6 Comments

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Mihnea Miculescu

Sunday, April 20, 2008 at 9:19pm

Go figure, Facebook’s getting to be even better than the online petition websites. :) Just another step in its plan to take over the world.

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Mariana Sarceda

Monday, April 21, 2008 at 12:58am

New media such as Facebook has proved to be something much more complex and richer than just a way to keep in touch with your friends on a day-to-day basis.

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Richard Millington

Monday, April 21, 2008 at 7:55am

“…successfully stopped the bank from introducing new charges to fresh graduates”

I’m sure that’s not the case. HSBC could easily have chosen to ignore the Facebook groups (which many other companies have done). Instead I reckon it was the media attention that this group received, and the subsequent pressure that put upon HSBC.

I think you nailed it in the second point. Cause-related Facebook groups have become more of a basecamp of operations. It’s a mighty collaborative tool, where people can organise themselves to take action. The group itself is not that action.

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Luke Pollard

Monday, April 21, 2008 at 3:04pm

Interesting post? From the online campaign work I’ve done Facebook campaign groups work best when they are part of a broader strategy. Some groups I’ve come across believe having a facebook group is an end in itself and deploy a campaign with a high membership as its goal. A far better way to conceive of facebook campaigning is as an organisational tool to aide a broader offline and online campaign. All campaigns need a hub, a committee room if you will, and facebook with its multi-media platform and ease of communications is an excellent tool. But facebook campaigning alone is unlikely to achieve the objective. Think of it as a catalyst. A very good one if used properly.

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Matthew Gain

Monday, April 21, 2008 at 3:35pm

I wonder if the mere success of Facebook as a tool to create change in the past is the aspect that will bring it undone.

It is so easy to set up these groups and to then in turn it is so easy to become a member and get involved that I believe so many will be made to the point they became redundant. I mean every cause has one, so why should I care?

I was invited to join this group today - http://snurl.com/255vw - by someone who had simply mailed their entire list. A quick look at the site suggested the need to be outraged and sign up to the group. However a little more digging suggested that the artist starved the dog (feels wrong to describe it as an art work) to highlight the fact that dogs all over his home city were being neglected and starving on the street. Apparently the dog in question was already too sick to be saved.

I wrote to the site administrator suggesting that she should include the artist’s intention on the page so that his voice could at least be included in the discussion. She responded agreeing and advising that she had set up the group quickly without understanding the artist’s intentions. She still thought it wrong, but was not as outraged as she first was. Since launch the group has exploded likely with other outraged people who clicked join and promptly forgot the poor dog’s plight.

In my opinion it is the fact that people are joining protest groups, not because they believe in the cause, understand the issues or are passionate about it, but simply because it is as easy to join it as it isn’t, that will be the downfall of Facebook as a lobbying medium.

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Phil

Tuesday, April 22, 2008 at 10:02am

I still maintain it’s a combination of lazy journalism and lazy protesting. Really.

Journalists seem to cite Facebook as proof that there’s pressure on a particular organisation for doing this, that or the other. For example, “and a Facebook group objecting to the plans has already attracted 100,000 members.” As if that’s proof enough that the corrupt organisation or dirty corporation should change its ways.

And it’s lazy protesting. How hard is it to join a Facebook group? What does it take, two clicks to open the message, then join? It’s hardly saying you’re a passionate believer in the group’s cause. What happened to a good old fashioned protest march?

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