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  <title>Personal Democracy Forum blogs</title>
  <subtitle>Technology Is Changing Politics</subtitle>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog"/>
  <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/atom/feed"/>
  <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/atom/feed</id>
  <updated>2008-05-09T13:27:20-04:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>WhatDoTheyKnow: FOI 2.0 </title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1915" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1915</id>
    <published>2008-05-16T19:44:02-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-16T15:49:31-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="FOI" />
    <category term="mySociety" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>The folks at UK-based <a href="http://www.mysociety.org/">mySociety</a> are developing a new site called <a href="http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/">WhatDoTheyKnow</a> that simplifies to process of making freedom-of-information requests and uses RSS to make it impossibly easy to keep track of pet issues.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>The folks at UK-based <a href="http://www.mysociety.org/">mySociety</a> are developing a new site called <a href="http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/">WhatDoTheyKnow</a> that simplifies to process of making freedom-of-information requests and uses RSS to make it impossibly easy to keep track of pet issues.<br />
The site -- which is still very much in development -- looks simple, but there's a sophisticated engine running beneath the surface. UK citizens can search for the public authority they're interested in addressing, and then send off a request for information (under the UK's Freedom of Information Act, the government has to respond).<br />
The fun part comes with the RSS (I challenge you to find a geekier sentence than that). When you search for "cars" in the search box at the top of the page it <a href="http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/search/cars">returns eight results</a> for FOI requests that mention "cars."</p>
<p>At the bottom of that page is a link to an RSS fee; subscribe to it, and every time someone makes an FOI request mentioning "cars" you'll be notified.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.techpresident.com/files/whatdotheyknow_cars.jpg" width="480" height="37" alt="whatdotheyknow_cars.png" /><br />
This opens up all kinds of possibilities for term-tracking. Given that the site is still in development we anticipate more good stuff like this. How we wish mySociety could produce similar projects on this side of the Atlantic...</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Daily Digest: Non-Conservatives Board the McCain Train</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1913/daily_digest_non_conservatives_board_the_mccain_train" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1913/daily_digest_non_conservatives_board_the_mccain_train</id>
    <published>2008-05-16T12:17:12-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-16T12:17:12-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="Second Life" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Obama's message to wealthy donors nets a new casualty; a study says most Americans aren't watching online political videos; a nasty, dirty Second Life build; John McCain reaches out to non-conservatives on blogger conference calls; and is McCain's climate change strategy appealing to Democrats? </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Web on the Candidates</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p><a href="http://barackobama.com">Barack Obama</a>’s <a href="http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0508/10315.html">message</a> to wealthy Democratic funders is being heard loud and clear. As a result, <a href="http://www.progressivemediausa.org/">Progressive Media USA</a>, a new 527 led by <strong>David Brock</strong>, has essentially <a href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/thefix/2008/05/democratic_media_group_scales.html">shuttered its doors</a>. OpenLeft’s <strong>Matt Stoller</strong>, ever on the Obama-power beat, is <a href="http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=5806">ambivalent</a> about the news. “Basically, [Progressive Media USA] was a very netroots friendly organization doing a lot of very positive anti-McCain work, and was also a potentially important allay [sic] of a new Democratic administration… At the same time, Progressive Media USA was also a soft-money organization dependent not upon small donations from the rank and file of the progressive movement, but instead upon humungous donations from a few dozen extremely wealthy donors,” he writes. The issue exemplifies the struggle between the billionaires and bloggers to make over the Democratic party, as described by <strong>Matt Bai</strong> in his book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Argument-Billionaires-Bloggers-Democratic-Politics/dp/1594201331">The Argument</a>. As Stoller argues, there’s plenty of reason to think the grassroots will remain strong, while groups dependent on soft-money donors may continue to wither.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>While an eMarketer <a href="http://www.emarketer.com/Report.aspx?2000490">study</a> estimates that 80% of online Americans will watch online videos this year, a small percentage of them will watch political videos, according to <a href="http://www.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?id=1006303&amp;src=article2_newsltr">eMarketer</a>. A total of 12% of those online watched a campaign ad in December 2007, the <a href="http://www.emarketer.com/Report.aspx?2000490">study</a> says, and 20% of them were ages 18-29. It’s true that older voters are yet to turn to the web in large numbers to watch campaign ads and videos, but as the Obama campaign has found out, the web is a terrific place to combat television’s sound-bite culture. Take a look at our <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/scrape_plot/youtube">YouTube charts</a> to see what we mean.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Warning: serious lewdness ahead. <strong>Reacting to Rep. Mark Kirk’s</strong> decrying of “toilet sex” in Second Life (the video of Kirk’s complaint is down), Majorly snarky liberal blogger patriotboy, a.k.a Jesus’ General, a.k.a Gen. JC Christian, composed a <a href="http://patriotboy.blogspot.com/2008/05/rampant-toilet-sex-rivals-wizardry-as.html">satirical letter</a> to Kirk in which he describes finding the Larry Craig Center in Second Life, which he calls “a monument to toilet sex.” Ugh. Given patriotboy’s earlier Second Life exploits, in which he built an <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/node/161">anti-Rudy Giuliani center</a>, we’re guessing he did more than discover the site. He posted G-rated pictures if you’re interested.</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>The Candidates on the Web</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>As <strong>Patrick Ruffini</strong> <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25414/john_mccain_tolstoy_in_my_inbox">pointed out</a> earlier today, <a href="http://johnmccain.com">John McCain</a>’s approach to the web is mystifying. On one hand, he does more outreach to bloggers than any other candidate, but on the other he just doesn’t seem to get how to actually <em>use</em> those damn tubes. Case in point: he is <a href="http://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080516/NATION/942099047/1001&amp;template=printart">now inviting</a> non-conservative bloggers to join his conference calls. “The plan is to take the work we’ve already built on with conservative bloggers and to open up a dialogue with non-conservative bloggers and even nonpolitical bloggers,” McCain staffer <strong>Patrick Hynes</strong> told the Washington Times’ <strong>Stephan Dinan</strong>. One non-conservative on the call was Talking Points Memo’s <strong>Greg Sargent</strong>, who immediately <a href="http://tpmelectioncentral.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/05/mccain_obama_cant_defend_ameri.php">reported</a> that McCain “launched what may be his most direct attack yet on Barack Obama’s national security credentials.”</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Despite the inevitable hits, McCain’s efforts to reach beyond the conservative base may be working. His new focus on climate change — including a <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25308/daily_digest_drafting_a_digital_new_deal">pair of websites</a> launched this week — appears to have been <a href="http://campaignspot.nationalreview.com/post/?q=NjE2YTZiNTRmNzY4YzY0N2E3YTA0NDQ5YzA3N2NjNWQ">swaying</a> Democratic voters.</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Case You Missed It…</strong></p>
<p>It’s Friday, and time to settle in and for some early morning tubin’. In our <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25441/favorite_videos_of_the_week_hillary_and_the_political_thumb">favorite videos of the week</a>, we’re surprised by the winner of MoveOn’s Obama ad contest; Ralph Nader antagonizes Google; Hillary strikes a softer tone, and Hillary impressions continue to get big laughs.</p>
<p><strong>Micah Sifry</strong> is still at the Berkman at 10 conference, and <strong>Steve Garfield</strong> is busy livestreaming it on Qik. Check out Steve's <a href="http://qik.com/stevegarfield">archive</a> of sessions, including one led by Micah and the Sunlight Foundation’s <strong>Ellen Miller</strong> on transparency and government.</p>
<p>Good online strategy is simple, <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25414/john_mccain_tolstoy_in_my_inbox">writes</a> <strong>Patrick Ruffini</strong>: reflect the very best of your candidate offline. John McCain offline is transparent, accessible, and willing to answer any question. John McCain online is stilted and awkwardly asking me for money. There’s a fundamental disconnect.</p>
<p><strong>Ari Melber</strong> is <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25413/from_jay_z_s_web_book_to_khatami_s_blog_berkman10_dispatch">liveblogging</a> from the Berkman at 10 conference, which he calls the most important Internet gathering in the country.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Berkman at 10: Open Media--Is Openness Enough?</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1912/berkman_at_10_open_media_is_openness_enough" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1912/berkman_at_10_open_media_is_openness_enough</id>
    <published>2008-05-16T10:02:14-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-16T10:02:14-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Micah L. Sifry</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Berkmanat10" />
    <category term="Qik" />
