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The
Power of Your Byte!
A keynote address by Mel King
September 20, 2001
Transcribed by Jeff Streier
"Good morning. I am very honored to be here.
So you know, when Samantha told me about the conference, I invited
myself. And I invited myself because I think we are at a place
and time where we can change. We can change so much of what
is going on in the planet today and this was before September
11 that this was organized. Because I believe very fundamentally
in the challenge and the change that we can make happen, I also
want to indicate that I am very impressed with those of you
who take on the challenge, only to let you know that you have
some awesome, awesome responsibility. And I put it in terms
of responsibility because this has to be viewed as an opportunity
to again make a difference.
"What Id like to do in the next moments
is first to talk a little about how I got here, other than my
own invitation. Two, some of the rationale for being involved
with the technology. Three, something which deals with the title
I chose, The Power of Your Byte! I know when we
were children, we thought there was one kind of power of our
bite. I know now that theres a significant kind of power
with our bytes.
"Now, picture growing up in a time if you
went to the movies, and you look like me, and some other folks
in the room, you did not see yourself represented in a positive
way. And those of you who know the step-and-fetch-its, know
how they were portrayed as turning white on the screen, always
acting as if they were clowns, buffoons. Or how one person white
could always outwit hundreds, thousands of Africans. And when
those kind of things happened and you went to school the next
day and you were almost always faced with a challenge and a
fight because of the stereotypes and the negativity that came
from the people who saw those kinds of films. And so at one
point it dawned on us, friends and I, that going to those films,
spending our money to have people laugh at us, etcetera, didnt
make sense, and so we stopped going.
"Went to college in South Carolina and was
then faced, as I had grown up in Boston where we could go almost
anywhere, to see that they had the segregated theater, and that,
if you wanted to see a movie you had to go upstairs. But fortunately
in Orangeburg, South Carolina there was a theater owned by Black
people, called the State Theater, and they had something that
I hadnt seen: films that were made by people of African
heritage about people of African heritage. And so it was interesting
to go to the theater there and sit anywhere and see some identification.
Yeah, we learned that there were Black cowboys and things that
people didnt get to know about until a lot later, in the
late seventies, early eighties. So, I was struck by that.
"The issue had to do with who had control
of the images. And so, when I returned to Boston, and was working
as a youth worker on street corners, one time was a commercial
on the TV at that time where there were two African American
heritage men talking about using the new Gillettes, whatever
blade it was that they were pushing at that time, and the young
people who were in the room all stopped. Now they had been watching,
the game was on and they were [gestures], but as soon as that
come on they all stopped and watched. And so later I said, How
come you stopped? One of them said, Well, the presence
there makes me feel like we count too. The presence there,
doing something natural, I guess if you shave its natural
[gestures at own beard], makes them feel like they count too.
So that kinda stuck because it reminded me of some of the issues
and concerns I had at a similar age.
"And so from then on, a major piece of my
work and involvement was to be around the issue of dealing with
images, dealing with the stories that are told about people,
and the idea of Cotter Woodsons Negro history turned Black
history have a lot of impact and meaning. And that any of the
things that could begin to bring persons of color into the consciousness,
not only for their own internal psyche and ego, but for getting
the ideas out across the whole community, became important.
So, before going to MIT to work, got involved with Bill Russell
and others. Bill Russell, the great basketball player from the
Celtics who understood also the impact of the media, and challenged
the media. The TV organizations and agencies in Boston were
one of the first in the country to get Black people, and then
Latino and Asian people, on the camera so that they were visible.
And so we worked and challenged that.
"The next thing came was the cable. So we
thought that it was important to try and get access to cable.
There are three issues here. The first is to get access to the
infrastructure, to the hardware. The second is to get access
to the content, the programming. And the third is to get people
to do critique and analysis of what kinds of things that get
put on. Well, obviously getting access to the infrastructure
meant having a lot of economic resources, the kind of finances
in order to do that. On the other hand the next thing would
be to get access to the programming, to see what we could do
with the content. And what you learn is since you dont
have access to the infrastructure, you have difficulty getting
access to the programming and the content. Except that there
was on e political leverage that we had. That is, with cable
they had to get permission from the city. And so we pulled together
a kind of political process which meant that different companies,
who wanted to get access, had to come before the body politic,
through the council, and then we could make some demands on
them. One of the things we were able to get was the issue of
local origination, so that the different neighborhoods got access
to the cable channels, so that they could do local programming
and have programs that they originated, which could talk about
themselves, their community, etcetera. And therefore, a number
of different groups were able to get some kind of access to
the programming.
