Tuesday, June 6, 2017

"Electronic Disturbance: An Interview" by Ricardo Dominguez

Nouriyah Saleh
June 6, 2017

Blog Response: "Electronic Disturbance: An Interview"

Dominguez discusses how Electronic Disturbance Theater and FloodNet were used as forms of online protesting in the 1990s. I thought it was interesting reading about this early form of online civil disobedience. The internet now is so expansive that it makes online protests in the past look silly. Today, cultural resistance through social media can be extremely powerful because millions of people use it and have access. Just like Dominguez mentions, small local actions can become large global actions. I agree with his statement to an extent. Now that the internet has a stronger presence, what happens when there's too many large global actions? Do social movements get the attention that they deserve if there's other issues that people are concerned about? How does one issue break out from the rest?

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