Essentially, the smart mob is a practical implementation of
collective intelligence. According to Rheingold, examples of smart mobs are the street protests organized by the
anti-globalization movement. The
Free State Project has been described in
Foreign Policy as an example of potential "smart
mob rule". Other examples of smart mobs include: • Smart mobs who arrange the meet up over the internet and show up at a retailer at a specific time and use their number to negotiate a discount with the retailer. •
Crop mobs, a group of agricultural volunteers who help out at a small farm •
Text messages that were sent in the
Philippines, which are thought to be partly responsible for the demonstration that ousted former President
Joseph Estrada. Examples of such a text message read "Wear black to mourn the death of democracy", "Expect there to be rumbles" and "Go to
EDSA". • The
11 March 2004 Madrid attacks (11M), and the reaction from the people against the government in the Spanish elections of 14 March 2004. • The
2005 civil unrest in France exhibited smart mobs—the French national police spokesman, Patrick Hamon, was quoted in the
Wall Street Journal as saying that youths, mainly those of the Muslim faith, in individual neighborhoods were communicating by cellphone text messages, online blogs, and/or email—arranging meetings and warning each other about police operations. • The
2006 student protests in Chile and
2007 Chilean government-Microsoft agreement are the example in
Latin America about the smart mobs and the use of weblogs, Fotologs, Photoblogs, text messages and digital organization in a few hours. Also due to their online organization has called the attention of the press as a source of news because of the strong activism online. • On July 5, 2005, during
U2's performance of the song "New Year's Day" at a stadium in
Chorzów,
Poland, the audience of 70,000 waved colored articles of clothing to form a giant Polish flag of white and red: fans on the pitch waved red, those in the bleachers waved white. This behavior was coordinated by fans communicating on the internet. • On November 6, 2008, more than 500 students across Taiwan began a sit-in protest in front of the
Executive Yuan. Known as the Wild Strawberry Students Movement
野草莓學運, this assembly was mobilised overnight with the help of an on-line Bulletin Board System (BBS). The students were equipped with mobile technology such as HSDPA (high speed download packet access) and web-cameras. They soon set up a live broadcast that aired for 24 hours a day over the internet for more than a week, and they used mobile devices to keep up to date with government reactions on the mass media. One of the main themes of the protest was for amendment of the Assembly and Parade Law that curbed freedom of expression: this demand earned support from various non-government organizations nationwide. • The release of the Baauer song "
Harlem Shake" was a smart mob phenomena in 2013. The song reached 700 million views in the month of February 2013 on YouTube. The song and dance has influences from a dance originally released in the 1980s. The phenomenon involves large groups of people banding together, utilizing their weak ties, and all filming a video dancing to "Harlem Shake". On February 10, 2013, the upload rate of the "Harlem Shake" videos was 4,000 per day onto YouTube. The increasing popularity has enabled the video to become used as a political statement, such as in Egypt, where a smart mob formed to perform the dance outside the Egyptian Islamic president's headquarters. According to Rhinegold's characteristics of what makes a smart mob, such as a lack of centralized control and peer-to-peer influence, the "Harlem Shake" is the epitome of a smart mob. ==In popular culture==