    <category term="Steve Garfield" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>For the next 45 minutes, you can join in and watch the "Open Media" session at the Berkman at 10 conference. It's being streamed live to web by uber-video blogger Steve Garfield.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>For the next 45 minutes, you can join in and watch the "Open Media" session at the Berkman at 10 conference. It's being streamed live to web by uber-video blogger Steve Garfield.</p>
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    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Policy (and maybe Politics) events: Week of 5/15/08</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1911" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1911</id>
    <published>2008-05-15T17:20:49-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-15T17:20:49-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Dave Witzel</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Berkman" />
    <category term="Berkmanat10" />
    <category term="events" />
    <category term="wireless" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Berkman@10, email to Congress, and wireless - events of interest.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>A few events of note for this week:</p>
<p><a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/berkmanat10"><b>Berkman@10</b></a>.    This has been a lot of fun so far.  Check out the posts by <a href="http://www.personaldemocracy.com/blog/entry/1909/berkman_at_10_is_the_internet_good_for_democracy_or_what">Micah</a>  and <a href="http://www.personaldemocracy.com/node/1910">Ari Melber</a>.  Jonathan Zittrain spoke this morning about the future of the Internet, John Palfrey about Politics.  In the afternoon its been Yochai Benkler and Jimmy Wales talking about Cooperation, and currently Michael Fricklas (Viacom), Reed Hundt, and Esther Dyson on the Future of the Internet (take 2).   Tomorrow has a series of sessions on Openness, plus Digital Natives, Network Neutrality, Netizenship.</p>
<p>It is a very lively virtual event so drop in if you can't make it in person.  Here's some live online resources:<br />
- <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/interactive/webcast">live video</a><br />
- <a href="http://twemes.com/berkman">discussion amongst the audience</a><br />
- <a href="http://tinyurl.com/s6tv4">second life</a><br />
- <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/questions/berkmanat10">questions to the speaker</a><br />
- IRC: irc://irc.freenode.net/berkman</p>
<p>The Internet Advocacy Roundtable at the Center for American Progress is hosting "<b><a href="http://www2.americanprogress.org/t/29/event/index.jsp?event_KEY=20439">The Future of Emailing Congress - New Solutions Offered and Old Myths Busted</a></b>" with Daniel Bennet speaking, (5/15/08 from 3 to 5pm in Washington DC).   You can get the <a href="http://www.americanprogressaction.org/events/IAR_files/iarstream.html">live video feed</a>.</p>
<p>At the end of the Month the New America Foundation will host the<br />
"<b><a href="http://www.wirelesssummit.org.">International Summit for Community Wireless Networks, Global Integration, Local Control</a></b>" in Washington DC (May 28-30, 2008).  The claim to be "largest gathering of community wireless networking developers, implementers, policy advocates and allies working to build universal, low-cost wireless broadband networks around the globe."</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>From Jay-Z&#039;s Web Book to Khatami&#039;s Blog (Berkman10 Dispatch)</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1910" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1910</id>
    <published>2008-05-15T16:08:09-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-15T16:08:09-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Ari Melber</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Berkman" />
    <category term="Berkmanat10" />
    <category term="Yes We Can" />
    <category term="YouTube" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Blogging from the most important Internet gathering in the country. </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Before the Internet changed everything, the Berkman Center was there.  Founded as a different kind of research lab about ten years ago, Harvard Law School’s unusual project – blending think tank freedom with academic rigor – is celebrating its first big anniversary this week.  The sold-out conference features celebrities in the world of Internet culture, like professors Yochai Benkler and Jonathan Zittrain, and actual celebrities catapulted <em>by </em>Internet culture, like Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales, named one of the world’s most influential people by <em>Time</em> magazine.</p>
<p>Jonathan Zittrain, nicknamed Jay-Z by techies in attendance, kicked things off by explaining his <a href="http://futureoftheinternet.org/ ">new book</a>, “The Future of the Internet; And How to Stop It.” As more web appliances restrict user choice, like iPhones, he warned that people will have less power to impact the web. That’s because these popular “tethered appliances” can only be modified by their parent companies. Zittrain argues that the web will foster less innovation under this system, freezing the current landscape and reducing the prospect for “generative” developments.</p>
<p>Networked politics was a hot topic in several sessions.  Jesse Dylan, who directed “Yes We Can,” the <a href="http://www.thenation.com/blogs/campaignmatters?bid=45&amp;pid=279437">music video</a> drawing lyrics from a speech by Barack Obama, spoke about how the creators were surprised by the viral success of the project.  (I spoke on the same <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/berkmanat10/2008/05/forum">panel</a>, about the youth vote in 2008.)  Another presenter discussed a fascinating April <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/publications/2008/Mapping_Irans_Online_Public ">study</a> of the Iranian blogosphere, mapped by link patterns and topic areas:</p>
<p><img alt="2008-05-15-Picture7.png" src="http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2008-05-15-Picture7.png" width="359" height="149" /></p>
<p>Iran's political blogosphere has more <em>elected</em> participation than most countries; the circled dots are the blogs of Iran's current and former president.  The large size of the dots reflects their many incoming links. The discussion of wired international activism turned to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Ooi">Jeff Ooi</a>, a popular Malaysian blogger elected to Parliament this March.  And as more governments restrict political speech online, one participant said activists abroad need more flash drives and portable storage systems that can save and spread political dissent, even when governments scrub it from the open Internet.</p>
<p>Today Harvard also <a href="http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2008/05.15/99-berkman.html">announced</a> it will pluck Berkman from the law school and elevate it to a "university-wide, interfaculty initiative."  That bureaucratic shift reaffirms the Center's culture, which is more dynamic and interdisciplinary than any curriculum cabined in a single graduate program. You know, like the Internet.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.thenation.com/blogs/notion/321247">From The Nation.</a></p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Berkman at 10: Is the Internet Good for Democracy, Or What?</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1909/berkman_at_10_is_the_internet_good_for_democracy_or_what" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1909/berkman_at_10_is_the_internet_good_for_democracy_or_what</id>
    <published>2008-05-15T13:04:28-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-15T13:04:28-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Micah L. Sifry</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Berkmanat10" />
    <category term="Ellen Miller" />
    <category term="Ethan Zuckerman" />
    <category term="John Palfrey" />
    <category term="Sunlight Foundation" />
    <category term="Yochai Benkler" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Is the Internet good for democracy, or not? John Palfrey is up leading a distributed conversation on that topic for the second plenary session. I'm going to take notes on the conversation, but as always treat these as paraphrases at best.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Is the Internet good for democracy, or not? John Palfrey is up leading a distributed conversation on that topic for the second plenary session. Here's the short description, from the <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/berkmanat10/agenda">conference program</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>The Internet is changing how politics is conducted at every level, from local to national to global.  Ten years ago, some predicted the online utopia of "everyone a pamphleteer."  It's clear that the changes taking place on the Internet are more subtle than some anticipated, that they vary by place and context, and that the changes are not all good.  Optimists argue that things are on the right track -- that the development of the "networked public sphere" is, overall, a very positive thing for democratic institutions.  Others are not so sure, pointing to the possible dystopia of citizens surrounding themselves with only the information they wish to hear, censors blocking important political speech at national borders, and a growing culture of surveillance on the web.  Against this background, what types of interventions could ensure that the growing use of networked technologies helps to strengthen democracies rather than to undercut their development?</p></blockquote>
<p>I'm going to take notes on the conversation, but as always treat these as paraphrases at best.</p>
<p>JP starts with Yochai Benkler's "framing" work, "The Wealth of Networks." In a networked public sphere, is democracy being enhanced or are institutions pushing back? He shows us some pictures of the recent protests in Burma against the military dictatorship, and talks about how the internet helped distribute images and videos from inside the country to the rest of the world. The net effect, he says, was to stimulate rallies and other actions in solidarity with the Burmese people. So, in this "everyone a pamphleteer" anecdote, is this the whole story, JP asks? The argument is that the Internet allows more speech from more people than ever before (think the "Yes We Can" video, or the Global Voices international blog network). </p>
