We are happy to announce and would like to invite you to the second in a series of seminars we have begun with Baruch College’s Center for Non-Profit Strategy and Management, focusing on how technology is changing non-profits. The workshop will be held in NYC,Thursday, November 12th from 4pm-6pm at Baruch College. It is titled:
National Broadband Workshop Reimagines 21st Century Citizenship The enduring lesson from yesterday morning's workshop on the Federal Communication Commission's National Broadband Plan? Americans need accessible, affordable broadband so that they can do things like... participate in workshops where we create a national broadband plan. In any case, the assembled experts from inside and outside government, including U.S. CIO Vivek Kundra and our own Andrew Rasiej, offered broad strokes of what hearty bandwidth makes possible. For starters, they observed, beyond the gates of the White House, the U.S. government is in a unique position: what it does with tech ripples out...
OFA Challenges List to Counter "Special Interests" During August Health Care Battle On the difficult question of is it astroturf?, Organizing for America has its take. The field arm of the Democratic National Committee is framing the anti-health reform protesters popping up at local townhalls as an extension of the same bought-and-paid special interests that oppose the reform push back in DC. Organizing for America's New York state director, reports Politico's Jonathan Martin, is firing up the organization's massive list...
From the U.K., a Guide to Good Government Tweeting Neil Williams, who heads up digital communications for the U.K.'s Department for Business, Innovation, and Skills, is just out with a 20-page how-to on government tweeting. Sure, Twitter carries risks, writes Williams. But there are upsides: Twitter can give government a human voice, establish it as a thought leader, and open up channels through which the public can connect with its overlords. Williams offers some principles useful for any tweeter...
Nowruz: Making Sense of YouTube Insight It took going to the source, but we now have some clarity on how to interpret YouTube's Insight statistics on how popular various videos are in different places in the world, a question that came up when everyone from us to Politico's Ben Smith to the White House tried to use the figures to make the case that President Obama's video to the Iranian people on the Nowruz holiday made an impact inside Iran. After a tutorial from YouTube's Aaron Zamost, it's clear that Obama's Nowruz video did in fact enjoy a great deal of popularity in Iran -- but interpreting the map requires understanding how YouTube thinks of popularity. YouTube uses a popularity index that blends two things...