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    <title>BBC - SuperPower</title>
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    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2006-03-28:/blogs/superpower/500</id>
    <updated>2010-03-19T15:37:09Z</updated>
    <subtitle>SuperPower is a season of programmes across online, radio and television, investigating how the internet affects lives and has become the catalyst for a fundamental change in societies around the world. This blog is your guide to what is happening in the season. Find more SuperPower content at www.bbc.com/superpower</subtitle>
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<entry>
    <title>My World: the winner</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/03/my_world_the_winner.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.201714</id>


    <published>2010-03-19T15:14:23Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-19T15:37:09Z</updated>


    <summary>The winner of the SuperPower film competition &quot;My World&quot; has been announced. Here the Executive Producer of the competition, SImon Pitts explains why it was held now and what made the winner stand out. &quot;Great! I needed a camera&quot; said...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>The winner of the SuperPower film competition "My World" has been announced.  Here the Executive Producer of the competition, SImon Pitts explains why it was held now and what made the winner stand out.</em></p>

<p>"Great! I needed a camera" said the winning film-maker Frederico Teixeira de Sampayo.  He was on his mobile phone in Madrid, Spain.  He said his (very) old camera has broken and so this came in time.  </p>

<p>Frederico's film "Wash Rinse and Spin" is beautifully simple. You watch as a finger switches on a washing machine and dirty laundry starts to rinse.  Then you notice Frederico's reflection in the shiny door of the machine.  He sits and watches the hypnotic rhythm.  The rest of the story is told in on-screen text as Frederico ponders what one can do to get a job in recession.  It's visually neat, smart and relevant.  </p>

<p>We launched MyWorld in January at the Sundance Film Festival.  The idea was to ask all our TV and radio audiences to make a mini documentary about their world - to share a story they think the world should see.  It caught on.  As an enthusiastic blogger on the BBC's Global Minds audience panel put it: "I really like it.... You're creating a mosaic of humanity".  Somehow that description nails it beautifully.  Through all these stories that we received and the ones that are shortlisted by our curators, we get access to places we could never see and stories we would never know about.</p>

<p>It's interesting how often the same themes come up in people's films.  With over 500 films from everywhere, people clearly share similar concerns.  Or at least the ones with cameras do.  We had films detailing local environmental issues - about a diseased fish in Canada, about environmental damage in the beautiful Galapagos.  There were plenty of stories about children's suffering in poorer economies, about dreams of freedom in Iran and plenty of stories of recession from the USA.</p>

<p>We're currently in the edit suite putting some of the best films together to be shown on BBC World News this weekend.  And we'll get them up online at the MyWorld web pages next week.</p>

<p>Even a year ago a worldwide competition such as this would not have been possible.  </p>

<p>Advances in camera technology on mobile phones, and improvements in editing software mean that access to storytelling is pretty much open to all.  </p>

<p>MyWorld has turned this small corner of the BBC into an editor and curator of your ideas and stories.  I'm sure that there will be more.</p>

<p><em>Simon Pitts, Executive Producer, MyWorld</em><br />
</p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>How the internet is changing the lives of disabled people.</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/03/how_the_internet_is_changing_t.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.201167</id>


    <published>2010-03-17T15:02:04Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-17T15:42:37Z</updated>


    <summary>As part of the BBC Superpower season bbcrussian.com set up a blog called Open Access. Disabled people from Samara, a town on the river Volga, agreed to write a dairy describing their experience on the internet. Anna Vissens of bbcrussian...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>As part of the BBC Superpower season bbcrussian.com set up a blog called Open Access.  Disabled people from Samara, a town on the river Volga, agreed to write a dairy describing their experience on the internet.  Anna Vissens of bbcrussian has compiled some of their entries.</em></p>

<p><strong>Igor Glushenkov</strong></p>

<p>There is lots of information on the internet - some of it is useful, interesting and truthful, some of it - pretty horrific. Take for instance an article published by a popular Russian newspaper which proposes to eliminate children born with a disability right in the maternity ward. </p>

