{ Monthly Archives }
December 2009
#iranelection and a sea of green on Twitter: at the forefront of social network activism
“The first step that I suggest as a solution is that we Iranians, no matter where we live in the world, strengthen the social ties among ourselves…. This is where the power of our social network resides.â€
— Mir Hussein Mousavi, quoted in Ehsan Moghaddasi’s The Green Moharram
Celebrate, brainstorm, anticipate: asset-based thinking 2009/2010
Judy Dubin of the Cramer Institute suggests looking at a meeting as a musical performance of classical music.  Via that lens, the asset-based thinking discussion list’s last conference call for 2009 was a work for guitar, four voices, and keyboards. It featured a prelude (Eve and I chatting while waiting for others to show up), three movements titled celebration, brainstorming, and anticipation, and a coda (this post and the ongoing discussions).
For abtdisc’ers who couldn’t be there in person, here are some of the highlights.
Whether or not you were there, please share any additional celebration, anticipation, updates, and brainstorming thoughts in the comments … and have a great holiday season, a wonderful end to 2009, and an even better start to 2010!
jon
Third time’s a charm: “The Ad Astra holiday special 3.0”
So it’s a golden opportunity for that classic TV holiday special. You know, the one where production costs are virtually zero because it’s mostly reused clips and stuff shot on one big party set, and various people show up and say hi and we get to hear about what they’re doing now — and their favorite moments from the last year. “A chance to say hi to old friends — and maybe make some new ones????â€
— “A very special Ad Astra holiday” , December 2007
For those of you who have gotten to know me over the last few years, Ad Astra (Analysis and Development of Awesome STRAtegies) was a grassroots strategy/culture change project I led at Microsoft.  Our charter to pursue game-changing ideas, positive focus, and attention to diversity — along with a cool logo and hot pink posters and beanbag chairs — attracted some amazing people. So every year around this time I say hi.
For those who knew me then …
Hiiiiii! (waves)
What’s up?
jon
PS: I hope everybody has a great holiday season, a wonderful end to 2009, and an even better start to 2010! Â Where’s the eggnog?
DRAFT: Want to make meetings better? Qworky is recruiting for a diverse open source project!
Update, December 17:Â Thanks to all for the excellent feedback, here and in email!
I’ll be splitting this into two posts, which will appear on the Qworky blog
Thanks also to those who expressed interest … if you’d like to get involved, stay tuned — or get in touch via the contact information at the bottom of the post.
As a company we view diversity as a vital ingredient to sustained business success. We value unique perspectives and traditionally under-represented viewpoints in the software design process. We welcome collaborators from every walk of life. We welcome people of any gender identity and expression, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, experience level, discipline, educational background, culture, and political opinion.
— Qworky’s draft diversity statement
Continue Reading »
Demand your dotRights: Facebook gives people “more control” by revealing private their information
We are concerned that the Transition Tool and other changes actually discourage or eliminate some privacy protections that Facebook users currently employ. And we’re still waiting for Facebook to address the privacy issues concerning third party applications that were raised months ago in our petition.
— Nicole Ozer of dotRights, Facebook privacy is in transition — but where is it heading?
Facebook’s message when I logged in today talked about how they were giving me more control of my information and simplifying the privacy settings. Uh-oh. Valleywag thinks it smells like an anti-privacy plot, and PC World’s Tech Inciter suggests watchs out for the “Everyone” setting. Comments on the Facebook governance page are even more critical.
And yeah, sure enough, if I click on “Save Settings” and accept Facebook’s defaults, my status updates, photos, list of family members, etc., become public.  For everyone on the internet to see. Yikes.  And just in time for the holidays, too!
dotRights has the best privacy guide I’ve found so far. Please have a look at it, and share it with your friends — on Facebook and in email.
If you’d like to give Facebook feedback, please do, either directly on Facebook or by signing dotRights’ petition. Twitter coming soon, hopefully 🙂
I’ve got a screenshot below, along with some thoughts about activism — and a comment about software engineering, if you’re into that kind of stuff.