General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOccupy Wall Street Activists Sue Each Other- Who Owns the Movement’s Twitter Account
Occupy Wall Street Activists Sue Each Other Over Who Owns the Movements Twitter Account
By Elliot Hannon
The Occupy Wall Street movements guidingif vaguely definedprinciple was: Stick up for the little guythe 99 percent. Sticking it to the proverbial man also seemed like a good idea at the time. Now, three years after the movements cultural and political apex, things have gotten a bit complicated for OWS activists. The movement itself may have been leaderless and ownerless by nature, propelled by discontent and fueled by social media, but that doesnt help answer the ultra-modern question now facing the group: Who owns the Twitter feed@OccupyWallStNYCthat helped make it all happen?
To try to figure that out, a group of activists filed suit in the New York State Supreme Court on Wednesday, the New York Times reports, accusing a former comrade of taking unilateral control of the shared account and locking out the organizers he had once collaborated with. The story of the OWS Twitter handle is particularly interesting, in part because it evolved in the same helter-skelter fashion as the movement itself. Heres more from the Times:
[T]he Twitter account was created in summer 2011 by Adbusters, the Canadian magazine that first called for an occupation of Wall Street. The resulting protests began on Sept. 17, 2011. Adbusters turned the account over to Marisa Holmes, the lawsuit said, a filmmaker and activist who had helped to moderate Occupy meetings in August 2011 in Tompkins Square Park. Ms. Holmes, in turn, gave others access to the account, which now has 177,000 followers. But in August, Justin Wedes, one of those with access, changed the passwords and locked out his fellow administrators, according to the lawsuit.
Mr. Wedes did not respond to requests for comment via phone or email. But in a blog post dated four days after the lockout, he wrote that he disbanded the collective of administrators because relationships among the group had become fractious. Clearly the question of ownership of the account is a contentious one, and I dont pretend to have all the answers, he wrote, adding that he planned to put the account in the hands of responsible stewards. Ms. Holmes had a different recollection of events, saying that other members of the collective were about to vote Mr. Wedes out of the group.
Holmes said that there had been numerous attempts to get control of the Twitter feed from Wedes, and that suing him was a last resort, BuzzFeed reports. She accused him of using the feed for his own projects, especially his activism surrounding water rights in Detroit.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2014/09/17/occupy_wall_street_activists_sue_over_twitter_account.html
BlueCaliDem
(15,438 posts)Filing a lawsuit over a Twitter account is bad publicity for OWS, a movement that's supposed to UNITE not divide. They're losing site of what brought them together to begin with, and that's just sad.
Bragi
(7,650 posts)The movement that spawned the first Occupy effort was all about the principle and reality of growing inequality.
The language of "the 99 per cent versus the 1 per cent" was brilliant in my view.
"Occupy" was just a tactic, and not a particularly good one at that, since a) it called on people to do something that most people couldn't do (they have commitments/jobs etc and can't camp out forever in town squares) and b) that set up those who did participate in the Occupy tactic for easy take down (since cops could bust up and disperse the protest, and end the Occupation, thereby "defeating" the Occupation.)
I say let them fight over the ill-designed Occupy brand.
It's the "99% versus the 1%" brand that actually matters.