<p>JP hands the mike to Ethan Zuckerman, one of the founders of Global Voices, who tells the now familiar story of how, in late 2004, he and Rebecca MacKinnon brought together a diverse group of bloggers from around the world to create a hub for distributing their stories, and help them get attention outside their own countries. Ethan admits, interestingly enough, that he was initially skeptical of this blogging thing, but Salaam Pax of Iraq convinced him that "it could literally be a tool for international understanding." But Ethan is a little frustrated by the discovery that "people pay attention when the mainstream media tell them to pay attention." For example, Global Voices has been trying to shine more light on the food riots in Egypt, to little avail.</p>
<p>JP shifts now into a discussion with John Kelly, looking at a map of the Farsi language blogosphere.<br />
<img src="http://www.techpresident.com/files/farsi blogosphere.png><br />
He sees a lot of diversity of opinion reflected in this map. Every dot is a blog, positioned by its relationships to others. The size of the dot is the number of incoming links. They are clustered by their linking histories. Interestingly, you can see some different colored dots mixed in groups where they seemingly don't belong. He says that's a sign of someone who is socially closer to one group but interested in topics outside of that group.</p>
<p>Ellen Hume of MIT asks a question about the structure of the American blogosphere. He says the largest clusters are around liberal and conservative politics. (No surprise.) You can find blogger clusters within those blocs that are more concerned with particular issues. He says there are also a couple of interesting groups that straddle this political divide, including, for example, those focused on the law.</p>
<p>A question comes up about whether people are more inclined to engage their political opponents or go into siloes on the web (this is known as the Cass Sunstein, "Daily Me" argument. Kelly says there are siloes, but in fact there is tremendous interlinking at the same time. The effect is to create, pace Benkler, a vast lens or giant filtration process, that helps filter information to the attention of many people that is far more open than the old centralized media system.</p>
<p>JP reminds us that while the net allows more speech than every before, states are finding more and more ways to restrict online speech and to practice surveillance. The <a href="http://www.opennet.net">Open Net Initiative</a> maps where states filter the net. At least two dozen, including China, Iran, Pakistan, Myanmar, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Yemen practice both political and social filtering of the net, and others like India, Morocco, Singapore, and South Korea are just somewhat less intrusive. </p>
<p>In Iran, many secular/expat and reformist leaning blogs are often blocked by the authorities, reports Rob Feris of ONI. But at the same time, not all of them are being successfully blocked. (We're shown two versions of the first slide showing how much in fact is NOT being filtered. I'm a glass-half-full kind of guy. Apparently every time a blog is blocked, it costs the government something in legitimacy, so it's painful for them to do it.)</p>
<p>Phillip Hallam-Baker, of VeriSign Inc., points out the "samizdat" circulation of USB memory stick sharing in Cuba. "The fact that it is censored," he says, "gives it legitimacy." In effect, JP asks him, are you saying that information will route around censorship?  Hallam-Baker answers yes, and we should design even safer ways for people to share information, such as a flash drive version of <a href="http://www.torproject.org/">Tor</a>, the anonymous blogging tool. Let's call it "flashdrive democracy," someone says in the IRC channel.</p>
<p>Esther Dyson notes the Russian politician who said, "The question is not freedom of speech. The question is freedom after speech." Ouch. (Her comment is even better with the fake Russian accent that she used to raise it.) In Russia, she says, you can post something critical of Putin, but try doing the same thing about the local police chief. JP asks her about the future of democracy, and she says, we need to fix the people. The internet is simply a tool. It will help the authorities if they want to increase their power; it will help the people if they want to increase their freedom.</p>
<p>JP takes us back to the bigger picture. Does the networked public sphere give individuals greater public autonomy? He turns back to Ethan Zuckerman, who talks about his friend <a href="http://www.jeffooi.com/">Jeff Ooi</a>, a prominent Malaysian blogger. Tripod, Ethan's web hosting company, hosted--quite by accident--a lot of Malaysian opposition voices in the mid-1990s. Ooi is now in the parliament, in part because of his reputation for honesty and as a muckraker.</p>
<p>JP asks if the solution is to elect more people like Ooi. Ethan agrees with Esther that it is important to change the people. As people find ways to exert power in this new networked fashion, we'll find people who figure out how to leverage it in important ways. He seems optimistic that the internet will force an evolution in political structures in reaction to these new power centers--at least in places where the people in power don't fight against it.</p>
<p>JP shifts the mike to <a href:="http://bethkolko.com/">Beth Kolko</a>, who says she's a pessimist about this question. Her research is also overseas in the developing world, focused on the unexpected uses of new technologies, which she says shift the information flow. </p>
<p><em>In the IRC chat, David Weinberger posts this: "I'd ask whether there are real ways that the Net is worse for democracy? Or are we really asking _how_ good is it for democracy?" Good point. Not clear if it will come up.</em></p>
<p>Back to the impact of the internet on Cuba. Josh Kauffman, who spent two months there recently working on developing new ways for Cubans to share information, is talking. He shows us a YouTube video titled <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMl3JFulO0A">"Cuban Student criticize the governement"</a> which is from a closed circuit TV system tape showing a top student lambasting the speaker of the Cuban parliament at a top secret propaganda training camp. This video was spread via flashdrive. Things are changing, he says. But two weeks later, one of the students who spoke out, Eliecer Avila, was arrested by the Cubans and forced to recant. This <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-hpi5Fu0p0">video</a>, too, was initially spread underground by flashdrive, Kauffman notes, only by the government! Kauffman notes that many foreign embassies are quietly passing around flash drives "like candy" in Cuba. Wow.</p>
<p>We're now on JP's third major argument, that the Internet facilitates the formation of online groups, which in turn has great impact on democracy and governance. He calls on Ellen Miller, of the <a href="http://www.sunlightfoundation.com">Sunlight Foundation</a>, who is sitting right next to me. She notes that we're experimenting a lot with ways to give voice to more people in the process. The most recent is <a href="http://www.publicmarkup.org">PublicMarkup.org</a>, where we put a bill online--an omnibus transparency bill. We've had about 150 comments on the bill so far, many of them far more expert than our own staff could have been.</p>
<p>JP asks if there's a downside to government transparency. What if people are harmed by the violation of their privacy? Are you worried about that? The simple answer, she says, is "not yet." "Would that we had this problem." Members of Congress are still far more opaque than they should be. She argues that it's time to shift the burden from citizens petitioning their government for more information about what it's doing, to the government having a pro-active responsibility to make that information public right from the start.</p>
<p>JP shifts over to give the mike to Yochai Benkler to talk about how the Ron Paul campaign practiced "open source" fundraising, as an example of how the Internet especially helps marginal groups. </p>
<p>Well, actually, he turns to Yochai because he's trying the sew up the session and given how much the discussion was framed by Yochai 's work, JP wants to know "what should we study, and what should we do, for the next ten years?" Yochai starts by saying that it's good to have all the current research (link analysis, text analysis) allowing us to see the new world as it is, rather than how we imagine it. Thus we can begin to move beyond hoping to understanding the grays in the picture, not an "all is great vs all is terrible" view of the Internet's impact.</p>
<p>Benkler notes that the phenomena we're talking about don't stand still or all in one place. The blogosphere is evolving. People's interactions online happen elsewhere as well. We're beginning to learn what the Internet's functioning impacts on democracy may be, such as distributed activism or fundraising (as in Obama's network), and watchdogging, as in the Sunlight Foundation case. </p>
<p>JP asks for questions and turns to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed's_law">David Reed</a>, one of the Internet's pioneers. Reed has thought deeply about group forming, and the net's impact on same. There is an upper limit, a saturation phenomenon, he says, which is that each group that you join requires your attention. "There's an attention economy at work." So while the Internet may be enabling massive increases in democratic participation, not everyone has the time to participate. And not every group is effective.</p>
<p>This is a very good point to end the session on, methinks. I would add that we don't have good group decision making tools--yet. Blogs are wonderful for hosting conversations, and wikis seems to work well for certain kinds of collaboration. But we need to figure out how to enable groups of people to come together more effectively to make decisions.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Daily Digest: Edwards Jumps on the Barackwagon</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1908/daily_digest_edwards_jumps_on_the_barackwagon" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1908/daily_digest_edwards_jumps_on_the_barackwagon</id>
    <published>2008-05-15T12:07:36-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-15T12:07:36-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="DNC" />
