Individual users have risen to form the greatest influence on the world in
2006, according to
Time magazine,
as it declared 'you' as its
Person
of the Year.
User-generated content represents a "story about community and collaboration
on a scale never seen before", the publication wrote in an editorial.
Time cited
YouTube,
MySpace
and
Wikipedia
as examples of the trend, along with open source projects and user reviews on
Amazon.
"It is about the many wresting power from the few and helping one another for
nothing and how that will not only change the world, but change the way the
world changes," the magazine said.
Time is relatively late in acknowledging the relevance of user-generated
content. US dictionary
Merriam-Webster
declared 'blog' its word of 2005, while the
New
Oxford American Dictionary chose
'podcast'.
Time warned, however, that the Web 2.0 is merely an experiment that can still
fail because blogs are also used to manipulate stock prices and spread hatred or
inaccurate information.
Every year the publication praises a single person or group of people for
making a major impact on the world. Last year
Bill
Gates was elected for his charitable work, together with his wife Melinda
and U2 rock star Bono.
The
Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation has been credited with saving 700,000 people
with its investments in vaccination programmes.
Bill Gates said earlier this year that he would retire from Microsoft by 2008
to devote himself full time to his charitable work.
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