<p>I have lived with cerebral palsy for 50 years and have heard so much nonsense that I have stopped paying attention. </p>

<p>But then the other day I got a call from a friend, also living with cerebral palsy.   She tearfully told me that an article had been published proposing to kill disabled people. </p>

<p>She was unimpressed by my arguments about democracy, the freedom to write anything and the freedom not to read what has been written by others.   </p>

<p>Then I started getting calls from other disabled friends. They were asking me: what are we to do now? Are we next?</p>

<p><strong>Alexander Tibatin</strong></p>

<p>People say that they only play foreign exchange markets online to boost their family budget</p>

<p>But they are not quite telling the truth. </p>

<p>Playing games is a way people to unwind,  to hope to realize the unrealized potential, to return to the careless childhood. </p>

<p>Online my gladiator avatar has won. </p>

<p>I turn off the monitor and I return from Ancient Greece to the present.    The Winter Olympics have just finished in Canada. The Russians have done poorly. </p>

<p>Maybe they should make  a new computer game.  Where our figure skater Yevgeny Plushchenko is number one, where we triumph over the Canadians in hockey and where our guys win gold in the biathlon. </p>

<p>But all these victories are only possible in the virtual, not the real world. </p>

<p><strong>Valentina Plotnikova</strong></p>

<p>I don't have enough time to explore everything I would like to. I do not understand people who say that they are bored.</p>

<p>I struggled to send my first e-mail to the BBC. The text I typed disappeared and I had to type it again. Everything I do in the Internet I do slowly and I lack confidence too.</p>

<p>I received a reply from the BBC - I was very happy to have this proof that the internet is working indeed.</p>

<p>When I tried to save my text I hit a wrong button by accident... Sergei helps me when I am stuck. He is very patient. I would like to know computers like he does.</p>

<p><br />
<strong>Sergei Graponin. </strong> (Sergei was paralyzed in a shooting accident while serving army 33 years ago. He trains other bloggers to use the internet talking with them on the phone.)</p>

<p>On of the people I am training called me the other day. Her friends loaned her their old computer and she is now learning to touch-type. </p>

<p>And then a problem arose:  she had removed the learn-to-touch-type CD from the CD drive too early and the programme "froze" on her screen. </p>

<p>We used the Ctrl-Alt-Delete command to resolve the problem and at the same time encountered a new one - not enough disc space. </p>

<p>I suggested that we remove some redundant programme. We chose to get rid of the latest programme that had been in use - her little nephew had been playing "Puzzles". </p>

<p>I spent the rest of the evening worrying about that nephew of hers. I had infringed on that little person's rights to privacy. At night this little boy appeared to me in a dream and threatened, without removing the chewing gum from his mouth: "I'll get back at you, you puzzle destroyer!" I could not reply anything to him. I felt numb. My nervous system must have shut down.  It must have been some kind of virus.</p>

<p>Tomorrow I will warn my trainee not to use the internet until she has installed anti-virus software.</p>

<p><strong>Natasha Pronina</strong></p>

<p>I have written lots of letters in my life and now I can say that these were written the old-fashioned way - using paper, a pen, an envelope and stamps.</p>

<p>There is a something charming about those letters - written by hand, put into an envelope and having travelled the long journey from one person to another.  And now here comes the new way to write letters - electronic mail, its main advantage being the speed of delivery. </p>

<p>Recently I had another amazing internet moment.  I recalled a song which I heard 27 years ago on a tape recorder. That song had really touched me, but I only remembered a couple of words from it. I typed them into the search engine and here was the song. </p>

<p>Another amazing thing about the internet is that it has given me an opportunity to get in touch with long lost friends. </p>]]>
        
    </content>
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<entry>
    <title>SuperPower Nation: what is the world talking about? </title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/03/what_is_the_world_talking_abou.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.201091</id>


    <published>2010-03-17T10:41:25Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-17T15:07:37Z</updated>


