The emergence of Industrialisation
in the 18th century took us away from agrarian self-sufficiency, as we relied
more on mass production, leading to mass consumption. Already in the 1970s, futurist Alvin Toffler foreshadowed such changes
in his coining of the term 'prosumer': highlighting the emergence of a
more informed, more involved consumer of goods who would need to be kept
content by allowing for a greater customisability and
individualisability of products. Certain websites on the
internet allow the user to produce, use or both. Wikileaks is a
good example of this as it “seeks to involve the visitor in an ongoing process
of creation and collaboration that constantly changes the Web site landscape.” One of the down sides according to Homelinux.org is ,” vandalism can go unnoticed for a period of time
and wiki’s by their very nature are susceptible to trolling.”
So at this juncture in time it seems that our material goods are still under
the industrial umbrella, but our informational goods are a combination of traditional
consumption and prousage. It has almost gone full circle. For primitive man to
get to the wheel, they worked communally. One had the idea for the wheel;
another man was good with tools, another with basic maths and physics and so
on. With prousage a concept, idea or ideology is announced, and then it is
added to, improved, shaped or rejected. The first wheel was a log, then a
sledge, then a sledge on a log, then a groove was added, then an axle. In today's modern world, prousage is just another step in our evolutionary ladder.
Alex Bruns comments that there a four preconditions to
prousage, they are;
Fluid Hierarchy/Ad Hoc Meritocracy- no boss
here, it’s based on merit, not status. As it evolves different people take over
and the project leaders pass on from one to the next. This concept works well because
it allows for an open playing field and the strongest content provider at the
time temporarily takes charge.
YouTube has announced plans to share advertising revenue with produsers. But some users appear to be happy to provide the web content gratis, even if it is then commercially exploited. Learning lessons from the popularity of TV viewer voting systems in shows such as Big Brother, companies have begun to invite people to create ads about why they like eating pizzas or burgers, the winner to become their new ad. Many of the entries are posted on YouTube, so the site provides a quick, free, widespread ad campaign and the advertiser doesn't even have to make the ad.
Here is an example of such a mashup:
References
Homelinux, 2009, http://m3m.homelinux.org/wikiMC/index.php/Security
Wiki, Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki
Prousage.org, from
production to Prousage:Research into user-lead content and creation, http://produsage.org/node/9
Jenkins, H, 2009, From Production to Prousage; Interview with Alex Bruns, http://henryjenkins.org/2008/05/interview_with_axel_bruns.html
The Huffington Post Wiki, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Huffington_Post
Images
1. https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRV0IfrKeH-ghYtNwy3ihDdoBQBgmJceK7-wI4wpQe0CEYGuflI0g
2. http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/thumblarge_543/12858075650q3AQZ.jpg
3. http://www.publiusforum.com/images/huffpostalert.gif
4. http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/02112/wikipedia_2112303b.jpg
Video
1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlUKRy3mkH8
Money easily influences the way in which you'll deliver information. Hence why most have stopped relying on major news networks and corporations for our news, instead we seek out amateur news because we feel that in this case they may be more credible.
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