David Weinberger's Intranet Buzz:
ONE-QUESTION INTERVIEW
Naomi Klein: The author of No Logo
tells us how the Web is enabling the anti-brand movement
By David Weinberger
Editor, Journal of the Hyperlinked Organization
Naomi Klein's book, No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand
Bullies, is an unabashed piece of partisan writing
about how global brands are assaulting human
decency. It's full of insight, wit and passion. The
last half of the book reports on the worldwide,
grassroots movement to stop global brands and the
exploitative practices that produce them. We asked
Naomi how the Web is affecting the movement.
The first time I realized the power of the
Internet was back in 1996 when I did a search on
the word "Nike" and ended up at the
"nikesucks.com" page before finding Nike's
official site. The same thing happened when I
searched on "Shell" and "McDonald's" and "The
Gap." It's the kind of thing that doesn't happen
much these days, with virtually all the search
engines selling priority to the brands, but in
that instant, I understood the power of this
medium: some kid looking for the latest Air
Jordan models could find himself reading about
Vietnamese sweatshops entirely inadvertently.
Even if that kind of extreme democracy only
lasted a short while, the Internet leveled the
communication playing field between brands and
consumers. Outside in the real world, corporate
messages are more powerful and more forceful
than anything an individual or a small campaign
group can hope to muster, but on line,
individuals and corporations can at times speak
with equal force.
I also think that global brands have spawned a
new kind of brand-based activism uniquely suited
to the Net: activists and consumers around the
word are using the common language that global
branding provides to tell each other the truth
behind the marketing. Where a previous
generation of activists followed the money,
these kids are following the logo, with the help
of the Net, wherever it leads. That means that
Gap sweater-folders at the mall know all about
Gap seamstresses in the maquiladoras; it means
that a worker trying to unionize his McDonald's
can communicate with a farmer in France
protesting "McDonaldization" and with peasants
in India fighting genetic engineering of foods.
The brand provides the political infrastructure
for Internet age activism.
In fact, there's a case to be made that brands are
the Anti-Web -- one-way broadcasting that attempts
to strangle conversation before it begins by
implanting a simple message in the minds of the
undifferentiated masses, a message that lacks even a
soupçon of truth, insight or humor.
But the real reason we asked Ms. Klein to comment
was so that we could announce that JOHO is proud to
be the first to offer the full line of Naomi!(tm)
brand demonstration-wear, including Naomi!(tm)
BillyBounce Headgear(tm), Naomi!(tm) camouflage
jackets with convenient CopGrab DragHandles(tm), and
Naomi!(tm) the cologne with just a hint of mace. All
we need is a jingle and an ad agency and we're on
our way!
The Author
David Weinberger writes JOHO and is one of the Ringleaders of cluetrain.com,
a manifesto of web ethics. He also provides strategic marketing
consulting to high-tech companies, writes for several magazines
(including Wired)
and is a commentator on NPR's "All Things Considered."
He was, as VP of Strategic Marketing, one of the shapers of Open
Text's intranet strategy. David sits on several conference boards
and is a member of AIIM's Emerging Technology Advisory Group. Reach
him at self@evident.com
.