    <summary>Krupa Thakrar-Padhy is the producer of SuperPower Nation which goes on air on March 18 2010. Here she explains what it&apos;s about. What&apos;s the world talking about? Tune in, log on or pop over on March 18th and we hope...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>Krupa Thakrar-Padhy is the producer of SuperPower Nation which goes on air on March 18 2010. Here she explains what it's about.</em></p>

<p>What's the world talking about? Tune in, log on or pop over on March 18th and we hope you'll find out. </p>

<p>This Thursday, Hackney's Shoreditch Town Hall becomes the world under one roof as it hosts SuperPower Nation.</p>

<p>The six hour event is part of the BBC's SuperPower Season. It's all about ordinary people from all walks of life, from all corners of the world engaging with one another about absolutely anything. Call it an experiment, pushing the boundaries or even over-ambitious but there's no excuse for having nothing to talk about.</p>

<p>This is the day when the BBC passes its editorial agenda to its audience. With no overarching question we'll let conversations unfold naturally between people of different language groups as we aim to get a snapshot of the global conversation as it happens in real time.</p>

<p>Consider the scene - A Urdu speaking Romeo romancing a French speaking Juliet, an Indian sitar player jamming with the bongo drums, a video wall full of talking faces from around the world, a flow of blogs from Brazil to New Delhi, a Mandarin speaker chatting about Iranian politics to a Hausa speaker all while munching on a plate of Indian samosas. </p>

<p><br />
The SuperPower Nation team have been working heads down to make this day happen. We've got over 20 of the BBC's language services involved from the Somali to the Macedonian service. BBC World, Arabic and Persian TV will be coming together to broadcast on the day and both Africa Have Your Say and World Have Your Say will be coming live from the Town Hall for an ambitious day of BBC broadcasting across all platforms.</p>

<p>There's plenty of opportunity to get involved even if you don't happen to live in the East end of London.  </p>

<p>You can tweet about the hot topic wherever you are using the hash tag SuperPower Nation, email us your thoughts or links to your blog to super.power@bbc.co.uk, join in our new multilanguage chat room (check out the site for more info on the day) or even pop up on webcam via video-conferencing.</p>

<p>Distance should be no boundary to conversation - nor should language. </p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Twittering and the world of disarmament</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/03/twittering_and_the_world_of_di.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.199565</id>


    <published>2010-03-11T13:10:12Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-11T13:40:11Z</updated>


    <summary>Chris Vallance is one of the reporters for the BBC SuperPower season during which he will look at how the internet is changing the way we interact with those in authority. Here he looks at the worlds of diplomacy and...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>Chris Vallance is one of the reporters for the BBC SuperPower season during which he will look at  how the internet is changing the way we interact with those in authority.  Here he looks at the worlds of diplomacy and disarmament; are they embracing the web and are becoming opening up to the publict. </em></p>

<p>I am ihere to meet John Duncan, the British Ambassador for Multilateral Arms Control & Disarmament, who is an avid twitterer (http://twitter.com/jduncanMacd).</p>

<p>This is quite a big step in the locked-down world of arms control. </p>

<p>To even get into the Ambassadorial offices I had to surrender my phone, and hence any chance of tweeting anything, secret or otherwise. </p>

<p>I wasn't being unfairly targeted. The ambassador' is very kind and patient assistant told me she wasn't allowed to use her mobile in the building either. </p>

<p>I was in Geneva to attend a meeting of human rights activists.</p>

<p>One of the speakers was Google's Robert Boorstin.  He's less of a fan of the way people use twitter than Ambassador Duncan. "No offense to the people who run Twitter or who use it but I don't want to know what you had for breakfast".</p>

<p>Twitter is a little like the dark, gooey, salty, brewing by-product called Marmite, which is a great British institution.  You either love it or loath it  - I love it, my Canadian spouse thinks it looks like hoof oil.</p>

<p>And the internet is rather like this. Read the papers and the web is either going to save the world or end it.</p>

<p>Technology has always provoked reactions like this. Tom Standage's book The Victorian Internet about the history of the telegraph shows how revolutions in communications technology have often been accompanied by exaggerated hopes and fears</p>