    <category term="John Edwards" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Edwards endorses Obama, and we first found out about it on Twitter, of course; where was Elizabeth Edwards last night?; Edwards takes advantage of the renewed media glare to promote his own project; Edwards for AG? Maybe.  VP? Don't bet on it; Sarah Stirland on the guy who produced the viral Obama smear video; Dean announces the DNC's "State Blogger Corps"; Marc Ambinder on Obama's understanding of the web; and Obama wields an iPhone.  Is that thing a 3G model? </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><strong>Edwards Endorses Obama</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>The wait is over: <a href="http://johnedwards.com">John Edwards</a> is endorsing <a href="http://barackobama.com">Barack Obama</a>. We first found out early yesterday evening, but the info didn't come from the boob tube, or from CNN.com, or from a little poli-birdy in our ears. Well, <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> a kind of bird; it was Twitter that did the trick. <strong>John Dickerson</strong> -- Slate reporter and journo-twitterer extraordinaire -- <a href="http://twitter.com/jdickerson/statuses/811443650">tweeted the news</a> yesterday at around 5pm. In the world of breaking news, Twitter reigns supreme.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p><a href="http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0508/Not_in_attendance.html">Missing</a> from the stage last night: <strong>Elizabeth Edwards</strong>. <strong>Ben Smith</strong> saw the <a href="http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0508/An_Edwards_hint.html">writing on the wall</a>, as it were.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Just after Edwards gave his endorsement speech an email from his campaign arrived in by inbox. I naturally assumed it had something to do with Barack Obama. Wrong! Titled, "Help me in North Carolina," it was an ask for donations to his College for Everyone program. At first it seemed like an incongruous piece of messaging, but it's possible that open rates, and thus donations, were sky high. Maybe it was a smarter move than we first thought.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Check out that jump for Edwards on our <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/scrape_plot/technorati?&amp;days=7#link_linechart_a_1">Technorati charts</a>. Folks are quickly <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/05/15/john-edwards-open-to-vice_n_101873.html">speculating</a> as to what role Edwards might play in the Obama campaign and an Obama administration. Word on the street, however, is that there's a greater chance of <strong>Bill Clinton</strong> inviting Obama to a boys' night out in Chappaqua than Edwards claiming the VP spot.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Meanwhile, Edwards' <a href="http://www.johnedwards.com/">homepage</a> is stuck on January 30, 2008.</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Other News</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>That Obama smear video that <a href="http://eyeblast.tv">Eyeblast.tv</a> claims has been viewed more than one million times (see our contention of that claim <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25154/favorite_videos_of_the_week_it_s_hard_out_here_for_a_chick_update">here</a>), and that manages to reproduce almost every untruth that's been spun about the candidate, was produced by former wedding videographer and Christian TV producer <strong>Jason "Molotov" Mitchell</strong>. Wired's <strong>Sarah Lai Stirland</strong> has <a href="http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/05/behind-the-obam.html">the goods</a>, reviewing Mitchell's history of provocative videomaking. He may be good at making noise, but it doesn't look like Mitchell is so good at, or much interested in, the truthiness side of things.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>DNC Chairman <strong>Howard Dean</strong> has <a href="http://www.demconvention.com/dnc-chairman-governor-dean-announces-blogs-selected-for-2008-democratic-national-convention-state-blogger-corps/">announced</a> the state blogs selected to be part of the "State Blogger Corps" at this year's Democratic National Convention. A full list is <a href="http://www.demconvention.com/dnc-chairman-governor-dean-announces-blogs-selected-for-2008-democratic-national-convention-state-blogger-corps/">here</a>, and even a passing glance makes it clear that Democratic and progressive blogging is alive and well across the country. Will we see a similar effort from the RNC?</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>In a <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/">new Atlantic issue</a> virtually devoted to Barack Obama, <strong>Marc Ambinder</strong> goes down the well-treaded path of documenting the various ways new media technologies have changed our politics, from Andrew Jackson and newspapers to FDR and radio to JFK and television to Obama and the internet. If Obama wins the presidency, "it will be in no small part because he has understood the medium more fully than his opponents do," Ambinder <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200806/ambinder-obama">writes</a> . He details the ways that Obama not only gets social networking and online video, but his intuitive understanding of how the web promotes participatory democracy. But the web can be "unruly and fickle," and it could either make Obama a powerful president, or forestall his agenda.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Another way that Obama gets technology: he <a href="http://fakesteve.blogspot.com/2008/05/obama-flashes-his-iphone.html">has an iPhone!</a></p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Case You Missed It…</strong></p>
<p><strong>Micah Sifry</strong> is at Harvard today and tomorrow attending the <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/berkmanat10/Main_Page">Berkman Center's 10th anniversary</a>. If you want to peek in on the proceedings, there are lots of ways to join in: You can watch Steve Garfield's <a href="http://qik.com/stevegarfield">live video streams</a> on Qik.com, you can log into the IRC back-channel at irc.freenode.net/berkman, and there's a lot of blogging, twittering and flickring happening, all grouped around the tag "Berkmanat10."</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Berkman at 10: The Future of the Internet is in Our Hands</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1907/berkman_at_10_the_future_of_the_internet_is_in_our_hands" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1907/berkman_at_10_the_future_of_the_internet_is_in_our_hands</id>
    <published>2008-05-15T10:39:05-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-15T10:39:05-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Micah L. Sifry</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Berkmanat10" />
    <category term="Jonathan Zittrain" />
    <category term="Qik" />
    <category term="Steve Garfield" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I'm at Harvard today and tomorrow attending the <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/berkmanat10/Main_Page">Berkman Center's 10th anniversary</a>, and boy is this is an idea-rich environment. If you want to peek in on the proceedings, there are lots of ways to join in:</p>
<p>You can watch Steve Garfield's <a href="http://qik.com/stevegarfield">live video streams on Qik.com</a>, you can log into the IRC back-channel at irc.freenode.net/berkman, and there's a lot of blogging, twittering and flickring happening, all grouped around the tag "Berkmanat10".</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I'm at Harvard today and tomorrow attending the <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/berkmanat10/Main_Page">Berkman Center's 10th anniversary</a>, and boy is this is an idea-rich environment. If you want to peek in on the proceedings, there are lots of ways to join in:</p>
<p>You can watch Steve Garfield's <a href="http://qik.com/stevegarfield">live video streams on Qik.com</a>, you can log into the IRC back-channel at irc.freenode.net/berkman, and there's a lot of blogging, twittering and flickring happening, all grouped around the tag "Berkmanat10".</p>
<p>I highly recommend checking it out. Right now Jonathan Zittrain is giving a tour-de-force keynote on the endangered structure of the Internet. I started reading his book, "The Future of the Internet, And How to Stop It" on the plane ride up to Boston, and can already say it's must-reading. He's even better on stage. More soon, if I have time...</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Daily Digest: Obama Steers Clear of 527s </title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1906/daily_digest_obama_steers_clear_of_527s" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1906/daily_digest_obama_steers_clear_of_527s</id>
    <published>2008-05-14T11:51:31-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-14T11:51:31-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="Hillary Clinton" />
    <category term="Ron Paul" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>You may be surprised at who some Ronulans are voting for this November; ProgressNowAction asks for your witty anti-McCain captions; hands-down, the best Hillary impression we've seen; only 2% of ad dollars will be spent online in '08; Googlers have a tough time spelling Hillary's name; the Obama campaign steers supporters away from 527s; Frank Lautenberg misses the chance to emulate Obama's online approach; Ralph Nader visits Google; and Al Gore tried to buy Digg in 2006. </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Web on the Candidates</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Ronulans across the country are facing a quandary. Should they vote for <a href="http://www.johnmccain.com/" title="John McCain 2008 - John McCain for President">John McCain</a> this November or stay true to his Paulness by writing him in?  Wired&#8217;s <strong>Sarah Lai Stirland</strong> <a href="http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/05/ron-paul-suppor.html">wanted to find out</a> what happened to &#8220;this rolling fireball of energy and enthusiasm&#8221; that the Paulites brought to the table, and polled them about their November plans.  More than 2,000 Ronstars have taken her poll thus far, and a whopping 47% say they&#8217;ll be writing in Ron Paul.  Only 7% will vote for John McCain, and 6% are sitting the thing out completely.  Most surprisingly, 24% say they will vote for <a href="http://www.barackobama.com/" title="Welcome to Obama for America">Barack Obama</a>.  Although, like Paul, Obama opposed the war in Iraq, he also espouses many of the big-government policies that sent folks running to Paul in the first place.  Contradictions: the breakfast of champions.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Taking a cue from the <a href="http://surrenderhillary.com/gallery/">Surrender Hillary</a> site, Colorado progressive site <a href="http://www.progressnowaction.org/">ProgressNowAction</a> is <a href="http://www.progressnowaction.org/modules/postcard/billboard_splash.php">encouraging</a> readers to post their own clever captions to a bunch of Photoshopped anti-McCain images.  It&#8217;s almost as fun as <a href="http://www.mittromney.com/" title="Mitt Romney for President">Mitt Romney</a>&#8217;s old <a href="http://www.epolitics.com/2008/01/03/have-romney-robo-call-your-friends/">robo-call tool</a>.  </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>We&#8217;ve linked to <strong>Rosemary Watson</strong>&#8217;s <a href="http://www.hillaryclinton.com/home/?splash=1">Hillary Clinton</a> impressions &#8212; which she features on her <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/ThatHillaryShow">ThatHillaryShow</a> YouTube channel &#8212;  before, but this is hands-down the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRbBJi0jfdU&amp;eurl">best Hillary impression</a> we&#8217;ve ever seen.  SNL, here&#8217;s your <strong>Amy Poehler</strong> replacement.   </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Despite the fact that the Obama campaign is <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25308/daily_digest_drafting_a_digital_new_deal">hiring</a> in-house online adspeople, analysts are still projecting that  most campaign ad funds will be spent offline.  In her new white paper, <a href="http://www.emarketer.com/Report.aspx?code=emarketer_2000490">Politics &#8216;08 Online: Push Meets Pull</a> (price: $695!), <strong>Lisa E. Phillips</strong> <a href="http://www.emarketer.com/Report.aspx?code=emarketer_2000490">predicts</a> that &#8220;Over the course of the year, less than 2% of political ad budgets will be spent online.&#8221; Meawhile, 50% to 80% will be spent on something called &#8220;television,&#8221; which is apparently some sort of glass box featured in nursing homes and Pep Boys franchises across the country. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Spelers unight! Having taken a look at Google Adwords search trends, Spot-on&#8217;s <strong>Scott Olin Schmidt</strong> made a <a href="http://www.spot-on.com/archives/schmidt/2008/05/searching_for_hilary.html">surprising discovery</a>: </p>