"And then along comes the information technology.
I just want to caution us because I use that and others use
it as if information technology is something new. Well, weve
had information technology ever since. Some of it started with
smiles and facial expressions and words and then with pictures
that were drawn and we can go on to the printing press, etcetera.
So, weve always had it. This one here seemed to have so
much kind of uniqueness going for it. So at MIT in the early
eighties, we put together a program called Community Bytes.
And what Community Bytes was about was to get some of the community
agencies to learn how to use the technology to manage their
operations better - to do something about their database, to
be able to do their fundraising, to get their mailings out,
to keep a record of their services, their people who were getting
services, who was delivering services, etcetera. So we worked
with some of the agencies to get that. Now keep in mind this
is at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. And it wasnt
easy to get the folks at the school to understand what were
about and how significant and important it is and was at that
time.
"Well at that point the Internet was not
a well-known entity. And so as it began to emerge, the late
eighties, the early nineties, I called to pull together a national
conference to bring together people to talk about what the potential
was in this technology. And to again go through the same issues:
access to the infrastructure, access to the content and the
programming, and to get people to critique it.
"And what we came out of this was that, in
many ways, many people were talking about this information superhighway.
And what we wanted to make sure was that we were not going to
have this information highway do the same thing that the national
defense highway system did across the country. It ran through
neighborhoods, ran through rural communities and the people
in there couldnt get on or off. And they didnt have
the access. And so we said, well, we cannot have a repeat of
that with this information highway that it had to be
one that was accessible to people everywhere, that they had
to be able to get on and off everywhere. So we saw at first
that this might be a civil rights issue getting people
that kind of access to make sure that that could happen. And
so we brought lawyers to that conference to raise those kind
of questions. It was going to be, and youre doing something
similar here, the issue of the technology, so that people should
understand what the potential of the technology was and
we brought people to the conference to do that. With the issue
of community, of networking information and so we brought
people there to do that. And so, after that conference was over,
we began to realize that this was unique, this was different.
If I wanted to go on TV, I had to go to CNN or someone and get
their permission and more than likely couldnt get that
together even with cable, with local origination, didnt
seem to have the kind of resources to do that. But with this
technology, Im here talking to fifty or sixty people and
I have the capacity to reach thousands of people. And I dont
have to go through the same kind of limitations and get the
same kind of permission from others that I have with this technology.
And that makes it extremely different as a vehicle for communication
and dealing with getting the kind of images out there that I
think are important.
"Now, part of this talk about the digital
divide, I know you know, is misleading. Cause the divide
is not digital, the divide has been political social and economic
from the beginning. It is based in a constitution that says
clearly that if you were of African heritage you were only three
fifths of a person that if you were a woman that you didnt
have the right to vote, a non person, and if you didnt
have the financial and economic resources, you had to step back
and let the property betters make the decisions. And our government
is framed that way. To this day because you know the millionaires
are where? The millionaires are in the senate. Now, there may
be one or two there who are not millionaires, but the fact of
the matter is that our country still represents the beginning
and so becomes very important to understand that the digital
divide is systemic. And that if were going to try to deal
with changing those kind of relationships, we have to say, What
is it that we can do with this technology? What is it that we
can do to end the kinds of ideology, institutions, interpersonal
behavior, and internalization? Which, I think, are the
eyes of oppression. And that comes from a group called Youth
Build, which is working with young persons to have them understand
what their situation is.
"But there are two pieces to those eyes of
opression. One is isolation. Because if you get isolated and
then dont believer that you can, are involved, there are
others who are in the same category, then you either try to
do something on your own or you dont do anything at all.
And the other piece of that ideology has to do with the imagery
and we are witnessing it right now. Witnessing it right now
the whole imagery. You have Middle Eastern imagery to
try to isolate and to harm you. And so I think it is very important
that we understand and keep this in the context. But what the
technology then allows us to do, if we understand its power,
is to put on the imagery that we believe, to get the stories
out there. And youre witnessing that on a day to day basis
now, given whats taken place in the days since the eleventh:
more and more people, more and more people are using the internet
to get different perspectives around what is being given on
CNN or the networks and in your newspapers. More and more people
are getting more information and that is absolutely critical
cause when you talk about the power of your byte, this
is one place where you can begin. And when you get something
that you understand, gives a perspective that ought to be shared,
share it and ask people to share it, because almost instantaneously
your words and those thoughts that can make a difference, can
reach out, not only across this country, but across the world
and in that way ending isolation becomes a critical way for
using the power of your byte. Ending isolation, because that
is one of the things that we suffer most from in this society.