<p>Of course, advances in communication do have profound changes, it's just as futurologists point out, we are apt to overestimate change in the short run and underestimate it the long run</p>

<p>You don't need to be a futurologist, or a highly paid consultant, or even have finished middle school to know that the web is a technology with huge potential.   </p>

<p>Another observation of Robert Boorstin's was to be very sceptical about anyone who claims to be able to predict the future of the web. This is a wise observation.</p>

<p>In the course of working on this SuperPower season I've met people who have been, to use an ugly word, empowered by the web. </p>

<p>Sometimes this seems to be a good thing.  </p>

<p>At other times, as in the case of those with extreme views, we recoil and ask ourselves if something should be done about it. More often it's a grey area.</p>

<p>In the end, the web reflects the human beings who use it. But we shouldn't complain, it's that which makes it such a wonderful, surprising and sometimes disturbing place. </p>

<p><em>Chris Vallance is writing and broadcasting a series of five features on Digital Democracy which will be broadcast next week on World Service Radio and www.bbc.cm/news</em></p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Digital Giants: Ballmer, Schmidt, Wales look to the future</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/03/digital_giants_ballmer_schmidt.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.198116</id>


    <published>2010-03-05T16:05:02Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-05T16:40:26Z</updated>


    <summary>Hello, I&apos;m Shaunagh Connaire and for the last three months I&apos;ve been working on the Digital Giants series as part of the SuperPower Season. Digital Giants is a series of monologues in which the digital world&apos;s top thinkers share their...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>Hello, I'm Shaunagh Connaire and for the last three months I've been working on the Digital Giants series as part of the SuperPower Season.  Digital Giants is a series of monologues in which the digital world's top thinkers share their visions of the future with the BBC from 8 to 19 March, online, on tv and on radio.</em></p>

<p>7 internet sages, 6 days and 5 cities - and that was just the first leg of my Digital Giants journey! When I say journey it was more like a 'geek stakeout', as we trekked across the U.S to speak with the finest of digital masterminds. First up in Chicago was Sam Pitroda, adviser to the PM of India.</p>

<p>For me Sam Pitroda epitomised 'the big thinker' and not surprisingly he was one of the gurus behind India's telecom revolution. </p>

<p>After spending an hour in his home in the suburbs, I came away feeling enlightened. For him the future for voting was on the cell phone and the archaic classroom as we know it, had seen its day! </p>

<p>Next stop New York, where I caught up with Joe Rospars, Director of Obama's online presidential campaign and Philip Emeagwali, a supercomputer scientist from Nigeria. </p>

<p>Rospars intrigued me. This man in his twenties had somehow managed to not only rub shoulders with one of the most influential men on earth but also boast that he was in some ways responsible for putting Obama where he is today. But a modest Joe was resolute that this bottom up approach to online campaigning could be applied to elections anywhere in the world. </p>

<p>An hour later in the same hotel conference room, Philip Emeagwali delivered the African perspective. The man literally had me on the edge of my seat as his every word commanded my full attention. I soon learned Nigeria was to become the third most populous country in the world and what implications this would have for the internet.</p>

<p>Another seven hours in the air and I found myself in Seattle. It was CEO of Microsoft, Steve Ballmer's turn in the hot seat! Now I'd be lying if I said that I hadn't sneaked a glimpse of the YouTube videos online of Mr. Ballmer screaming at the top of his lungs....and after that I really didn't know what to expect! But alas I quickly digested my worst fears as a jolly and spirited man sat down beside me to chat. Twenty minutes later I had learned about the intricacies of cloud computing and the prospect of one platform for all devices (TV, radio and web merged as one). </p>

<p>Next stop the Googleplex at Mountain View! Here Eric Schmidt (CEO of Google) delivered his views on augmented reality and Google's plan to create a 100x100 matrix in every language for online video and sms. </p>

<p>Back in San Francisco I caught up with Jimmy Wales (founder of Wikipedia) and he delved into the paradigm of geotagging and creating a more geographical aware encyclopaedia. </p>