<blockquote>
<p>In Texas, Ohio and Pennsylvania, more than two-thousand people per day misspelled Hillary Clinton&#8217;s name; In Indiana and North Carolina, one out of six searches for Hillary Clinton have just one &#8220;L&#8221; in her first name. Another five percent are looking for Hillary Rodman Clinton, who apparently served eight years First Lady of the NBA Bad Boys Club.  </p>
</p></blockquote>
<p>And even if you spelled Hillary&#8217;s name right, Google doesn&#8217;t tell you much. Schmidt sees the future in contextual advertising, which, he says, both Obama and Clinton are owning at the moment. </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>The Candidates on the Web</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>The Politico&#8217;s <strong>Ben Smith</strong> <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20080513/pl_politico/10315&amp;printer=1;_ylt=AnyfJ8NUflZ_p5RKa9H1m9nCw5R4">reports</a> that the Obama campaign is &#8220;steering the candidate&#8217;s wealthy supporters away from independent Democratic groups,&#8221; i.e., 527s that could help frame the message for the Democrats in the general election, and toward the campaign itself. There&#8217;s been lots of speculation on campaign&#8217;s intentions. The move may be directed at certain media-centric 527s like <strong>David Brock&#8217;s</strong> <a href="http://mediamatters.org/" title="Media Matters">Media Matters</a> and <strong>John Podesta&#8217;s</strong> <a href="http://www.americanprogress.org/" title="Center for American Progress">Center for American Progress</a> that could be perceived as too close to Hillary Clinton.  It&#8217;s unlikely that the Obama campaign wants to cut off all third-party funders, and is trying to control its message as tightly as possible. Last week <strong>Matt Stoller</strong> <a href="http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=5637">enumerated</a> the ways Obama has built a parallel Democratic infrastructure; whatever the motives, this looks like one more step in that direction.    </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>We recently got an alert from the <a href="http://www.lautenbergfornj.com/home">Frank Lautenberg</a> Senate campaign announcing the creation of an &#8220;<a href="http://actioncenter.lautenbergfornj.com/">Action Center</a>&#8221; on their website, but were disappointed to see that it&#8217;s the same web 1.0 approach: tell-a-friend, sign-a-petition, make-a-donation (while we collect your email addresses). You&#8217;d think that in the wake of Obama&#8217;s impressive online organizing that more state-level campaigns would be looking at emulating his approach with <a href="http://my.barackobama.com/">my.barackobama.com</a>.   </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Earlier this week <a href="http://www.votenader.org/" title="Ralph Nader for President in 2008 &mdash; Join with us today">Ralph Nader</a> showed up at the Google offices to talk about his presidential campaign.  About 5 minutes in, he says the Internet has been a "disappointment," and then, "don't get me going on the Internet." He goes on to say that "it hasn't shown much by way of mobilizing, except on Internet issues..."  Keep watching; it gets worse. We're perplexed as to why Nader bothered to go to Google, as he seems to have no idea what it is or represents.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>This just in: TechCrunch is <a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/14/report-al-gores-currenttv-offered-100-million-for-digg-in-2006/">reporting</a> that <strong>Al Gore</strong>'s <a href="http://current.com/" title="news // current">CurrentTV</a> tried to buy <a href="http://www.digg.com">Digg</a> in 2006, offering at least $100 million for it. Too bad he never got the chance to day, "I invented crowd-sourced URL bookmarking."   </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Case You Missed It&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>Based on a few recent experiences regarding the YouTube community, and specifically how the tool could help increase citizen participation in our upcoming general election debates, <strong>David All</strong> <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25311/the_presidential_debates_must_embrace_the_internet">seeks to encourage</a> the Commission on Presidential Debates &#8212; the Old Guards if you will &#8212; to truly embrace the Internet in at least one of its three scheduled debates.</p>
<p>Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John McCain continue to hit up supporters for cash via e-mail, but Obama for America is going one step further, <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25310/obama_looks_ahead_to_oregon_primary_in_e_mail_push">reports</a> <strong>Kate Kaye</strong>. The Senator&#8217;s campaign is asking diehards via e-mail to trek to Oregon and knock on doors. The grassroots-minded campaign also used e-mail to push for residents of Obama&#8217;s home state of Illinois to get out Tuesday&#8217;s Indiana vote, in-person.</p>
<p><strong>Micah Sifry</strong> offers a <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25309/pdf_2008_rebooting_the_system_a_peek_at_the_program">peek</a> at the emerging program for this year&#8217;s fifth annual <a href="http://pdf2008.confabb.com/">Personal Democracy Forum</a>, which is coming up this June 23-24 in New York City. We&#8217;re pretty excited about the line-up that&#8217;s taking shape (and the fact that this is the first year we&#8217;re expanding to two days). Plus we think that this year&#8217;s event is going to be a seminal moment in defining the Internet&#8217;s impact in opening up not only politics, but also governance (i.e., all the important stuff that happens after the election is over).</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>PdF 2008: Rebooting the System (A Peek at the Program)</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1905/pdf_2008_rebooting_the_system_a_peek_at_the_program" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1905/pdf_2008_rebooting_the_system_a_peek_at_the_program</id>
    <published>2008-05-13T12:51:32-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-13T14:21:12-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Micah L. Sifry</name>
    </author>
    <category term="pdf2008" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Here's a peek at the emerging program for this year's fifth annual <a href="http://pdf2008.confabb.com">Personal Democracy Forum</a>, which is coming up this June 23-24 in New York City. We're pretty excited about the line-up that's taking shape (and the fact that this is the first year we're expanding to two days). Plus we think that this year's event is going to be a seminal moment in defining the Internet's impact in opening up not only politics, but also governance (i.e., all the important stuff that happens after the election is over). </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Here's a peek at the emerging program for this year's fifth annual <a href="http://pdf2008.confabb.com">Personal Democracy Forum</a>, which is coming up this June 23-24 in New York City. We're pretty excited about the line-up that's taking shape (and the fact that this is the first year we're expanding to two days). Plus we think that this year's event is going to be a seminal moment in defining the Internet's impact in opening up not only politics, but also governance (i.e., all the important stuff that happens after the election is over). </p>
<p>"<strong>Rebooting the System</strong>" is our overall theme, and we'll be delving deep into how internet-driven mass participation is transforming everything from political media and message-making to fundraising and field organizing, along with how big institutions like governments, campaigns and membership organizations are adapting. Day One will focus on the impacts on politics (campaigns, elections, media, etc.), while Day Two will focus on the ways that governance and civic engagement are being changed.</p>
<p>What follows is an overview of what to expect; everything is still subject to change, and I'm not putting in a detailed minute-by-minute schedule because that is still in flux. Plus we have a few panels that are still in formation and some major speakers who aren't quite ready to be announced...</p>
<p>Day One is focused on how technology is changing campaigns, elections and the media system, and inevitably as this is an election year, we're paying close attention to how voter-generated content is emerging as a major force in politics. </p>
<p>The morning plenary will include keynote talks from:<br />
-Clay Shirky (author of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Here-Comes-Everybody-Organizing-Organizations/dp/1594201536" title="Amazon.com: Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations: Clay Shirky: Books">Here Comes Everybody</a>) and Zephyr Teachout (Dean '04 internet organizer), each talking in different ways about how we're just beginning to see the potential of the internet play out in politics;<br />
-Arianna Huffington (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/" title="Breaking News and Opinion on The Huffington Post">Huffington Post</a>) and Chuck Defeo (CEO of <a href="http://www.townhall.com/" title="Townhall.com">Townhall.com</a>), each taking a close look at whether internet-powered media is creating a genuinely new media system;<br />