We have as a people been isolated from people in other parts
of the world. We have been isolated from attitudes. We have
been isolated from their pain. And now we are beginning to have
a little more of a sense of what that means. But, it is a horrible
way for people to get understanding. Very horrible way. But
other people have been terrorized and we have not said it was
an attack on humanity, or an attack on civilization, and our
problem is that we are so isolated that we cannot begin, or
we are beginning, let me put it that way, to get outside of
ourselves.
"So, when we talk about the power of the
byte, it seems to me that we need to look at several kinds of
things. First critical issue is that we talk about the potential
for the Internet and for bringing people in. When we bring people
in at our center, we ask them to think about two things. The
first is that we see this as a vehicle for creating knowledge,
producing knowledge, that we do not see it as a place to be
just consumers. Because if you just be a consumer, it in a way
suggests that people think that you dont have anything
to contribute. And so we want people to be creators of knowledge.
And I tell them about why Im in it and my little history
about the images, and so I think you need to get your stories
out there, to be producers of knowledge. And the second thing
I say is: if this is valuable, it really only be valuable if
when you learn something, you teach somebody else. If you learn
something you teach somebody else. You know theres a little
group that sings the song, Love is like a magic penny,
you hold it tight you wont have any. But you lend it, spend
it, you end up having more. I try to get that if
this is valuable, share it. And so we have a very good process
in our program where people who learn on Monday and Tuesday
and Wednesday can come on the next Monday and teach others how
to do that. We have people who are now teaching their fourth
class, having learned how to do Photoshop, or having learned
how to do web page design. And so we try to build that in -
create, and share what youve learned.
"Now, the other aspect of the potential of
this technology have to do with understanding the ways in which
they can be used to deal with some of the issues in your neighborhoods
and your community. So, for example, used the information technology
to get access to some of the banks records, insurance companies
records about where they were giving insurance and where they
were not. And they could see clearly, by using excel and charting
it, that neighborhood A, with people with similar
kinds of incomes as people in neighborhood B were
being denied access to the insurance, and the neighborhood over
here was getting it. What do you think was the factor that appeared
when they looked at the two neighborhoods? Come on what do you
think was the issue? Hello? Race. Not income. Income was pretty
much the same. But it was race. So you use that technology to
begin to deal with the disparities that come from public services,
insurance companies, banks, etcetera. Because you can begin
to do that, and now all of them have their records online in
ways that you can get access to. And if your city doesnt,
you have to insist that they put on line so that you can have
access. Its a matter of public record. And you can, ought
to be able to, log on and be able to get them.
"One of the things that we are trying to
get people to look at when we are talking about school failure,
or the failure of the schools, is to, cause they always, you
know, theyve done tracking right? Theyve tracked
the youngsters; if youre smart youre in the A
class, B class, C class, or whatever.
But there hasnt been any tracking of what happens to the
children who are in certain classrooms and there is a pattern
of the fact that the person who is supposedly teaching is not
delivering on that. And so there are groups that are looking
at how do you use the technology, how do you use that information
to see what the record is of a teacher in a particular classroom,
what happens to the children in those situations. And so you
can track school success or failure.
"Those of you who are into politics on the
electoral level, notice I say at the electoral level cause were
all into politics, at the electoral level its become very
helpful and having those laptops or the palm pilots accessible
when youre at the polling place. Youre able to call,
as you can check off people who are coming in to vote and you
can then send people out to particular areas where you know
your strength is. And you have your strength there because people,
when theyve gone around to knock on doors or theyve
made phone calls, they have put the information right on the
computer. And so there are those ways in which we need to think
about how we maximize the political participation and the political
power. Those are just a few of the approaches that we think
make some sense.
