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HAL 2001: How to set up a successful
cyberaction
This text is published at Cyberacties.nl, a (Dutch) site devoted to cyberactions, initiated by Peter de Ruiter, who can be reached by mail@peterderuiter.nl and + 31 70 3060013 This contribution about cyberactions is highly structured. First I will discuss what cyberactions are, then who you can set up one, then when to do this and why. How do you do this successfully and where can you find resources to do so? At the end, I present some do's and don'ts and a bunch of quotes from a quick survey I did among organizations that use cyberactions. Then we can discuss. What Much used ways to quantify support to
a cyberaction are Who When and why How and where 1) Contact a few neighbors and form a
small committee. From start to finish, the whole process could be done in one or two weeks. You'll be amazed what you can accomplish and the attention you will get, probably not only from local media. Design an action page at Tripod.com or Geocities.com. Open an email address at Hotmail.com or look for a free pop mail address (in Holland 12move.nl runs quite smoothly). Start a discussion forum at Server.com. Here you can also start a free mailing list that people can subscribe to so you can easily inform them about developments and results. 8) Inform supporters about the results. 9) Be creative. Do not imitate other actions, but give yours an original swing.
Do's and don'ts Phil Agre of UCLA gives a number of useful
suggestions in order to set up a successful what he calls 'action alert
for the internet'. Read it and don't get discouraged, because it's quite
a lot. Two don'ts are: - Don't use a chain letter where you can write your name under as a form of cyberaction. They get messed up by forwarding and lost somewhere along the tracks. Last month a newspaper in the Netherlands published the experience of medical doctor B. Meyboom - de Jong with the chain letter concerning the Brazilian boy Brian. I guess you know his case: an internet provider should have donated 0,0001 cent for every email that would be forwarded in order to sponsor Brians heartsurgery. Well, doctor Meyboom forwarded the email to a couple of friends. And the friends did the same. But one of these friends added to the forwarded email: for more information contact doctor Meyboom, and gave her telephone number. After a year and a half, she still gets called form people all over the planet. 'It comes in waves', she says. And them this Brian doesn't exist at all. Example A special kind of cyber action is this: 21 October will be this year's Jam Echelon Day. A group called Cipherwar want to distort the international eavesdropping network that scans all our telephone conversations and emails. The network reacts if one of more 'trigger words' are found in communications like counterterrorism and information warfare. Than the information is monitored closely by agents. But what if everybody adds these trigger words in their emails? Then Echelon will have to employ the half of the planet in order to be able to check it all out. Find the trigger words at Cipherwar.com/echelon Quotes Greenpeace and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) can be regarded as forerunners when it come to cyberactions. At WWF supporters can become a member of the Panda Passport. As a member, you are regularly invited to sign petitions of send email messages when nature is at stake anywhere in the world. Greenpeace International has its Cyberactivist Community with 25.000 members worldwide and growing with 200 a day, says Ilja Jutte of Greenpeace Netherlands. To her, cyberactions work best when companies or policians worry about their image. Even limited pressure by way of a cyberaction can result in the right behavior towards the environment. A special kind of cyberactions by Greenpeace are the webcams that show pollution to the whole world. 'Cyberactions though will never replace the rubber boats, but with every action in the physical world we nowadays think of how we can let the public participate via the net', says Ilja Jutte. A good spin off of the Cybercentre is that people meet there and fight environmental issues locally, even apart from Greenpeace. Greenpeace about the importance of cyberactivism Roland Ramakers of Amnesty International says the internet is becoming more and more important in fighting human right issues. For instance, members and other people are asked to email authorities in countries were political prisoners are mistreated. The several national organizations of Amnesty work independently, but they are moving toward an international approach of these actions. The SMS action which is now running is a success. In this action one can reply to an SMS message and this way protest against the mistreatment of prisoners. Amnesty has similar email actions. Friends of the Earth, a loose international federation of environmental organizations, is in Holland represented by Milieudefensie. Koen Vink of Milieudefensie says they are working on a cybercentre like Greenpeace. They hope to get a grant from the Dutch government for this. Their recent (physical and digital) action 'Groene Grens' (Green Frontier) is considered a success with 13.000 gathered supporters via the internet. The facilitation of discussion forums is one of the main activities of Milieudefensie. Finally, there is an organization in the south of the Netherlands that fights for the survival of their language 'Limburgs'. Their website is an important meeting point and medium for the dissemination of information. Paul Prikken of Limburghuis.nl says that the dictionary of the Limburg language that is on the site is very popular. The amount of downloads represent the support the organization has. Being a small group without many funds, Paul praises the fact that the internet is so cheap to use to reach your goals. It also gets you in contact with a much younger crowd than in the physical world. And to get response, there is no medium that can beat the internet, says Paul. |