Posts Tagged ‘social media’

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U.S. military aid funds tear gas used to repress peaceful protestors in Egypt

January 28, 2011

Lynne Kiesling

I am watching and following the events in Egypt with great interest. Of course as a technologist-of-sorts who studies complexity I am interested in the role of social media in enabling such a distributed movement to coalesce. Unlike what happened in Iran in June 2009, this uprising seems likely to have a longer-lasting impact on Egypt’s institutions.

The British journalists on Al Jazeera are asking about the domino effect and whether or not this will be the equivalent of 1989 and countries “throwing off the Soviet yoke”. Or will this bring a “meet the new boss, same as the old boss” switch from one authoritarian regime to another? The lessons of economics indicate that for the sake of the Egyptian people, their prosperity and well-being, and their living standards, institutional change that brings an increase in individual liberty.

There’s an important point relevant to U.S. policy and the economics and morality of our spending U.S. taxpayer dollars on military aid to such authoritarian regimes. We spend over $1 billion dollars on aid, including military aid, to Egypt. Today that authoritarian regime has turned its arms on its citizens who were protesting peacefully, including turning water cannons on people at prayer. Such aid has neither consequentialist nor moral economic foundations, should never have existed, and certainly should not continue.

Some in the media are starting to see this, although in today’s press conference no one pressed Robert Gibbs enough on this. CNN’s Ben Wederman is on the ground in Cairo, and sent this tweet:

Teenager showed me teargas canister “made in USA”. Saw the same thing in Tunisia. Time to reconsider US exports?

As the kids say these days, peace out.

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Coffee shop builds business with Twitter

February 17, 2009

Michael Giberson

Unlike Lynne, I don’t Twitter.  (No Facebook or Myspace, either.  I don’t text from my phone – well, only to reply when my kids text me first; I used to IM, but I don’t anymore.)  I do have a LinkedIn profile, but other than blogging here and responding to the occasional email, that is about as close to ‘social media’ as I get these days.

But I am, as you might say, Twitter-curious.  This story about a Houston coffee house that used Twitter to build business caught my eye.

An excerpt:

On October 31st, 2008 Sean Stoner (@maslowbeer) was hungry. As a regular customer at CoffeeGroundz he sent the following Twitter to Cohen:

sean

Cohen quickly replied and Sean went through the drive-thru at CoffeeGroundz to pick up his burrito.

coffeeground

This simple exchange got a lot of coverage on Twitter and was hailed as potentially the first time that Twitter had ever been used to place a To-Go Order. Seeing an opportunity, Cohen started taking to-go orders via direct message from any of his Twitter Clientele.

CoffeeGroundz offers free Wi-Fi, plenty of outlets, and they serve beer and wine – making it a cross between a Coffee House and a Lounge. Today, customers can order beverages and tasty bites from the comfort of their seat using Direct Messages to @coffeegroundz. How cool is that? You don’t even have to stop working to walk to the counter and order a coffee.

Hat tip to Texas Coffee People.

(By the way, I think the best place in Lubbock to get coffee is Sugar Brown’s, on 50th Street.  They have a Myspace page, but no Twitter so far as I can tell.)

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