<p>Not surprisingly I did probe the notion of net neutrality and the old adage of winners recording history. However it was apparent that Wales had already thought of this and he hopes to create a Wikipedia in every language and dialect throughout the world!</p>

<p>Later that day I spoke to Ge Wang (cofounder of Smule) at Stanford University. And with three cameras focusing on him, his passion and zeal for the app scene and what it brings to music could not go unobserved. Anyone who plays a Beatles tune by blowing into their iphone will always get a thumbs up for me...</p>

<p>Victor Koo (CEO and founder of Youku) delivered the Chinese verdict. Interestingly he considers the idea of censorship and the monitoring of content in China to be exaggerated by the West. An enigmatic argument to say the least but one which makes you question whether this is the generally held opinion of most CEOs in China.....</p>

<p>And that was the U.S.</p>

<p>Inspired, informed and jetlagged I made my way back to London.</p>

<p>Back at the BBC I caught up with our only lady Digital Giant, Martha Lane Fox (cofounder of Lastminute.com). Martha delved deep into the notion of hierarchies online and why UK internet businesses never really had a lasting impact. One word. Google.</p>

<p>Evgeny Morozov, (Yahoo! Fellow member of Georgetown University) laughed at the notion of democracy online and portrayed a more ominous and dark version of the web concluding that transparency and anonymity online are all too opaque. </p>

<p>Music streaming and this whole concept of the Freemiun model had to be explored so I also made it my business to chat to Daniel Ek (of Spotify). According to him, virtual scouting and streaming music in tailored packages is the future. I am still not wholey convinced about this business model and its sustainability but I suppose time will tell.</p>

<p>And that was that. My Digital Giants journey complete. </p>

<p><em>Shaunagh Connaire is a producer for HardTalk at BBC World News and produced the Digital Giants series for SuperPower.  You can see some of them now by logging onto</em><br />
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/sci_tech/digital_giants</p>

<p><br />
</p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>Mobile internet in Nigeria: the 21st Century Invasion.</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/03/mobile_technology_in_nigeria_t.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.197448</id>


    <published>2010-03-03T15:10:57Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-04T15:03:21Z</updated>


    <summary>Jamilah Tangaza is Head of BBC Hausa which connects the Hausa-speaking community across the globe, from villages in Northern Nigeria to diaspora audiences in Europe. Here she tells of a new initiative to connect rural Nigeria to the web and...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>Jamilah Tangaza is Head of BBC Hausa which connects the Hausa-speaking community across the globe, from villages in Northern Nigeria to diaspora audiences in Europe.  </p>

<p>Here she tells of a new initiative to connect rural Nigeria to the web and life of a young connected urbanite in London.</em></p>

<p>I know that mobile phones rule my children's world but frankly they rule my world too. It also appears they are starting to rule some African rural communities as well. </p>

<p>Mobile phones are becoming increasingly popular in Nigeria.  However, usage is largely limited to voice calls and SMS, and for some areas, becoming connected to the internet can be a major challenge.   </p>

<p>When mobile technology really began to be taken seriously some two decades ago, no-one knew what the scale of the impact would be, in terms of communication, accessibility, convenience, or the nuisance they can sometimes become. </p>

<p>Back in January as part of the SuperPower season,  BBC Hausa provided villagers of Gitata in Nasarawa, Northern Nigeria, with two internet-enabled mobile phones. </p>

<p>I'm looking forward to the BBC Hausa's "Gagabadau" at 06.30 GMT on March 15, as Ibrahim Isa revisits the village to see how the devices might have changed the lives of the villagers.</p>

<p>Gitata continues our Labarinku A Tafinku (Your World in Your Palms) story, which started last summer.  </p>

<p>By giving village communities in Nigeria mobile phones, we are empowering them.  I also see it as some sort of partnership between journalists and 'citizens', and I am hopeful it will benefit all involved. </p>

<p>Exploring the other end of the 'connectivity scale', we also wanted to look at the effect of the internet on young urbanites and to find out what it means to them to keep 'connected'.  </p>