-Jane Hamsher (<a href="http://firedoglake.com/" title="Firedoglake">FireDogLake.com</a>) and Patrick Ruffini (<a href="http://www.thenextright.com/">The Next Right</a>), exploring, respectively, how the role of the net-roots and the right-roots is being redefined by this election; and<br />
-Elizabeth Edwards, returning to grace PdF again with her presence (she keynoted two years ago), to give her firsthand view of the power and prospects of internet-driven politics.</p>
<p>Scattered thru the plenary will also be a handful of demos and data visualization presentations, including an eye-opener from Anthony Hamelle of <a href="http://linkfluence.net/" title="Linkfluence - Home">Linkfluence</a>, on visualizing the political blogosphere and the campaigns' role in it.</p>
<p>In the afternoon, we'll move into in-depth concurrent breakout sessions on a wide variety of topics. Here are some of the highlights:<br />
-Jose Antonio Vargas (<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/" title="washingtonpost.com - nation, world, technology and Washington area news and headlines">Washington Post</a>), Ana Marie Cox (<a href="http://www.time.com/" title="Breaking News, Analysis, Opinions, Multimedia and Blogs - TIME">Time</a>), Ben Smith (<a href="http://www.politico.com/" title="Politics, Political News, Campaign 2008 - Politico.com - Politico.com">Politico</a>) and Sarah Lai Stirland (<a href="http://www.wired.com/" title="Wired News">Wired</a>) will talk about the covering the political web and web politics, a topic that they have been pioneering this whole election cycle;<br />
-Catherine Geanuracos (<a href="http://www.liveearth.org/" title="SOS | Live Earth | 7.7.07">Live Earth</a>), Jed Alpert (<a href="http://www.mcommons.com/" title="Mobile Commons   &raquo; homepage">Mobile Commons</a>), Becky Bond (<a href="http://www.credomobile.com/" title="CREDO Mobile">Credo Mobile</a>) and Katrin Verclas (<a href="http://mobileactive.org/">Mobile Active</a>) will give us the latest from the rapidly growing world of mobile politics, with a focus on what it will take to "unblock" the future and substantially expand the use of mobile phones as political tools in the U.S. (Hopefully, we'll have a participant from the Obama campaign on this panel too, but I can't confirm that yet.)<br />
-Mayhill Fowler (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/off-the-bus/" title="Off&nbsp;The&nbsp;Bus News and Opinion on The Huffington Post">Off the Bus</a>), Mary Katherine Ham (<a href="http://www.townhall.com/" title="Townhall.com">Townhall.com</a>), Amy Holmes (<a href="http://www.cnn.com/" title="CNN.com - Breaking News, U.S., World, Weather, Entertainment &amp; Video News">CNN</a>), and Jay Rosen (<a href="http://journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/weblogs/pressthink/" title="PressThink">PressThink</a>) will look at how citizen journalists and "semi-pro" bloggers are helping to reinvent political media and, sometimes, even change the campaign narrative.<br />
-Matt DeBergalis (<a href="http://www.actblue.com/" title="ActBlue">ActBlue</a>), David All (<a href="http://slatecard.com/" title="Slatecard.com">SlateCard</a>), Justine Lam (<a href="http://www.ronpaul2008.com/" title="Ron Paul 2008 &mdash; Hope for America">Ron Paul '08</a>), and Julie Barko Germany (<a href="http://www.ipdi.org/" title="IPDI : Institute For Politics Democracy &amp; The Internet">IPDI</a>), will explore the internet fundraising frontier, and make sure we all understand how to generate an online "money bomb."<br />
-Ed Cone (Ziff Davis), Wendy Norris (<a href="http://coloradoconfidential.com/" title="Colorado Confidential">Colorado Confidential</a>), Michael Van Winkle (<a href="http://www.samadamsalliance.org/" title="The Sam Adams Alliance - Building a network for liberty">Sam Adams Alliance</a>), Liza Sabater (<a href="http://www.dailygotham.com">Daily Gotham</a>) and Alex Hunsucker (<a href="http://eventful.com/" title="Local Events, Concerts, Sports, Festivals &amp; More - Eventful">Eventful.com</a>) will follow the old adage that "all politics is local" and focus on how local bloggers are shaking up the local political scene in cities and states across the country.</p>
<p>Day One will close with a plenary panel on what worked and what didn't work with the internet strategies of the 2008 presidential campaigns. All of the top campaigns will be represented; more details on this soon. I'll also have more details on other Day One breakout sessions as they congeal. We'll close the day out with a rollicking party for all the registered attendees.</p>
<p>Day Two is focusing on how technology is changing governance and civic engagement, and we'll be cutting new turf on everything from the potential of "collaborative governance" or "wiki government" to new ways of attacking and solving BIG problems like political corruption, climate change, and improving basic services. </p>
<p>The morning plenary will include keynotes from:<br />
-<a href="http://www.rushkoff.com/" title="Douglas Rushkoff">Douglas Rushkoff</a> (author of Open Source Democracy, among many titles), giving us the big picture on the new Renaissance age that we're entering;<br />
-Larry Lessig (<a href="http://change-congress.org/" title="Change Congress &mdash; Home">Change-Congress.org</a>), talking about how open data and open government can help reduce corruption and restore public trust;<br />
-Robin Chase (<a href="http://www.zipcar.com/" title="Zipcar - Car sharing, cars by the hour or day">ZipCar</a> and <a href="http://www.goloco.org/" title="GoLoco">GoLoco</a>), and Van Jones (<a href="http://www.greenforall.org/" title="Building a green economy strong enough to lift people out of poverty &mdash; Green For All">Green for All</a>) will explore how social technology can help us address the urgent issue of climate change;<br />
-Beth Noveck (NY Law School) and MP Tom Watson (UK Cabinet Office) will discuss the power of information and the social web to reinvent governance;<br />
-Morley Winograd, the co-author of the new book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=mozilla-20&amp;index=blended&amp;link_code=qs&amp;field-keywords=Millennial%20Makeover%3A%20MySpace%2C%20YouTube%20and%20the%20Future%20of%20American%20Politics&amp;sourceid=Mozilla-search">Millennial Makeover: MySpace, YouTube and the Future of American Politics</a>, will explain why current trends suggest we are on the verge of a new "civic generation" in American politics; and<br />
-<a href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&amp;ct=res&amp;cd=1&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Fmarkpesce.com%2F&amp;ei=5tYpSMqAPYSm8gSinrzECw&amp;usg=AFQjCNH7kHDCqkGKLWBNIlQ1QIYIA3jfOA&amp;sig2=6i9be2obRo2rPt_stu-b9g">Mark Pesce</a>, digital anthropologist and co-inventor of VRML, will give us his vision of "Hyperpolitics," i.e. what happens when everyone in the world is connected.</p>
<p>After lunch, we'll shift into concurrent breakout sessions again:<br />
-Vint Cerf (<a href="http://www.google.com/" title="Google">Google</a>), Michael Arrington (<a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/" title="TechCrunch">TechCrunch</a>) and Alec Ross (<a href="http://www.barackobama.com/" title="Welcome to Obama for America">Obama '08</a>) will wrestle with national technology policy, and the best ways forward for America;<br />
-Josh Marshall (<a href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/" title="Talking Points Memo">TalkingPointsMemo</a>), Robert Greenwald (<a href="http://bravenewfilms.org/" title="Robert Greenwald's Brave New Films">Brave New Films</a>), Matthew Sheffield (<a href="http://www.newsbusters.org/" title="NewsBusters.org | Exposing Liberal Media Bias">Newsbusters.org</a>), and Steve Grove (<a href="http://youtube.com/">YouTube</a>) will share their secrets for mastering the new world of online political video;<br />
-Ellen Miller (<a href="http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/" title="Sunlight Foundation">Sunlight Foundation</a>), Mark Tapscott (<a href="http://www.examiner.com/" title="Stay Current With Today's Top Breaking News Headlines - Examiner.com">Washington Examiner</a>), and Matt Stoller (<a href="http://www.openleft.com/" title="Open Left">OpenLeft.com</a>) will explain the strange bedfellow politics of transparency;<br />
-Steven Clift (<a href="http://e-democracy.org/" title="E-Democracy.Org - Discussion Forums with Political, Elections, News, and Government Links - Since 1994">e-democracy.org</a>), Tom Steinberg (<a href="http://www.mysociety.org/" title="mySociety   &raquo; News">mySociety.org</a>), Bev Godwin (<a href="http://www.usa.gov/" title="USA.gov: The U.S. Government's Official Web Portal">USA.gov</a>), Sarah Schact (<a href="http://knowledgeaspower.org/" title="Knowledge As Power - Welcome">Knowledge as Power</a>) and Justin Hamilton (<a href="http://georgemiller.house.gov/">Rep. George Miller's</a> office) will dig into "Design principles for online democracy: how to connect government and constituents in the internet age";<br />
-Jason Calacanis (<a href="http://www.mahalo.com/" title="Mahalo.com: Human-powered Search">Mahalo</a>), Jonah Peretti (<a href="http://buzzfeed.com/" title="BuzzFeed">BuzzFeed</a>), and Ami Dar (<a href="http://www.idealist.org/" title="idealist.org - Welcome to Idealist.org - Imagine. Connect. Act.">Idealist.org</a>) will explain how they make messages that go viral, in a session we're calling (pace Seth Godin), "Ideas that spread win";<br />
-Vijay Navindran (<a href="http://www.lsoft.com/lists/listref.html" title="CataList, the official catalog of LISTSERV lists">Catalist</a>), Paul Davis (<a href="http://www.votergenome.com/" title="Voter Genome Project, LLC :: A Revolution in Political Intelligence">Voter Genome Project</a>) and Greg Elin (<a href="http://www.sunlightlabs.com/" title="Sunlight Labs">Sunlight Labs</a>) will gather the real data geeks in the house for a session on building new tools for getting out the vote, getting out the vote and going hyper-local;<br />
-Henry Copeland (<a href="http://www.blogads.com/" title="Blog advertising makes opinions - Blogads stir opinion makers">BlogAds</a>), AJ Schuler (<a href="http://www.commonsensemedia.org/">Commonsense Media</a>), Michael Bassik (<a href="http://www.mshcdirect.com/" title="MSHC Partners">MSHC</a>), and Kate Kaye (<a href="http://www.clickz.com/" title="Internet Marketing Solutions for Marketers - ClickZ">ClickZ</a>) will talk about online advertising and new ways of both making and spending money online.</p>
<p>We'll also work in some demos of cool new tools for finding out what government is up to, and for collective decision making, interspersed through out the day. Plus we'll bring back the "Idea Market," the movable feast of fast talks and hands-on demos that was a hit at last year's conference.</p>
