2/11/2006

Participatory Media and the Incentives Problem

Filed under: blog, economics, media, social — ryan @ 11:03 pm

Why do people blog? Questions about incentives are sure to arise soon after people begin talking about participatory media (or “user-generated content” as the business people call it). Yahoo! Research Berkeley has a whole team, led by Cameron Marlow, looking at what they call the “social motives” that lead people to participate on the web.

People discussing incentives to participate in media production often assume that producers are motivated by things like novelty or ego that will soon “wear off,” and that traditional economic incentives will have to come in to replace them. Vincent Maher believes that “bloggers in late capitalist society will begin to seek financial compensation for the time spent serving increasingly large audiences,” and Scott Karp says that “unless we develop economic models to meaningfully compensate the long tail, the ego payoff for most people won’t be enough to justify the effort.” In other words, there’s no such thing as free labor.

With economic incentives come the potential for editorial influence. An increasing number of (amateur?) producers monetize their content via contextual advertisments, a practice that makes them vulnerable to accusations of rational self-interest from folks like Robert Scoble. As Maher puts it, there is worry about whether these producers will end up “simply repeating agendas set by commercial advertising keyword and search indexes.” These worries are leading some to call for better “Chinese walls” in the blogosphere.

But is the economic payoff from contextual advertising enough to keep people producing, or to motivate them to produce in the first place? Nicholas Carr says no, which leads me to wonder why people bother with the ads at all, other than to “keep tabs on what Google is doing.” Furthermore, studies of the closely related phenomenon of open source software production suggest that economic motivations do not play a major role.

So is the monetization of user-generated content through contextual advertising networks a dead end? Will bloggers eschew the paltry sums they receive, in order to guarantee the purity of their editorial independence? I believe the answer is “no,” but not because producers are greedy sell-outs or because their advertising revenues will rise to the point that they would be fools to give them up. Instead, I would argue that in a capitalist society, revenues from advertising take on a symbolic value that exceeds their actual economic value: they are proof of participation in a system larger than oneself that values one’s contributions. Just as the open source software developer wants to believe that someone is using her utility, the blogger wants to believe that someone is reading. In many cases that someone is a friend or family member in direct communication with the producer, and no further proof is needed. But in other cases, like when people blog about a hobby or a topic of professional interest, feedback isn’t necessarily forthcoming. Contextual advertising networks excel at giving people the rich feedback they crave, which is why so many people (like me) who don’t even run ads installed Google Analytics on their blogs. Click logs give people the warm fuzzies, and actual payments, even if only for a few cents a day, are proof positive that actual people are behind those clicks.

This is all conjecture, of course, and ought to be followed up on by a proper investigation of the emerging political economy of “amateur” production on the web, an investigation that moves well beyond Nardi et al’s investigations of blogging practices and takes participatory media seriously as a political, economic, social and cultural phenomenon. (Note to self: get on that…)

11/20/2005

Unfinished Thoughts

Filed under: blog, ideas — ryan @ 10:25 am

I usually think blog memes are pretty lame–if you can’t think of anything to write, how about just not writing?–but this one, spotted at Blackbeltjones, caught my imagination:

What are the titles of the posts you have in your draft folder of shame? The things where you’ve just thought of the title, but written nothing to back it up? The momentary points of self-deluded genius that in the cold light of day you thought better of?

Here’s mine:

Think Tank: Greeting Big Brother With Open Arms
Spontaneous Screen Videos
Visual Radio
Video Sniffing
braintag: why i don’t think videoblogging is ready for alpha release.
The Bastard Child of Art and Commerce
Movieoke
Ghetto Brawls
Fully Digital Hollywood
Me Too!

7/21/2005

FREE $$$ FROM THE SEKRIT WORLD OF BLOGS!

Filed under: blog, finance — ryan @ 6:16 am

Ad seen in the NYT this morning:

If you had $300 available to invest in the next 48 hours, you could tap the secret world of blogs for potential gains of 958% by November 25, 2005!

958%?! That’s like almost 1000% but made more realistic by being slightly less! Quick, where’s my checkbook?

4/3/2005

Justice is Served

Filed under: blog, code — ryan @ 6:11 pm

My response to the Wordpress scandal:

ryanshaw@dream ryanshaw $ vi public_html.php/wordpress/wp-content/themes/aeshin/footer.php

Before:
Powered by <a href='http://wordpress.org'><strong>WordPress</strong></a>

After:
Powered by <a href='http://wordpress.org' rel='nofollow‘><strong>WordPress</strong></a>

12/15/2004

Everyone’s Marketing

Filed under: blog, unmediated — ryan @ 8:07 pm

Unmediated? Nope. It’s just that anyone can become a mediator, now. Today two stories juxtaposed themselves just so in my newsreader. First a Wired piece on a California schoolteacher’s homemade iPod ad:

“There’s a real trend toward consumer-generated media. People are creating news, they’re blogging. People will create marketing as well.”

Then Lucas Gonze on the perils of selling out:

Now that I’ve been doing this a few weeks I strongly agree that paying people to talk about you is a good idea. The tricky part is being a paid talker, because the money breaks the conversational flow and makes it hard to not be creepy or annoying.

The near future will bring all sorts of new social etiquette questions. “How much advertising should I splice into my wedding video?”

10/1/2004

Blog Trumps Trad Media

Filed under: blog, search, unmediated — ryan @ 9:18 am

As of 8:42 this morning, the top headline on Google News was a blog. That’s a first as far as I know.

Daily Kos headline on Google News

The algorithms have spoken, and the most relevant source of news on the 2004 Presidental debate isn’t a “news organization,” it’s a guy with a brain and a text editor. Looks like Dave Winer might win his bet.

9/1/2004

Hating on Multimedia

Filed under: audio, blog — ryan @ 9:33 am

Maciej Ceglowski has posted an “audioblogging manifesto” (transcript here) that is worth a listen. His basic point, that dictation-style audioblog posts and talking-head-style videoblog posts are boring, a waste of time, and antithetical to the nature of the web, is well taken. But when he veers into a general rant against multimedia on the web, he starts to sound like a crusty old BOFH ranting about how Mosaic ruined the Internet.

It should be clear that images, audio, and video communicate things that text cannot. I suspect that Ceglowski knows this, because his manifesto ironically illustrates the point: hearing someone speak URLs out loud is a far more effective way of skewering that practice than just writing about it. His use of background music makes a point as well: the advent of mp3 blogging has turned writing about music from “dancing about architecture” into something worthwhile.

Some of his other points are just lame: a proper audioblogging system wouldn’t use spoken URLs to link things–it might work more like a driving game. And as for “Google won’t index it”–when did everyone on the web become a goddamn SEO monkey? Sure, keep SEO in mind when choosing between tools or formats, but don’t let it dictate the medium you choose to express yourself. Set aside the GoogleWorship, innovate a bit, and let the high-paid computer scientists worry about how to index your work.

No one is seriously considering replacing text on the web with audio or video. As Ceglowski has shown, text is vastly superior for a lot of things, and A/V content can’t easily be manipulated, quoted, linked to, or skimmed. Personally, I’d rather solve those problems than bitch about them.

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