Ada blogger yang melompat dan marah-marah kerana tidak dapat menerima kebenaran wawancara saya dengan Malaysian Insider bertajuk "Armed for cyberwar; UMNO Youth wants ammo from Putrajaya".
Saya tahu ada blogger pro-BN yang tidak memahami bahasa Inggeris, tetapi itu tidak seharusnya menghalang mereka menggunakan aplikasi yang dapat menterjemah artikel BN losing the cyberwar again agar ia dapat dijadikan iktibar. Walaupun artikel ini tidak tepat sepenuhnya, tetapi selaku pejuang siber BN kita tidak wajar menjadi defensif dan menolak kebenaran dalam artikel ini.
Pandangan dalam artikel ini konsisten dengan pandangan Naib Presiden Umno, Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi yang menyatakan bahawa, unit tempur siber parti ketika ini dilihat tidak memberikan perincian serta penghayatan pada sesuatu isu sehingga gagal menyampaikan maklumat kepada kumpulan sasar.
Saya mengambil positif kenyataan Zahid, kerana di luar PRK dan PRN Sarawak, UMB BUKAN jentera perang siber parti yang diberi penghak upayaan mengendalikan gerak kerja perang siber untuk UMNO dan BN. Saya tegaskan dalam posting saya, "Zahid perlu sedar pemimpin tertinggi UMNO perlu tahu jawab isu" bahawa kritikan Zahid ini tidak boleh dipandang ringan kerana silap-silap yang dikritik oleh Zahid adalah nama-nama besar dalam UMNO, di Ibu Pejabat, di negeri-negeri, di pejabat Perdana Menteri, termasuk Menteri dan pemimpin UMNO tertentu yang telah memberikan penghak upayaan kepada kumpulan-kumpulan tertentu untuk mengendalikan perang siber UMNO.
Jadi blogger Dinturtle, HHalem, dan Flying Kick, tidak perlu melompat seperti beruk terkena belacan dan menjadi defensif. Fahamkan artikel di bawah ini. Kita semua kena menilai semula outcome kita bukan output yang telah kita hasilkan secara jujur, demi kemenangan parti.
BN losing the cyberwar again
By Oon Yeoh
Jul 14, 11 | MalaysiaKini
What a difference a year makes. Around this time last year, I wrote an article entitled The Cyberwar of 2012 for my weekly Oon Time column in theSun newspaper.
In it, I wrote about how Barisan Nasional seemed to be getting the upper hand in the online space largely because many of the popular pro-Pakatan Rakyat bloggers had become MPs and had become too busy to blog.
Post-March 8, 2008, we saw the rise of pro-Umno bloggers who quickly went on to dominate the political blogging scene.
Also around that time, online news sites were full of stories about how Pakatan lawmakers were busy jumping ship or fighting amongst themselves.
“The balance of power in cyberspace is pretty even now,” I wrote, adding: “If anything, BN has a slight advantage.”
I also criticised Pakatan for its complacency, highlighting the fact that they had reigned supreme in the online space prior to the general election not because of their brilliant new media strategy – they had none – but because their supporters happened to be web-savvy.
Take Jeff Ooi. He was actively blogging about governance issues long before he decided to join DAP. Tony Pua already had a well-followed education blog before he became a DAP member. Elizabeth Wong was well known as a human rights activist and blogger before she joined PKR.
Many opposition supporters also took to YouTube and posted stuff critical of the BN. They weren’t instructed to do so by Pakatan parties. They just did it out of conviction because they felt Pakatan parties got very little traditional media coverage.
Why didn’t BN’s supporters do the same? Prior to the 12th general election, they obviously didn’t feel the need to take to new media because they had traditional media on their side.
That mindset completely changed after the elections and pro-BN guys responded with a vengeance. As I had mentioned earlier, by this time last year, the political blogosphere had become dominated by pro-Umno bloggers.
Momentum swings back to Pakatan
Fast forward to the present. What happened in the space of one year? Social media happened.
The rise of Facebook and Twitter was something BN supporters have failed to appreciate and have been slow to adopt. While they were busy blogging away – and sometimes having Utusan Malaysia picking up their conspiracy theories – Pakatan supporters were actively tweeting and setting up Facebook pages.
The recent Bersih rally clearly demonstrates that the new media momentum has solidly swung back to Pakatan (although Pakatan politicians can’t claim credit for it) thanks to social media.
In the days leading up to the July 9 rally, social media networks like Facebook and Twitter were full of comments expressing outrage at what the authorities were doing – arresting people for wearing yellow Bersih shirts, outlawing an organisation that wasn’t even really an organisation but a coalition of NGOs, and making unsubstantiated allegations about Bersih leaders.
Now it should be said that the people I follow on Twitter are not all into politics. In the case of my Facebook network, even fewer are politically inclined. Yet, on July 9 – and the days immediately after that – my social media timeline was completely lit up with tweets and status updates about Bersih.
People who normally never even pay attention to political news were suddenly tweeting about Bersih and sharing links to pictures and videos of Bersih demonstrators being sprayed with chemical-laced water and being fired upon with tear-gas.
Videos like this became viral. Facebook pages like this became a hit. A Facebook page calling for Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak’s resignation became an even bigger hit.
And amidst all this, what were the hardcore BN supporters doing? They must have been busy blogging, I guess.
3 comments:
Tak sabar tunggu siri ke-2...
kita dedah sikit demi sikit untuk buka mata pemimpin BN :)
ehh.. pakai siri pulak... menarik nie... bende dedah-dedah nie best nak tengok...
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