Footage from protesters seizure of Cairo's state security building. Before leaving, the police were shredding everything in sight, clearly in an effort to protect themselves from prosecution by a new government. According to Harman, one of the files they didn't manage to shred showed that they are still keeping tabs on Wael Ghonim, who everybody besides the state police in Egypt rightfully regards as a hero. Also, the protesters were amazed to find that there were six underground floors in the building.
I think one of the really interesting things about cell phone cameras and web 2.0 here is the surprisingly positive effect of lots of people being conscious of being watched by lots of other people. Not only do people get to craft a narrative in opposition to the reigning ideologies, but they also get to be actors in their own representations of the actualization of this counternarrative. This has always been part of revolutionary politics, with underground newspapers and such, but I think it's a much more powerful force now, one we don't fully understand yet.
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