! --- from the www.thestandard.com media grok newsletter: TOP GROKS ~~~~~~~~~ Media to Webbys: Why Bother? The rules of the Webby Awards limit acceptance speeches to five words. The way the media is talking, you'd think the speeches should be omitted entirely as a sign of respect for dead Webby nominees of yore. And while you're at it, change the dress code to sackcloth and ashes. We're trying to mourn some lost money here. The weeping and wailing began well in advance of Wednesday's awards ceremony. "All the dead and decaying Web sites that have stacked up in the past year make it tough to ignore the odor of failure permeating the industry," said AP writer Michael Liedtke on Monday. "With the beating that the dot-com industry has taken, the idea of an awards show has something of a hollow ring to it," agreed Wired News' Katie Dean. And it was so substantive before this? We're not talking about the Nobel Peace Prize. Not every reporter played funeral dirges. The BBC News Online, with its picture of Google executives grinning in silver capes, accepted the event for what it is: a silly awards show. Then again, the BBC ought to be upbeat; it won the award for best radio Web site. The Contra Costa Times published an upbeat article with lots of quotes from Webby boss Tiffany Shlain. ("We're not dead.") ABCNews.com streamed the event and brought in talking head Sam Donaldson to host the Webcast. "I've never been to a Webby, and I've never seen it," Donaldson told the Contra Costa Times beforehand. Swell.com's acceptance speech: "Sam Donaldson, dude, gnarly toupee." Wired's Farhad Manjoo had a different take. "The Webby Awards aren't a big deal," Manjoo said. "Everyone in the Web world kinda-sorta knows this." But the Webbys are important, said Manjoo, because they raise the right questions about what makes a good Web site, and because nonprofits such as the Independent Media Center get nominated along with doomed online retailers. It's true, there are Webby categories devoted to activism, community, education, art, personal sites and "weird." Maybe next year, rather than rehashing the we-miss-1999 angle, more reporters will read the entire list. - Jen Muehlbauer In Search of the Webby Worthy http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,45281,00.html The Webby Awards http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/ 'Net Oscars' handed out http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/entertainment/new_media/newsid_1446000/1446 449.stm Dot-com bust can't stop the Webby Awards party http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/07/18/MN230943.DTL Webbys go on despite dot-bomb threat http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/2001-07-18-webby.htm At Dot-Com Award Fest, First Prize Is Survival (AP) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1484-2001Jul15.html Webby's Woll With the Punches http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,45136,00.html Webby Awards strike a note of defiant optimism (Contra Costa Times) http://www.siliconvalley.com/docs/news/svfeatures/webbys071601.htm 2001 Winner Speeches http://www.webbyawards.com/main/press/speeches.html --- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net