Online Curating (Your Great Aunt's Milk Glass Collection)

Paddy Johnson was on a recent panel about "online curation" and gives a report. I'm more interested in carefully-accumulated labors of love on the web than pre-fab social media tools for aggregating content (which seems to have been discussed a fair amount) so I put in this plug for Paddy's own IMG MGMT series and a William Gibson quote I've been flogging for almost a decade:

[The] IMG MGMT series...has been one of the brighter lights shining through this foggy topic. You curate the essayists, the essayists curate online "artifacts" they care about, the artifacts lead to more content-- the whole spreads out, ahem, rhizomatically, taking the reader further and further away from the original cult of expertise and deeper into realms where they have to make their own judgments. Almost 10 years ago William Gibson wrote about "the otaku, the passionate obsessive, the information age's embodiment of the connoisseur, more concerned with the accumulation of data than of objects..." Gibson felt that "understanding otaku -hood [was] one of the keys to understanding the culture of the web. There is something profoundly post-national about it, extra-geographic. We are all curators, in the post-modern world, whether we want to be or not."

The blogging tools you and [Rex] Sorgatz are talking about are high tech ways to fine-tune personal obsessions and make them marketable (if not financially then in terms of building readership). Yet at the same time we are told newsreaders such as Bloglines and Google Reader are falling out of fashion. I wonder if [Mark] Zuckerberg's vision of "connection" and "likes" chips away at the authority of the obsessive--in the world of corporate social media, everyone needs to know about everything in order to be the best informed consumers of paid-for goods and services, and the old web of carefully cultivated "weird" collections begins to disappear.

As for this quote from panelist Rex Sorgatz related by Paddy, I wish Steve Gilliard was still alive to make fun of its sheer emptiness:

Furthering this point, Sorgatz explained the common creation story of a mid-2000 online celebrity. “It was a right of passage, particularly in early New York history,” he told us all, “To have an anonymous blog that got outed, and then the New York Times wrote about you, and then you got a job at Gawker Media."

Human Kibble Winter 2010 Catalog

Am participating in this fine publication/exhibition, just posted today:

Human Kibble Winter 2010 Catalog
A group GIF collaboration organized by Duncan Alexander

Collections by:
Fabien Mousse
Frankhats
Jennifer Chan
Jermaine Davis
Jeffrey Henderson
Luis GCN
Maxwell Paparella
Michael Manning
Mary Rachel Kostreva
Nick Marcus
Chris Shier
Stage Baker
Tom Moody

Am not sure if human kibble is dogfood for people or something like Soylent Green, but most products advertised in the catalog are not pet food. Mine were hardware--couplings and tool chests. The way the show worked is, Alexander posted real retail catalog pages that he found, and participants were asked to make GIFs of them. The pages were so middlebrow it was a serious challenge to think of anything creative to do with them. Mine are under-manipulated, but I wanted the essential banality of the original layouts to shine through.

Update: Sentences reordered for journalistic "flow."

Update 2: JO says Human Kibble is a reference to Philip K Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?--haven't read it in a while, will hunt for an excerpt.

You Can Quit Anytime

Speaking of quitting Facebook, here are a couple of blog posts from one who did, programmer/entrepeneur Barry Hoggard:

Article in PC World on Facebook privacy

I deleted my Facebook account today

These posts are chockablock with links to other articles about how unbelievably bad Facebook is, if you care about your privacy at all. Hoggard, as someone who joined in '07 and quit after three years, has more authority than those of us who never signed up, who could be written off as "old" and/or web-inept by the terminally thick. But allow me to lecture you anyway: even before the site blew open all its privacy doors it sounded iffy, as in, all these people saying "We're getting a Facebook group together to save Indonesian hardwoods"--what guarantee did they have that their personal data wasn't being "shared" with the International Mahogany Trade Association and Death Squad? The idea of taking your politics to a glorified dating site always seemed incredibly naive. And as for artists uploading all their creative work to a site that was going to (a) convert it to crappy jpegs and (b) keep it forever on servers beyond your control, excuse me, but: Dorks R Us.

i heart my blog (but not enough to marry it)

These days as we surf around the net every site screams at us to "like" this and "reblog" that. Pages load slowly, groaning as they collect all the packets for embedded media, ads, feeds, and interactive widgets. In the place of blog posts we find teasers--carefully crafted headlines and lead sentences that entice us to click through for a story that may or may not be interesting. The people we used to read now talk to us on TV screens. The Huffington Post gives us a range of reactions we can click for its stories (except it is missing "sux").

And then there's the blog you are reading, a throwback to a web few actually ever saw (post dotcom, pre social media) consisting of writing, pictures, a few links, some horizontal lines, and a "logo." The text may overdramatize and the pics may be blingy but at least they don't have to compete with the rest of the page. If you're reading this on RSS it looks pretty much like it does in its native element, depending on how much design paraphernalia surrounds your feed info. Am coming up on ten years of doing this (Feb 2011) and feel very little itch to change, despite peer pressure to join the ZuckerBorg. (Some non-fans have made digs that I can't "figure out how to use Facebook"--in your dreams, assholes.)