<p>Day Two will conclude with a major closing plenary on the question of "Redefining Leadership in a Networked Age." Confirmed speakers include Craig Newmark (<a href="http://www.craigslist.org/" title="craigslist classifieds: jobs, housing, personals, for sale, services, community, events, forums">Craigslist.org</a>), Joe Trippi (<a href="http://johnedwards.com/" title="John Edwards for President">Edwards '08</a>), and Scott Heiferman (<a href="http://www.meetup.com/" title="Meetup: World's largest community of local Meetups, clubs and groups! - Meetup.com">Meetup.com</a>). </p>
<p>As I said above, the program is still a work in progress. I haven't listed every session, as several are still taking shape. So if you're already a confirmed speaker and I didn't mention you in this post, don't worry, things are coming along nicely and I'll be updating as we go along. </p>
<p>Remember, the early bird rates on registration will close May 31. If you haven't registered yet, go to <a href="http://pdf2008.confabb.com">pdf2008.confabb.com</a> and sign up!</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Daily Digest: Drafting a Digital New Deal </title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1904/daily_digest_drafting_a_digital_new_deal" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1904/daily_digest_drafting_a_digital_new_deal</id>
    <published>2008-05-13T12:43:06-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-13T12:43:06-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="Gov Gab" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="Mediabistro" />
    <category term="RNC" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>An anti-Hillary Facebook glitch; looking for the Digital New Deal; looking at the average worth of legislators vs. American families; White House Rocks and the superdelegate superheroes; a Mediabistro circus will focus on online journalism and politics; the RNC and John McCain launch two new green sites; Barack Obama post online ad jobs on Craigslist; Gov Gab wants your input; and Obama and Bono to duet? </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Web on the Candidates</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>More evidence that Facebook is biased? HuffPo blogger <strong>Will Bower</strong>, in a post titled &#8220;<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/will-bower/glitch-plagued-clinton-fa_b_101000.html">Glitch-Plagued Clinton Facebook Group Cries Foul; Obama Page Glitch Free</a>&#8221; (that title is so funky, I had to post it), quotes a letter from the administrator of the Facebook group <a href="http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2230418813">Hillary Clinton for President - One Million Strong</a> to a Facebook administrator.  Apparently a &#8220;glitch&#8221; has left the group &#8220;unable to add moderators, to ban members, or remove bans on members.&#8221;  Does the fact that Facebook co-founder <strong>Chris Hughes</strong> works on <a href="http://www.barackobama.com/" title="Welcome to Obama for America">Barack Obama</a>&#8217;s web team have anything to do with this? We're sure it has nothing to do with anything... </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>FDR 2.0? In a long and thoughtful <a href="http://www.afro-netizen.com/2008/05/next-president.html">post</a> at Afro-Netizen, <strong>Helene De Michiel</strong>, national co-director of the National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture (NAMAC), writes that &#8220;Our next president can help reconstruct America&#8217;s fragmented and relatively weak public communications infrastructure by using the most effective tool our youth wield - the power and depth of their digital fluency,&#8221; so she calls for a Digital New Deal. De Michiel details a &#8220;large-scale public sector agenda&#8221; that, she argues, will reinvigorate the economy, provide jobs, and stoke civic activism. The public sector aspect is sure to make conservatives squirm, but all online activists will find something to like in her techno-positivism. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Another fantastic site from the <a href="http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/" title="Sunlight Foundation">Sunlight Foundation</a> is letting the light in on the personal worth of elected representatives.  <a href="http://fortune535.sunlightprojects.org/">Fortune 535</a> lets people see what Members of Congress are actually worth and how much they&#8217;ve gained since they came to Congress.  Even more fun are the graphs showing the average net worth of a lawmaker versus the average American family.  Hint: it isn&#8217;t even close. (techPres&#8217; <strong>Micah Sifry</strong> and <strong>Andrew Rasiej</strong> are advisers to the Sunlight Foundation). </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>We still haven&#8217;t forgiven humor site 23/6 for fooling us with that <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/23985/we_ve_been_had_mccain_girls_revealed">whole McCain Girls fiasco</a>, but they <em>are</em> producing a pretty funny series of Schoolhouse Rocks <a href="http://www.236.com/blog/w/agit_pop/white_house_rocks_superdelegat_6483.php">cartoons</a> called &#8220;White House Rocks.&#8221;  The first features a new group of superheroes called in to save the electoral day&#8230; funny.  But we&#8217;re still suspicious, 23/6. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Next week <a href="http://mediabistro.com/">Mediabistro</a>, the media-focused jobs and community site, is holding a two-day summit called the <a href="http://www.mediabistrocircus.com/index.php">Mediabistro Circus</a> that will discuss &#8220;the digital platforms and trends that are changing media.&#8221; The carnival will include a talk by New York Times digital news editor <strong>Jim Roberts</strong> about how digital media has changed coverage of the presidential campaigns. Other speakers include Wired Editor-in-Chief <strong>Chris Anderson</strong>, writer <strong>Steven Johnson</strong>, <strong>Robert Scoble</strong>, <a href="http://www.sixapart.com/" title="Six Apart">Six Apart</a>&#8217;s <strong>Anil Dash</strong>, and <a href="http://blip.tv/" title="blip.tv (beta)">Blip.tv</a> co-founder <strong>Dina Kaplan</strong>. Not to be missed. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p><a href="http://pdf2008.confabb.com/">Personal Democracy Forum 2008</a> is only six weeks away!  Stay tuned for a big announcement, and be sure to <a href="http://pdf2008.confabb.com/">register</a>. </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>The Candidates on the Web</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>The RNC and <a href="http://www.johnmccain.com/" title="John McCain 2008 - John McCain for President">John McCain</a> have launched two websites focused on (gasp!) global warming and the environment.  The RNC&#8217;s site, <a href="http://net.gop.com/climatechange/">Environmental Pledge</a>, is a simple form asking people to make pledges &#8212; start a carpool, use mass transit, keep your car tuned up, use a compact fluorescent bulb &#8212; to help the environment (there&#8217;s no mention of &#8220;climate change&#8221; or &#8220;global warming&#8221; anywhere, just the liberal use of the color green) with John McCain&#8217;s heading looming from above.  The <a href="http://www.johnmccain.com/climatechange/">second site</a>, which features a McCain URL, is much more involved, and establishes McCain&#8217;s market-based cap-and-trade &#8220;Plan on Global Climate Change&#8221; with a nifty Flash presentation, details about McCain&#8217;s plan, and a link to that GOP pledge. The site is one of the first GOP sites to heavily emphasize protecting the environment and to use phrases like &#8220;global climate change.&#8221; It will interesting to gauge the bases&#8217; response.       </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>He&#8217;s just like us; he posts on craigslist! <a href="http://chicago.craigslist.org/chc/web/674778972.html">According to an ad</a> in Chicago craigslist, the Obama campaign is &#8220;looking for internet experts who strongly support Barack Obama for President.&#8221; It looks like the campaign is planning on handling web advertising in-house, a rare move that, according to one online advertising exec, &#8220;is curious and contradicts the norm in political campaigning.&#8221;  The reasoning behind the move? &#8220;It&#8217;s possible that Obama&#8217;s current agency simply doesn&#8217;t have enough online advertising resources &#8212; or that the campaign is trying to save money by bringing everything under one roof,&#8221; says our source.  </p>
</li>
<li>
<p><a href="http://blog.usa.gov/roller/govgab/">Gov Gab</a>, the government site that bills itself as &#8220;Your U.S. Government Blog,&#8221; is taking a cue from the<a href="http://www.tsa.gov/blog"> TSA blog</a> and opening up for reader input. &#8220;Give us your ideas of how you’d like us to use this blog to provide you with information, services or a place to express your opinions,&#8221; <a href="http://blog.usa.gov/roller/govgab/entry/your_wish_is_my_blog">writes</a> Joanne (no last name given). &#8220;We’re ready to experiment.&#8221;  Cool!  If you get a chance, go ahead and leave a comment.  </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>He really is a rock star candidate. Barack Obama&#8217;s campaign is <a href="http://my.barackobama.com/page/community/post/katealbrighthanna/gGB95Z">starting to put</a> Barack&#8217;s &#8220;greatest hits&#8221; up as subscribable podcasts on iTunes.  What next, a duet between Barack and Bono?   </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Case You Missed It&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>To get a better sense of what tools political professionals are using, both for advocacy and to help elect candidates, <strong>Colin Delany</strong> <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25270/what_tools_are_you_using_for_online_politics">implores us</a> to take the <a href="http://www.hcdsurveys.com/go/J6789/Evoter?Vendor=evoter">2008 E-Voter Institute Survey of Political and Advocacy Communications Leaders</a> today. </p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Introducing PdF&#039;s Weekly Roundup: Policy, Not Politics</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1903" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/node/1903</id>
    <published>2008-05-12T17:08:29-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-12T17:08:29-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Dave Witzel</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Newsletter" />
    <category term="Policycommons" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>PdF's new email newsletter, the Policy Not Politics Weekly Roundup, will discuss what the rise of the networked age means for small 'g' governance</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Okay, there's an election campaign going on.  Sure, it's historic. But what I want to know is, what happens after the election, after the handicapping, polling, and prognosticating are finished, after the game is over, and the work begins?  I listened to Joe Trippi on Friday speaking at a <a href="http://www.ndn.org/events/050908.html">New Democratic Network Event</a>, assert that the second ever "bottom up" campaign (ie, Obama's) is about to defeat the best-ever-of-all-time "top down" campaign (ie, Clinton's).  But does running a successful networked campaign mean a candidate will govern differently?</p>