"The question of information is power, and
that knowledge is power. But the information has to have understanding,
people have to understand what does this information mean how
do we analyze it and then you can move from there. Last night
some of us were fortunate enough to have an incredible dinner
at Samanthas and every once in a while, wed have
to stop talking or raise our voice and thats because the
airplanes were going over. Well, one of my coworkers at MIT
was able to help a community that was struggling to keep the
airlines from building a runway and expanding it, by getting
a computer hooked up with some sound equipment and they brought
it into the meeting and it showed how because the airplane people
were saying that the decibels would not reach a certain level.
And I wish I had this here. They put it on and in front of the
whole city council and others it showed the decibel level going
up and up over what was acceptable. And they were able to do
that using the technology to help people understand that the
information was and how it could be used to keep the runway
from being built. And they were very successful because, you
know, its kind of interesting to be sitting in a room
as somebody from the airlines saying, Oh no this doesnt
happen, and then to look up on the big screen and see
and hear the sound and watch the thing go up and up. So that
there are lots of ways that they can be useful.
"Weve had some young people whove
done mapping of their neighborhood and showed through the mapping
how far away a particular social service was, a playground in
this instance and they wanted something closer. And one of them
was able to do, using a little comic strip approach to show
how the park was being used at night for drugs and what happened
when the police car came in and the people dealing drugs ran
out. He did this right on the computer, showed it up on the
wall, then went to the park department and asked them to change
the use of the park so that it could be made accessible for
them. So its a good tool in the hands of young people
who begin to understand how they can use it to shape their community.
But again, its understanding the particular level of power
that is represented in the knowledge that the technology represents.
"Now, Id like to share with you, since
we are here and one of the ideas is about networking, a meeting
that I attended on Monday which had to deal with a group of
technology centers that we have in Boston for which we are very,
very fortunate. There is a fund in Boston called the Timothy
Smith Trust. Timothy Smith was a businessperson in the Roxbury
community and made a lot of money and left it for the city and
the city decided to use it for technology. One thing was, it
had to be used in a particular geographic area. Well, the long
and short of it is that there are several technology centers
now with a twenty-year endowment of $50,000 a year for equipment.
And so they have tried to figure out how to get together. Now
thats a very hefty amount of money. One problem. Its
only for equipment. Its not for staff. Its not for
software. And so you can, as some people say, we are house rich
and cash poor. And so they have that resource. They dont
have the capacity to run the centers because they now have to
go out and raise money to get the kind of staff that is necessary.
And so one of the ways to deal with it, instead of having each
of the centers go out, again in isolation, to try and raise
money, theyve come together as a consortium to see how
they can pull things together. And the four areas of objective
that they have are: A) building each centers capacity; B) dealing
with information knowledge management; C) professional development;
and the last is training and education coordination. So others
are struggling with this issue of coordination and coming together,
as I understand you are, I think it is an imperative that we
do that. I think it is an imperative that we have some kind
of overall goal for the centers if were coming together
so that we have a kind of mindset. It doesnt mean that
there arent different things that we can do. For example,
we are promoting trying to get, over the next couple of years,
five thousand people employed in the field because they have
been exposed to training that can get them job ready over that
period of time. But having some goal, then figuring out what
each of us have to be about in order to move in that particular
direction. What do we need for staff? What do we need for software,
programming? What kind of training do we need so that we can
move in that kind of direction?
"I just want to say finally this. That the
use of the term technology is important in one way, but I think
its very, very insignificant in our world if we arent
networked, if we arent coming together, if we arent
sharing the kind of information. And the web does give us that
kind of opportunity to put that information there. I think it
takes a lot of agency and community discipline to understand
the real power in this by sharing the information and being
willing to check it out. Because its one thing for people
to be committed to looking at it and learning from what other
people are doing. So conferences like this become very important
because, as we sit here, we hear together. It seems to me that
we have to recognize that theres a power in this technology
that allows us to tune into each other in ways that can make
us more effective than continuing to be in isolation.
"Technology, or the term high-tech, for me,
is not appropriate because people have used technology, and
we hear it today, as weapons and means of destruction. When
they talk about high-tech, well, to me thats low-tech
because in my reading of the book it says that you should beat
your swords into plowshares and your spears into pruning hooks,
which says that we want technology to be about the enhancement
and development and not destruction. This technology gives us
an opportunity to be about that, because we can share positive
information about each other and we can build, build, build
on the basis of communities of love and togetherness. And networking
becomes a crucial part of that. Thank you."
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