On the CBC last night, in a documentary called "The Human Behaviour Experiments" and a subsequent townhall discussion, this same question was posed albeit indirectly. The film was about Abu Ghraib and references included both the Milgram obedience experiments and the Stanford Prison experiment. There was also a passing reference to the Genevese murder, with 38 people or so people hearing the screams and not dialing the police. It seems to me that the triggering conditions for reacting in the way that the reported wanted you to react are a confluence of at least two events: 1. The posts have to be anomalous in the context in which they are placed (more extreme, more incoherent, more specific) 2. The posts need to be viewed by someone who has a personal acquaintaince with the poster outside of cyberspace AND outside of the cyber context within which the posts are occurring. Absent that confluence, it seems reasonable to expect that posts will be taken as hyberboly or otherwise not to be taken seriously. JW On 9/14/06, Jonathan Sterne <jonathan.sterne@mcgill.ca> wrote:
Hi All,
I've been on the phone with reporters on and off today and am struggling a bit with the whole event. Mostly, the questions are about the "impacts" of various technologies, to which I respond that the technology with the most impact yesterday was a gun.
But I just had a long back and forth with a reporter from the National Post who was saying "the guy had this website, why didn't anybody do anything?" I tried to explain the subtleties of goth subculture, darkness and all that to no avail. The old "most of the people on this website never do anything" argument wasn't washing either. My line was that the responsible people for doing something were the people close to the shooter, whether they be online or offline friends. The reporter then turned it back on me and asked whether that wasn't simply dismissing online communication as a serious context.
Sooooo, I'm turning the question around to you: at what point do people have a responsibility to "intervene" in something they see online and if that point comes, what form should their reaction take?
I write this noting that there was just a big report (I think I saw this in the paper a day or two ago) by the Canadian anti-defamation league about the proliferation of hate websites and governments being unable to regulate them.
Best, --J
-- Jonathan Sterne Department of Art History and Communication Studies McGill University http://sterneworks.org
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