Rant of the Week

Infodiversity

You are going to hear this word a lot in the next few years.

I hope..

Biodiversity is good.  We know that if there is biodiversity in a certain geographical region, that the region is generally healthy.  There is a balance of interests that allows all species to thrive and propagate within the same habitat. 

However, if one species gains advantages as the result of human intervention or mishap, the entire ecosystem can become polluted or barren.  Some species, for example, will consume all the grass and leaves, because of a reduction in the population of the carnivores that prey on them.  The entire habitat can become a disaster zone. 

Information technologies are the same way.  If our environment is balanced with news and information from a diversity of sources-- labour, management, government, academia, women's groups, men's groups, capitalists, socialists, environmentalists, even conservatives-- we will have a healthy habitat that represents a balance of all the competing interests.

But what happens if the wolves take over all of the information technologies and begin to control the message.  That is what is happening in the news and entertainment industries.  Big corporations like Time-Warner are taking over more and more other media companies, including AOL and CNN. 

So when you watch your newscaster and read your paper and think that you are getting information from honest people who have drawn their own conclusions about various events and are relating them to you-- think again. 

When Adbusters tried to show a documentary on deforestation in British Columbia on TV-- even offering to buy the air time-- they were turned down flat.  No television station would broadcast their documentary.  Why not?  You can buy air time to sell cars and panty hose and diamond rings.  Why can't you buy air time to tell people about an ecological disaster in the making?

Because these media companies are not objective or neutral when it comes to interpreting events for you, the consumer.  They want to decide what you should or should not see. 

In practice, their standards seem pretty broad.  They are always excited about showing you something that is "cutting edge".  But there are some things that they will never show you.  And that is anything that challenges the idea that personal fulfillment and happiness can only be found in the purchase of more and more branded products and services.

Copyright © 2001 Bill Van Dyk  All rights reserved.

Copyright © 2001 Bill Van Dyk  All rights reserved.

 

 

All Contents Copyright © Bill Van Dyk
 2001 All Rights Reserved