stolen goods and the power of the internet

Like the good folks over at the Independent, I too have recently been reading Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody, a collection of arguments and vignettes on the power of the Internet. The salient point that the Indy picked up on is how, by abolishing the high costs of printing, publishing, and distributing information, the Internet is forcing The Newspaper to reassess its traditional role as the weekly standard for a community.

A few weeks ago, I ran into Lenore Ramm of Eclectic Glob of Tangential Verbosity at the DPAC Blogger Bash. She told me of a friend who’s bike had been stolen and how, in an effort to retrieve the bike, the friend created a website. While stories of using blogs and monitoring eBay and Craigslist to recover stolen goods have become almost commonplace, take a second to think about what this means for just how pervasive the Internet has become to our conception of community.

Just two examples to focus my point:

  • Neighborhood listservs are now among the most reliable sources of hyperlocal news. Warnings about loose dogs on the streets, plants to give away, yard sales announced, café music benefit show funds raised, even homes sold — no topic is off-topic as long as it happens in the neighborhood. When friends ask about finding housing in my neighborhood, I refer them to the listserv and encourage them to join.
  • There are also a growing number of cities with local blogs that cover on-the-ground civic reporting with as much reliability and insight as the municipal papers. Bull City Rising and Church Hill People’s News (Richmond, VA) come to mind.

And while there have always been start-up attempts at taking a cut from the local publishing market, Shirky’s point is that never has it been so easy to obtain the means of publication. Until the advent of the Internet, publishing an independent organ for the sole purpose of recovering a $700 bicycle just would not have been possible.

So, on March 21st, a bike was stolen in Old West Durham, and now the whole world can know about it. Any computer attached to the Internet can browse to http://findmybicycle.blogspot.com/, learn how to spot the features that make the victim’s bike unique, and get in touch with the owner. “I’m hoping that we demonstrate the power of social media!,” says the website’s creator.

So world, although it may add some perverse pleasure to your life to know that bike thieves spend eternity in a special circle of hell for their miscreant deeds, the owner of a silver Trek 7500 FX will find more pleasure if she gets her bike back. Even more still if a community helps her find it.

 

a palette similar

Attentive readers may notice that I’ve recently added a Creative Commons licensing badge to nicomachus.net. I’ve meant to add it for some time now, and older versions of nicomachus.net bore the badge. In the process of switching to WordPress (in 2007) and revamping the (visual) theme for the site, I lost or decided to shed most of the blog links and other sidebar items I had collected. So after a two-year hiatus, it’s now back.

from wallygs Flickr

from wallyg's Flickr photostream

You’ll notice too that I’ve recently updated the look of this site, which I hope is both pleasing to the eye and quick-loading on your computers. One feature that I want to draw your attention to is the navigation system in the top left corner of the screen, which is a story in itself.

The vertical bars, which switch to black when you hover your cursor over them, are meant to mimic the fluted columns of doric and ionic architecture (e.g. the inset grooves of the columns supporting the Parthenon in ancient Greece). I don’t really expect anyone to pick up on this bit of visual rhyming, but it represents part of the style I am developing on both this website and, more specifically, on my business’ website. You see, as a perpetual student of ancient Greek philosophy, I look for ways to incorporate and exhibit some of the virtues of Plato, Aristotle, and Plotinus’ ethics and aesthetics. After all, one of the most important things one can do with one’s life is to develop a sense of style that ultimately guides all of one’s decisions and behavior.

red_spectrumFor the palette, I knew I wanted to use a spectrum of shades of red. I found inspiration on the bedside table.

The concept for the vertical bars fits most squarely into my other website, the one for my web-design and digital media company, nicomedia. I decided to use the vertical bar concept, although mirrored, on this website as well in order to imply the connection between the ethic of my business and and ethic of my personal site — both sites, just as both the commercial and civic motivations in my life, are inspired and led by the same background.

header for nicomedia's website

header for nicomedia's website

in the footer at Ogilvy Durham

in the footer at Ogilvy Durham

So, if it’s not obvious from all that I’ve said here, I put some thought into this design. A moment of panic, then, was understandable last week, when I noticed that another local website design company is making use of a similar navigation system. Ogilvy Durham’s blog site lists their most often employed tags in shades of red not unlike the pile-of-books palette.

While it struck me at first as a strange coincidence that two website design firms in Durham would develop and employ a navigation system so visually and behaviorally similar, after an email exchange with the Senior Art Director at Ogilvy, it’s clear that we simply share both an affinity for red and black (OgilvyDurham because red and black are Ogilvy colors generally, nicomachus.net because of the political symbolism behind the colors) as well as a design intuition.