Knowledge Vault


Follow us





Social media generation is struggling, says Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch

A kick up the Eighties

I’m a child of the Sixties, but however much I would like to conjure up images of hanging out with Hendrix on the King’s Road, the truth is less swinging: I was born in 1965 and spent most of the Summer of Love trying to keep my formula down.

But while our parents believed whatever the man from the ministry said, our generation grew up deeply cynical in a post-Profumo and Vietnam world.

This background seems to help us navigate the maze of information that social media brings to us. In a world where everyone can have an opinion and express it, deep cynicism seems important.

In the US there are a number of lawsuits against review sites that allegedly operate as a cyber-protection racket: “Pay us da money or else an accident could happen to your review rating”.

The problem is very deep-rooted, with hedge funds trying to manipulate company prices, false postings of product reviews, marketing agencies creating personas to boost clients and political parties pretending to be White Van Man.

One might expect the Eighties generation which has grown up into all this to be experts at handling the noise. They have seen a thousand school friend postings saying “JayZee snogged Mo behind the bike sheds” when in all veracity no tongue-to-tongue contact ever occurred. In fact my experience is that they seem strangely less able to filter the truth than us ageing Stones fans.

The answer given at this point is some sort of argument about the wisdom of the crowd and how the truth will win out. But analysis needs knowledge, and those of you who would fly an aircraft designed by the wisdom of the crowd might pretty soon meet with the wisdom of evolution.

Registration is free, and gives you full access to our extensive white paper library, case studies & analysis, downloads & speciality areas, and more.

The very generation born into 24/7 information seems not to understand it. I recently visited a job candidate’s Facebook profile, which duly revealed: “I like sleeping at work and nicking stuff”.

The understanding is missing that this posted stuff is not just accessible to JayZee but to everyone and, thanks to digital archiving, will never go away. This persistence of information can no longer be left at the legal department’s door but is now a key issue for the CIO, leading to some of the largest architectural decisions in the enterprise today.

The naivety of YouTube’s founders in their email correspondence in the Viacom-YouTube case is testament to this. Those emails seem strangely generation Eighties.

The CIO can’t ignore social media. Inside the firewall, there has been much talk about the collaborative use of social media in terms of search, wikis and blogs, but the problem here is that there needs to be know-how and not just opinion. How do you separate the wisdom of the crowd from the wisdom of the clowns?



Email Updates

CIO Newsletters: Expert insight, advice and tools for technology, business, leadership and the CIO career.


Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.


CIO White Papers

The financial economics of cloud email

This white paper evaluates cloud computing as a flexible alternative to your current IT capability that delivers tangible benefits including: projects delivered earlier, faster adoption to change, lower risk, reduced costs and easier to scale up or down services.

Beyond Dropbox: Requirements for Enterprise Secure File Sharing

This whitepaper explores the danger “Dropbox” type services pose for enterprises, and the security and compliance requirements for deploying enterprise-wide file sharing solutions.

Top 10 considerations for your IT operations management in the cloud

This paper explores ten questions every IT organization should answer to help determine their cloud based ITOM needs.

How to get your business ready for the 2012 Olympics

IT Manager: "I'm working on contingency plans to ensure that we can keep the business running whatever happens during the Olympics. Hopefully, it'll just be a case of letting people work from home but we need to be ready for anything".


CIO UK - Business - Technology - Leadership

Voice Applications in the Cloud

Watch this webcast to learn about new network and telecoms options.

Register now

Download the CIO BlackBerry App -
Access CIO's Content on the Move


The CIO UK BlackBerry App provides daily business and technology news, opinion and indepth features direct to your BlackBerry device.

Find out more

CIO Transformation Summit

CIO Roundtable:
The Private Cloud

Wed 29 Feb 2012
Tower 42, London, 7pm.

Join a select group of your fellow CIO's to discuss private cloud computing and how best to apply the private cloud to your organisation

Register here to book your place.



Knowledge Vault


* *