<p>A second-generation Hausa girl living in London, Khadija Ahmed, enjoys surfing the net and social networking and spends several hours a day on the internet via her iPod, which she uses to chat, visit Facebook, exchange pictures and listen to music. </p>

<p>Yet Khadija still finds time to study - she is an A-student who hopes to read Law at Oxford University.  </p>

<p>The popularity of online social networking, particularly sites such as Facebook, is also rapidly increasing in Northern Nigeria, and many young people use BBC Hausa's Facebook page as their meeting point where they exchange views on topics ranging from sports to politics to social issues. </p>

<p>I am going to be talking to Khadija in Zamani Riga at 06.30 on Tuesday 16 March, and Ahmed Wakil will be asking youngsters in Abuja about the ways in which mobile phones and online social networking are changing social dynamics and habits. That will be on Kungiyar Zumunta at 06.30 on Wednesday 17 March.  </p>

<p>BBC Hausa is also going to be looking at the 'non-mobile' generation - the 'unconnected', with Nazir Mika'ilu reporting on whether the older generation is missing out on what many believe is a tool of empowerment. That will be on Jiya Ba Yau Ba at 06.30 GMT on Friday 19 March.</p>

<p>In English you can hear from Gitata village on The World Today (radio) on March 8 and on TV on March 20.</p>

<p>I am hopeful lots of benefits will be reaped both on our part and on the part of the communities too. After all we share a common objective: the will to change life for the better!</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>Online Hackers and Snoopers investigated</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/02/online_hackers_and_snoopers_in.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.196264</id>


    <published>2010-02-26T15:54:49Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-01T17:08:06Z</updated>


    <summary>Julian Bedford of World Service News looks at the Radio Documentaries that will form part of the SuperPower season. One of the documentaries I&apos;ve been working on in preparation for the Superpower season is an investigation into our vulnerability to...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p><em>Julian Bedford of World Service News looks at the Radio Documentaries that will form part of the SuperPower season.</em></p>

<p>One of the documentaries I've been working on in preparation for the Superpower season is an investigation into our vulnerability to snoopers and hackers now so much of our lives is played out online. </p>

<p>As someone who has failed to engage properly with the web, I expected it to be terrifying and to some extent it is, but what is more scary to me is the discovery of how much of ourselves is daily given away as we type. </p>

<p>We trade information for free searches and the use of  social networks. </p>

<p>The growing presence of cookies in the back of our computers tell any interested parties in  great detail who we are, how we live and what interests us.</p>

<p>For much of that information I am grateful to Aleks Krototski, who has been dropping in to Bush House to record the big documentary strand of the season -- The Virtual Revolution. She lives and breathes the web and her insights in the series are a lesson to us all.</p>

<p>For more on the malicious hackers, go to Russia. There we meet Andrei who's the central figure in our "Hackers For Hire" documentary. </p>

<p>Just twenty-years-old and yet he claims to have been inside more government computers around the world than is good for him. </p>

<p>Sarah Rainsford and Rose Kudabaeva travelled into the intense cold of Moscow and Siberia to find out why Russian hackers are so good. </p>

<p>Another country whose hackers enjoy a certain renown at present is China, but our investigation there was centred more on the country's Great Firewall and how Chinese internauts use the web. </p>

<p>Weiliang Nie of BBC Chinese found it difficult to get the story, but has taped some intriguing voices and brought home an audio diary of his journey.</p>

<p>That's what's been really enjoyable -- working and thinking in another dimension. The use of audio diaries and video to make the stories come alive not just on radio, but on the web. </p>

<p>For me it's been the biggest challenge of the whole season, a certain reconfiguring of my brain to try and get things to work in ways I am just not used to. Because I am such a recent convert I cannot say whether it has worked, but for your sakes, I hope it has.</p>

<p>Then there's Gordon. A serendipitous encounter at a London railway station with a passing acquaintance from college, not seen in twenty years, gave me my internet entrepreneur who is enduring the hazards of a start-up. </p>

