Archive for June 2nd, 2003


“Networks and Netwars, The future…

“Networks and Netwars, The future of terror, crime, and militancy”


This somewhat ponderous book from the Rand Corp, available online in PDF format for free, discusses how underground and militant groups are organized as networks while the governments who wish to know more about them, are organized as hierarchies. And that this poses problems for governments.


The book discusses the network organization of such disparate groups as terrorist organizations, organized crime, and protestors such as the International Committee to Ban Landmines (who won a Nobel Peace Prize) and the anarchists and anti-glob forces who participated in the Battle of Seattle.


One key insight here is “hierarchies have a difficult time fighting networks”. This is because they don’t understand them. You often see this confusion in articles and government announcements about Al Qaeda. The unspoken assumption is that Al Qaeda is hierarchical, that bin Laden is at the apex, and that if we chop off the head, then Al Qaeda will cease to exist.


This is almost certainly not the truth. Networks aren’t organized that way. There is no head to chop off. Plus, if you take out one node, another node will take over.


Three important characteristics of networks are:


1) Communication and coordination is determined by the task at hand and will change.


2) The network is complemented by links outside the organization.


3) Internal and external ties are enabled by shared norms, not by rules.


ANSWER L.A. is an excellent example of a networked organization. ANSWER called most of the recent antiwar demos in L.A. They immediately asked the other major coalitions if they wanted to join in as equal partners on the steering committee. The others did, so then we had a coalition of coalitions organizing a demo, with no one really “in charge”. The steering committee selected the date, place, and speakers, and that was about it.


The hardcore get-the-word-out push was done by the individual coalitions with no direction needed from the steering committee. Each coalition also did their own signs and banners and organized their own people. Very little hierarchy was involved in the organizing, but lots of networking was.


In the words of the book, this is an example of a SPIN, which is - take a deep breath now - a Segmented, Polycentric, Ideologically centered Network! Yessirree, they study us very carefully, even to the point of having acronyms to categorize our organizations. I guess we should be flattered.

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Why leftists think liberals are…

Why leftists think liberals are useless



Barbra Streisand thinks that people, people who fly past her house with cameras, are the nosiest people in the world.


Claiming her privacy was violated, the diva actress and singer has filed a $10 million lawsuit against Silicon Valley millionaire and environmentalist Ken Adelman. The suit demands that he remove an aerial photograph of her oceanfront Malibu mansion from his Web site.”


Dan Gillmor comments:



“As a Sierra Club lawyer told the Mercury News’ Paul Rogers: “It is inconceivable to me that someone who proclaims herself an environmentalist would threaten to dismantle one of the greatest high-tech projects to protect the California coast. At some point, someone needs to sit her down and tell her the public interest is at stake here.”


Apparently, when the public interest bothers the diva, the public interest loses.”

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Kicking out the jams in…

Kicking out the jams in Geneva


Protesters rampage in Geneva



“Police have used rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons against anti-globalisation protesters in Swiss and French cities near Evian where the Group of Eight (G8) summit is being held.


In the Swiss city of Geneva authorities spent more than nine hours battling with demonstrators as they rampaged through the city centre. Shop windows were smashed and stores looted, leaving the city streets awash with broken glass and choking fumes from tear gas canisters.”


UK Indymedia has on the ground coverage


A protestor was badly hurt when police cut a rope suspending him from a bridge. He fell 20 feet into a river.

And, of course, “Arundhati Roy is new icon for anti-G8 protestors”.

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A cage for Palestinians: A…

A cage for Palestinians: A 1,000-kilometer fence preempts the road map



“After the wall is finished, at a cost of more than $2 billion, the Palestinians will live in two minuscule states behind concrete and electrified fencing, restricted to their main population centers. Thousands of rural Palestinians will live outside the West Bank cage in military controlled zones, denied rights as citizens of either Palestine or Israel. The rest will live inside the prison.”

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Greek lawyers to sue Blair…

Greek lawyers to sue Blair for war crimes



“The Athens Bar Association has announced it will file a suit against British Prime Minister Tony Blair for “crimes against humanity and war crimes” for his role in the Iraq war. Association President Dimitris Paxinos told the press the organisation was also considering launching an action against Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, who also backed the invasion of Iraq.”

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