태터데스크 관리자

도움말
닫기
적용하기   첫페이지 만들기

태터데스크 메시지

저장하였습니다.


'afreeca'에 해당되는 글 2건

  1. 2008/06/18 I think President Lee thinks of the Internet more as "poison" than "cure".
  2. 2008/06/14 How to be a BJ (Broadcasting Jockey) (2)
2008/06/18 11:50

I think President Lee thinks of the Internet more as "poison" than "cure".

사용자 삽입 이미지
President Lee MyungBak, whom I'm sure has been quite emotionally devastated from all these protests and from the improbably quick fall of his support--it went all the way down to 7%. Remember it was at 22% few days ago and 50% few months ago?--gave the keynote speech at Future of the Internet, an OECD Ministerial meeting being held in Korea right now.

Here are some of the more notable excerpts from his speech: (via AFP)

Lee, grappling with IT-inspired mass protests over his decision to resume US beef imports, bemoaned the "spread of falsehoods" via the Internet in a speech to an OECD ministerial meeting on information technology.
"The Internet economy is expediting the development of a knowledge-based society, thus leading to new economic growth and job creation," he said.
Lee also called for the Internet to "be a space of trust. Otherwise, the force of the Internet could turn out to be venomous rather than beneficial."
He also noted that the system is still out of the reach of 80 percent of the world's people and pledged Korea's efforts to redress the situation. "The Internet gap is bound to lead to a socio-economic cleavage between individuals and nations, and the gap will be ever-widening."

Now, one particular phrase I paid attention to was "venomous rather than beneficial". A better translation of what he said is actually "poison rather than cure."

I believe that's his honest stance on the Internet that it's just powerful and could go either way. He's even created the Ministry of Knowledge Economy, so I'm sure he does believe in the power of the Internet for economy growth.

But, apparently he views the Internet more as poison and than cure at this moment. Well, at least for himself. Just few hours before he gave the speech, the CEO of Afreeca.com was arrested. Remember Afreeca? That was the citizen broadcasting station for many Korean people. You might go "What? President Lee let the CEO of Afreeca arrested to kill the freedom of speech? I thought South Korea was a well-established democratic country!"

Well, to be fair, let me explain more. Moon Yong Sik is the CEO of Nowcom, which runs a Web-disk service as well was Afreeca. Moon was actually arrested with copyright violation charges because of the Web-disk service. A Web-disk service is basically an unlimited file-uploading and file-sharing service where you can basically upload/download anything you want, like P2P, including movies, mp3s, porn clips, documents, ripped software CD images, etc. Obviously, there's been a long battle between the copyright holders and those companies. Nowcom isn't an exception; indeed, its services drew some of the most fierce debates regarding copyright issues in Korea.

So what happened to Moon is quite legit. Can't argue with that. But here's the problem.

Why now?

I do believe there's a good chance that this was a pure coincidence. But, come on! And here's even more serious problem.

People are asking "why now?"

President Lee might have just offered another tool for people to use against him with. Again, it might have been coincidental, but ain'g gonna do any good to restore his reputation.

Protests are still going on with less fervor than before. The only thing left for President Lee might be "pick your poison" soon. The Internet is powerful and could go either way. So, please make it work good for you. And what Lee's doing isn't necessarily the right way to do it.

brought to you by
사용자 삽입 이미지


Trackback 0 Comment 0
2008/06/14 00:46

How to be a BJ (Broadcasting Jockey)

Before I go on to talk about the portal-centric Internet landscape in Korea as I said in the last article, I decided to write a post on a different topic because the portal topic seems to cover too many areas, so I'll probably need some more time to think through. But before that, I'll give you guys something juicy again. Namely, "How to be a broadcasting jockey".

That's what all these livecasting citizen journalists are called. By Afreeca, they are officially named BJs. They are also called Street Journalists. The question is how do you live-broadcast while out in the public?

The key lies in Internet ubiquity. People live-upload video content through WiBro. And the setup looks like this:

broadcasting_jockey.png

You connect to the Internet through your WiBro modem like I did hundreds of times in the past; you capture the scene live with your webcam or better-quality camcorders connected to your notebook. You run some Afreeca applications on your notebook. That's it. You have your own real-time broadcasting station!!

Remember this is only one example of what Internet ubiquity can do for your country. Now, imagine what could happen when you have this many people out in the street holding candles; hundreds of them are BJs.

사용자 삽입 이미지

Reuters has an excellent coverage on the topic (via Futurize Korea):

But in this country, one of the most wired and technology savvy in the world, the month-long series of gatherings has also been a valuable testing ground for the latest communication devices, gadgets and websites.

From high-resolution camera phones to instant broadcasting software and water cannon-resistant camcorders, the latest advances in communications were in evidence during the five weeks since the protests began.

Many demonstrators rely on Internet forums to get information on rallying points, weather forecasts and riot police presence. With powerful camera phones, they are able to shoot photos and videos that they can instantly upload on Internet sites thanks to high-speed wireless technology.

It wasn't even a year ago when I had the Joost-on-highway experiment. Did I imagine what's happening right now could happen in less than 10 months? Heck, no! So there's goes my lack of imagination. OTL.

There's a reason why this blog is taglined Spicy Thoughts on Digital Generation in Asia. :)

brought to you by
사용자 삽입 이미지


Trackback 0 Comment 2