<p>He is living and breathing what we are investigating, and trying to turn two years of his life into a going concern rather than a failed dream. </p>

<p>The clock is ticking on his venture and I am genuinely intrigued to discover whether his business project will work. We should know more by the end of the season.  </p>

<p>There are other ideas that I would have loved to pursue;  such as taking a stroll through a graveyard of dead internet sites and what that journey might tell us about the way our lives have been changed over the past twenty years. </p>

<p>Perhaps we can have a look at those when we next get round to examine the world's new SuperPower.</p>

<p><em>Julian Bedford is the editor of radio documentaries for BBC World Service</em></p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>On the road in Brazil: bogus Blackberries and changing hemispheres at half-time</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/02/on_the_road_in_brazil_bogus_bl.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.196035</id>


    <published>2010-02-25T17:22:08Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-25T17:41:47Z</updated>


    <summary>SuperPower in Brazil by Mark Gregory, BBC Technology Correspondent Day 1: I am in Sao Paulo finding out how Brazilians make money from using the internet. It&apos;s my first trip to Brazil. First impression of Sao Paulo: it&apos;s huge and...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p>SuperPower in Brazil by Mark Gregory, BBC Technology Correspondent</p>

<p>Day 1: I am in Sao Paulo finding out how Brazilians make money from using the internet.  It's my first trip to Brazil.  First impression of Sao Paulo:  it's huge and sprawling but  surprisingly lush. </p>

<p>Most Brazilians don't have internet access at home so they go to internet cafes - known locally as Lan Houses. Lan Houses are everywhere, mostly filled with kids using the social networking site Orkut (which is more popular than Facebook here) and playing games.  </p>

<p>The City Council has set up a network of centres known as Telecentros where anyone can drop in and have one hour of internet access free of charge.  <br />
 I went to one in the corner of a public library in the centre of town.</p>

<p> The atmosphere is studious. I meet an unemployed man living in a shelter who speaks remarkably good English.  </p>

<p>He tells me he uses the internet to hunt for jobs.  It saves him a lot of time and hassle as he used to have to travel all over the city to go to different employment agencies.  He tells me he often doesn't have enough money to buy food let alone pay for a bus fare to get to an employment agency.  </p>

<p>Mind you, his online job hunting doesn't seem that successful - he's only ever found one part time job and that was a couple of years ago.   </p>

<p>A woman tells me she's applying for a passport online.   She says it's much easier than the old system where you had to queue for hours at a government office.  </p>

<p>Is there a message from these two random conversations?  Yes there is:  internet access opens up opportunities for making money and saving time by making it easier to do simple things like hunting for work or dealing with red  tape.  </p>

<p>Later in the day I meet a lady from Dell, the computer firm, who tells me the average Brazilian internet user is online for 70 hours a week - more than any other country in the world.  The figures sounds too high - I am not sure I believe her.      </p>

<p>Day 2: I'm still chasing how to make money on the web.  I met one person who certainly seems to have worked out how to do it: Gilberto Mautner, founder of Brazil's first and largest webhosting company Locaweb. </p>

<p>The company was founded at a corner desk in a textile factory 12 years ago.  </p>

<p>Now it hosts the websites of 200,000 Brazilian companies.  </p>

<p>Gilberto waxed lyrical about how the web is helping small firms reach new markets.  </p>

<p>Highlight of the visit was venturing into the company's data centre  - a high security room full of servers,  incongruously with a toilet in one corner. </p>

<p>Later I visited an area of the city, which is billed as Latin America's largest open air electronics market - a grand name for a few streets stuffed with gadget sellers and street hawkers peddling pirate software.   </p>

<p>At one point a police car appeared and many of the sellers immediately ran for cover.  </p>

<p>Some of the kit on sale was clearly fake - my favourite was a mobile phone looking exactly like a Blackberry.  Closer in section revealed the brand name was actually Blackbory. </p>

<p>Day 3: visited what is described as a business incubator, an organisation dedicated to nurturing small technology firms in the grounds of the University of Sao Paulo. </p>

