With the rise of reputation as online concurrency, & becoming
more than cach’e, the question is asked how exactly the exchange rate
works, & whether futures trading has any relevance for the Whuffie.
If you are now lost, then you’re not a part of the future economy.
You may not even care about it, even if you could become aware of it.
That’s OK, we’re all slowly catching up with what’s been happening in
that other world - the online world - where some things that don’t seem
to be more than figments of the imaginations of nerdy people are getting
their own reality.
Many people are building an online reputation as if it ‘means
something’, to which you could rightly respond “who cares?” - or else,
you’re wondering if you’re being left behind. If the former, then you
have nothing to fear - go back to TV. If the latter, then you may have
been sucked in like a newbie getting a poorly-written hard luck story
from Nigeria offering a small fortune in exchange for some simple bank
account details.
People who do something well, know more than others, have lots of
friends, or simply are arrogant enough to believe their own amateur
publicity, are building a name for themselves, building themselves up,
selling their soul, however you like to describe it, in that big red
light district that is the internet. Yes, I use that metaphor advisedly
because as often as not people put themselves out there on display with
no idea of their actual worth, often out of low self-esteem, hoping to
get enough currency to live off for a short while & forget about
their mundane existence until they go back out on the web & do it
all again - & it’s all legal. The internet is Amsterdam.
The new currency is the Whuffie - online reputation, social capital,
the size of your facebook friends list, your linked-in network, your
twitter followers, your reach, your pull. It’s like a measure of
celebrity, but a little more useful to you & a little more direct
& personal.
Celebrity is still a currency in the real world, & it can
translate into hard cash currency sometimes (box office or television
audiences turn into direct sales or advertising income or endorsement
contracts, turning into a pay packet). Whuffie can work like this,
sometimes - reach becomes traffic becomes eyeballs on monetisable real
estate becomes click-through on ad placements turning into cash-flow for
the online publisher, which is hopefully you.
But Whuffie is more about the possibility of gaining benefit, rather
than the benefit received, which is a whole futures market, not an
exchange rate. People are measured by their earning potential, not the
actual income.
This whole scenario is only relevant to the information rich. It is
only those who have access to the net & spend time being social who
are even vaguely aware of the possibility of someone having an online
reputation (as opposed offline, that is, through print & broadcast
media). The likelihood of someone whose computer skills don’t go beyond
sending an email in upper case caring two hoots about someone’s online
reputation is equivalent to the success rate of the afore-mentioned
Nigerian scammer.
People who don’t watch TV or go to the cinema have no idea about
current celebrities. People who don’t use google to find things don’t
need to know about Whuffie. People get by without TV, but it’s getting
harder to ‘live’ in the offline world without online access. That
constant source of often factual information is such a necessity for
‘real life’ that it is becoming harder to escape that need to be
connected to the information superhighway. This means it’s going to get
even harder to avoid being known when you’re on it, or to avoid getting
an awareness of how unknown you are in the big connected world that the
web is. This means you are only one short step away from cadging your
first inkling of social currency, like some country hick arriving in the
big city without a coin in your pocket.
The information poor will get by somehow. They will integrate into a
broader society that has a place for all. They will be marked by how
they speak, what they wear, & where they live, as they always have
been in the offline world. They will try to fit in, try to improve
themselves, try to get on, build a future, leave a legacy for their
children. They will need to earn their way, & do it in Whuffie.
One day, there will be charities on the internet who will dispense
reputation like food parcels. They will sit down & read people’s
blogs & leave nice comments. They will provide shelter for those so
poor that they don’t have a home page to go to.
That’s when you know that someone really cares.
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