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How social media changed protest How social media changed protest
(40 minutes later)
By Dominic Casciani BBC News home affairs correspondentBy Dominic Casciani BBC News home affairs correspondent
Over the past month, many parts of the UK have witnessed student-led protests against tuition fees and the end of grants in further education.Over the past month, many parts of the UK have witnessed student-led protests against tuition fees and the end of grants in further education.
On television, the scenes have looked like a typical demonstration: people standing around in the cold waving placards while police run around after trouble-makers. But what's beyond doubt is that social media has played an important role in the anti-cuts demonstrations, but is it changing the nature of modern protest?On television, the scenes have looked like a typical demonstration: people standing around in the cold waving placards while police run around after trouble-makers. But what's beyond doubt is that social media has played an important role in the anti-cuts demonstrations, but is it changing the nature of modern protest?


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  • There is also a risk to freedom of speech & personal liberty. I or an organisation I'm associated with can be targetted for what I (am purported to) say or do without the opportunity to respond or even find out who's behind it. If someone disagrees with me, they can attempt to silence me in this way. A small number of people using the right tools can do a lot of damage.
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  • The risk is that the new media can be manipulated, but potentially with faster & less predictable results. People you contact in cyberspace can as easily be fictitious as real - and it could be open to the media/polical movements to appear to be something else & attempt to gain their ends (e.g. a piece of headline-grabbing violence) surreptitiously.
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  • Over a million people protested against the Iraq. Look what that changed.Nothing. We should remember who got us into this mess.Blair/Brown.
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  • This comment is awaiting moderation. href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/moderation.shtml#appear" target="_blank">Explain. One lot of apples is all I have to offer.
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  • John - This lot *is* the future of our country? I hope that is a deliberate ironic mistake. Hopefully with a university education the future can at least have a grasp of grammar.
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  • What is wrong with you people blinding believing all the mainstream media's bias reportage - LOOK A BIT CLOSER - 20,000 demonstrators & just 3 arrests!!! This is not the violent masses here. BBC you are either just trying to make things interesting by constantly focusing your reports on very little violence or your working for Cameron
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