<p>I met a remarkable entrepreneur Patrick Choate who seems to have perfected the art of making money out of very little, using the power of the internet. </p>

<p>He buys carbon fibre tubes normally used in the exhaust pipes of high performance motorcycles, slices them up into wristband sized rings, and sells them over the internet as jewellery.  </p>

<p>Each tube makes 30 wristbands, each wristband is sold for the same price as the whole tube cost him to acquire.  Cost of production: almost zero; cost of distribution: not much; profit: huge.  </p>

<p>Petrol heads snap them as the result of a clever marketing wheeze.  <br />
Patrick has contacts in Formula One motor racing and he has persuaded several top drivers to be photographed wearing his carbon fibre wristbands.  The photos are prominently displayed on his website making his products into objects of desire.  </p>

<p>It shows what you can do with a clever idea and the reach of the web.  </p>

<p>Later in the day, I drove past a road sign marking the Tropic of Capricorn - the southern boundary of the tropics - and it definitely wins the coolest sign of the week award. </p>

<p>In a similar vein, a friend told me there's a football stadium in Brazil that is exactly on the equator.  At half time the teams change hemispheres.  </p>

<p>The day ended with a visit to a project in a favela that encourages slum dwellers to learn computing skills.  The district is known locally as the "crack favela" as a result of its drug problems.  I heard uplifting tales of how training in making effective use of the internet has helped some people find jobs and improve their lives.   <br />
</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

<entry>
    <title>The SuperPower season: exploring the power of the web</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/2010/02/the_superpower_season_explorin.html" />
    <id>tag:www.bbc.co.uk,2010:/blogs/superpower//500.195459</id>


    <published>2010-02-23T17:43:25Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-23T17:51:56Z</updated>


    <summary><![CDATA[Welcome to our BBC SuperPower blog.From March 8-19th, the BBC is running a season on how the web is transforming people's lives.&nbsp;There will be documentaries, features and specials on television and radio and even more material available online.We hope to...]]></summary>
    <author>
        <name>Michael Duncan</name>
        
    </author>
    
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/superpower/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Welcome to our BBC SuperPower blog.<br /><br />From March 8-19th, the BBC is running a season on how the web is transforming people's lives.<br />&nbsp;<br />There will be documentaries, features and specials on television and radio and even more material available online.<br /><br />We hope to answer some of the big questions: what kind of business do we want now that all businesses can be global? How is politics changing when we the public can make our views known in seconds? And who is really shaping this new world? Is it us - or the individuals and companies who have mastered the web?<br /><br />Some of the highlights of the season include:</p>
<p>Blogworld which is gathering the best of the blogosphere in multiple languages. <a href="https://bbcbreakingnews.pages.dev/blogs/blogworld/">Visit their blog</a>, especially if there's a blog you'd like to share with the team. Starting on March 8th the BBC will be airing short TV and radio slots in English, Arabic and Farsi, talking with some of the bloggers that are going to be featured. </p>
<p>Digital Giants which will be talking to some of the main figures in the development of the web in our series including Steve Ballmer of Microsoft, Eric Schmidt of Google, Joe Rospars from the Obama campaign and Sam Pitroda the main advisor to the Indian Government on the web.</p>
<p>On/Off which explores the differences between the connected and unconnected worlds. Two families in the world's most connected city, Seoul in South Korea agreed to be disconnected from the web for one week. In contrast two young men in a Nigerian village, Gitata have been given two internet connected mobile phones to explore the web for the first time. </p>
<p>Superpower Nation which is the biggest ever experience of its kind, will harness the power of the web and the BBC's 32 language services to launch the world's biggest multi-lingual conversation. Superpower Nation goes on air March 18th.</p>
<p>We want this to be a lively place where you can provide us with feedback about your own experiences of using the web, and to let us know what you think about the season.</p>
<p>We look forward particularly to hearing about whether you think the web has transformed your life, from wherever you are.<br /></p>
<p><em>Michael Duncan is the co-ordinator of the BBC SuperPower Season.</em></p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

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