Difference between revisions of "Forms of collective intelligence"
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| + | The following table shows three major orientations of collective intelligence. (Of course there are many, many other groupings that assume different forms and take different strategies.) | ||
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| | Civic Intelligence   | | Civic Intelligence   | ||
| |- | |- | ||
| − | |  | + | | '''Orientation''' 	 | 
| − | |  | + | | Profit driven 	 | 
| − | |  | + | | Power, the "national interest"  | 
| + | | Social and environmental amelioration, values-driven  | ||
| |- | |- | ||
| − | |  | + | | '''Organization''' | 
| − | |  | + | | Top-down, bureaucratized  | 
| − | |  | + | | Top-down, bureaucratized  | 
| + | | Network-based, provisional, fluid leadership; yet still marginal and under-utilized  | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | '''Engagement''' | ||
| + | | Public relations campaign, advertising, lobbying 	 | ||
| + | | Legislation, speeches, meetings  | ||
| + | | Protests, letter writing, campaigns, discussions with peers, voting, document disclosure  | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | '''Intelligence''' 	 | ||
| + | | Competitive, focus groups, industrial espionage 	 | ||
| + | | State level, spy satellites, wire tapping, strategic analysis, covert, polling 	 | ||
| + | | New framing of issues, intelligence networks, monitoring, FOIA (freedom of information act) requests  | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | '''Products and Products''' 	 | ||
| + | | Services and commodities for sale 	 | ||
| + | | Services, licensing, policies, regulations, laws, policing, defense and war  | ||
| + | | Social innovation, social maintenance, services, policy papers, advocacy and protest, citizen journalism, citizen science, etc. New communication services, applications and technology.  | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | '''Resources''' 	 | ||
| + | | Variable but often vast  | ||
| + | | Variable but often vast 	 | ||
| + | | Variable, generally unfocused and insufficient - but potentially vast  | ||
| |} | |} | ||
| + | |||
| + | <p>— from [http://www.publicsphereproject.org/presentations/hcii/ Presentation at HCII, Beijing] | ||
Latest revision as of 18:28, 12 May 2011
The following table shows three major orientations of collective intelligence. (Of course there are many, many other groupings that assume different forms and take different strategies.)
| Business | Government | Civil Society | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Competitive Intelligence | Strategic Intelligence | Civic Intelligence | 
| Orientation | Profit driven | Power, the "national interest" | Social and environmental amelioration, values-driven | 
| Organization | Top-down, bureaucratized | Top-down, bureaucratized | Network-based, provisional, fluid leadership; yet still marginal and under-utilized | 
| Engagement | Public relations campaign, advertising, lobbying | Legislation, speeches, meetings | Protests, letter writing, campaigns, discussions with peers, voting, document disclosure | 
| Intelligence | Competitive, focus groups, industrial espionage | State level, spy satellites, wire tapping, strategic analysis, covert, polling | New framing of issues, intelligence networks, monitoring, FOIA (freedom of information act) requests | 
| Products and Products | Services and commodities for sale | Services, licensing, policies, regulations, laws, policing, defense and war | Social innovation, social maintenance, services, policy papers, advocacy and protest, citizen journalism, citizen science, etc. New communication services, applications and technology. | 
| Resources | Variable but often vast | Variable but often vast | Variable, generally unfocused and insufficient - but potentially vast | 