<p>That's the question of the PdF's new "Policy Not Politics" Weekly Roundup.  We'll focus on what the rise of the networked age means for "small 'g' governance" as Jerry Michalski called it.  This weekly email newsletter will compile posts from the Personal Democracy Forum blog focused on how the internet is changing, and perhaps should change, how we govern ourselves.  Trippi suggested that we are about to see the first network-era presidency much as Kennedy represented the first TV-era presidency.  This Weekly Roundup will be focused on what that means and who is doing what about it.</p>
<p>We'll tend to do a few things every week, with the option to change and improve as we go.  We'll highlight new initiatives and topics as they occur, track related events and conferences, host a live online interview or two (and encourage your participation), and provide some deeper insights into a different topic every week.</p>
<p>Please let me know about your activities and ideas (as well as comments and criticism) – <a href="mailto:dwitzel@policycommons.org">dwitzel@policycommons.org</a>.  If you see something I should see, tag it with "policycommons" – I'll make sure to look.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Daily Digest: Obamacans Move On To Barack</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1902/daily_digest_obamacans_move_on_to_barack" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1902/daily_digest_obamacans_move_on_to_barack</id>
    <published>2008-05-12T12:08:25-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-12T12:08:25-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="Hillary Clinton" />
    <category term="MoveOn" />
    <category term="Ralph Nader" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>MoveOn announces the winner of its Obama ad contest; Andrew Sullivan, the web, and the fight against obedience, submission, and authoritarianism; a videoblogger asks, where is Ralph Nader's party and organization?; LisaNova nails a Hillary/Sunset Blvd. impression; Surrender Hillary is popping up across the land; two candidate Twitter feeds aggregate Twitter-chatter about the candidates; and George Bush submits to his first online-only (but not live) interview.   </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Web on the Candidates</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p><a href="http://www.moveon.org/" title="MoveOn.org: Democracy in Action">MoveOn</a> has announced the winner of its <a href="http://www.obamain30seconds.org/">Obama in 30 Seconds</a> contest.  The video, titled &#8220;Obamacan&#8221; and produced by <strong>David Gaw</strong> and <strong>Lance Mungia</strong>, is narrated by a Republican vet who, despite years of supporting Republican candidates, is throwing his weight behind <a href="http://www.barackobama.com/" title="Welcome to Obama for America">Barack Obama</a>.  The spot was chosen by MoveOn&#8217;s panel of judges (which includes folks like <strong>Ben Affleck</strong>, <strong>Donna Edwards</strong>, <strong>Oliver Stone</strong>, <strong>Markos Moulitsas</strong> and, um, <strong>Moby</strong>) and MoveOn supporters, who could cast their vote after viewing the videos.  It&#8217;s a surprising winner.  As the Politico&#8217;s <strong>Ben Smith</strong> <a href="http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0508/MoveOn_Obamacan.html">wrote</a>, the video &#8220;captures the power of Obama&#8217;s post-partisan argument &#8212; intensified in this case by the fact that the spot was chosen by members of a group normally seen as hyperpartisan.&#8221; Also, a quick check of MoveOn's <a href="http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=karinmoveon&amp;p=r">YouTube channel</a> (in the name of karinmoveon) shows that all of the finalists' videos were viewed at least 100,000 times.  Not bad.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Conservative-ish Obama supporter <strong>Andrew Sullivan</strong> is excited about Barack Obama and <a href="http://www.ronpaul2008.com/" title="Ron Paul 2008 &mdash; Hope for America">Ron Paul</a>&#8217;s online success, and <a href="http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2008/05/non-paul-republ.html">wonders</a> if it is &#8220;a harbinger of a more libertarian and self-empowered political culture &#8212; because the web does not reward obedience, submission, or authoritarianism.&#8221;  To Sullivan, the web <em>is</em> conservatism.  Think the mainstream GOP got the memo?  </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Citizen video blogger <strong>Joe Felice</strong>, whose entry to Project Breakout&#8217;s <a href="http://broadcasting.projectbreakout.com/header/page/how_it_works">Political Pundit</a> competition we recently <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/24701/daily_digest_obama_s_outreach_or_lack_thereof">noted</a>, asks <a href="http://www.votenader.org/" title="Ralph Nader for President in 2008 &mdash; Join with us today">Ralph Nader</a> a pertinent question in a <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9Hb9Svxa1Y">new video</a>.  &#8220;When I go to your website I don&#8217;t see the name of your party&#8230; you had the last eight years to build something else bigger than yourself, but it seems like you haven&#8217;t built anything to affiliate your campaign with, you just drop in to run for president.  How does that inconsistent behavior make you a credible voice for organized change?&#8221;  Fine question, Joe. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/LisaNova">LisaNova</a></strong>, a videoblogger and veritable YouTube star, produced a <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWaL1XnUPN0">biting</a> parody of Sunset Blvd. starring <a href="http://www.hillaryclinton.com/" title="HillaryClinton.com -  Welcome">Hillary Clinton</a> as the faded film star.  In her fantasy world, the stairs in Hillary&#8217;s home become the stairs in the White House, and an amateur interview becomes <strong>Anderson Cooper</strong>.  It&#8217;s worth watching for LisaNova&#8217;s over-the-top, hammy acting alone.  It's also amazing that someone with a vast following on YouTube (nearly 100K subscribers) and well more than 6 million individual views, is beaming out an anti-Hillary parody.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>The next piece anti-Hillary agitprop comes in the form of <a href="http://surrenderhillary.com/gallery/">Surrender Hillary</a>, a brutally funny gallery of canonical images altered to include the phrase &#8220;Surrender Hillary.&#8221; They&#8217;re often written in the same chicken-scratch scrawl, lending the images a homespun and menacing look. The voter-generated anti-Hillary wave continues to swell.       </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Two Twitter feeds collect Twitter chatter (twatter? That sounds kind of nasty.  Chitter?) about the two Dem candidates.  <a href="http://twitter.com/twobama">TwObama</a> and <a href="http://twitter.com/twhillary">twHillary</a> are your one-stop sources for all things Twitter and the candidates, follow them or be left behind.       </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>The Candidates on the Web</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>This is surprising: tomorrow President Bush will <a href="http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0508/10266.html">sit down</a> for his first-ever online-only interview.  Politico&#8217;s <strong>Mike Allen</strong> will do the duties, and the interview will be posted on both the Politico and Yahoo. It doesn&#8217;t look like the interview will be livestreamed &#8212; the White House isn&#8217;t going <em>that</em> far &#8212; but it <em>will</em> &#8220;be one of the president’s first on-camera interviews following the wedding of first daughter Jenna Bush in Crawford, Texas.&#8221;  Phew, for a minute I was nervous they wouldn&#8217;t cover that important bit of news.    </li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Case You Missed It&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>Today Bob Barr formally announced his entry into the Presidential race, and as the only candidate for his party’s nomination who has actually won a significant election, he will likely be the Libertarian candidate this fall, <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25268/can_bob_barr_tap_into_ron_paul_s_movement">writes</a> <strong>Luigi Montanez</strong>. Can Barr harness the energy from the libertarian-minded Ron Paul campaign and mount a disruptive third-party run? Or is he doomed to receiving a miniscule portion of the popular vote, as has been the case with past Libertarian presidential candidates?</p>
<p>There is no limit to how citizens can use the internet to make political statements, <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25239/omg_warning_over_the_top_offensive_humor">writes</a> <strong>Alan Rosenblatt</strong>.  Case in point: Hillary&#8217;s Downfall. (Viewer warning: this video may offend you.)</p>
<p>A Washington State state delegate named Suzi LeVine, looking for an easy way to organize her state’s Obama delegates, <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25159/obama_delegates_learn_to_self_organize">turned to</a> free wiki service Wetpaint, which helped her quickly build the Barack Obama Delegates site. This is one of those sites that serve such an obvious function that we wonder how the delegates could live without it. So why haven’t supporters of the other candidates done anything similar?</p>
<p><strong>Colin Delany</strong> reviews an interesting new GOP anti-Obama site, <a href="http://www.CanWeAsk.com">CanWeAsk.com</a>, that mixes social media techniques and video to try to undermine Obama&#8217;s credibility. But does the featured video actually backfire?</p>
<p><strong>Micah Sifry</strong> was in a breakout session at the New Democratic Network&#8217;s daylong conference on &#8220;New Tools, New Audiences,&#8221; listening to Vijay Ravindran, the CTO of Catalist, talk about web 2.0 and its development of an &#8220;Enhanced Voter File.&#8221; He offers his <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25157/voter_file_2_0_catalist_democratic_tool">rushed notes</a>, and a good paraphrase of what was said. </p>
<p>Chart-watcher <strong>Micah Sifry</strong> <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25156/clinton_going_down_while_the_web_dreams_of_an_obama_win">notes</a> that Clinton is losing friends on MySpace, and traffic to her website seems to be crashing. Meanwhile, the interwebs are having a ball with &#8220;<a href="http://kottke.org/when-obama-wins/">When Obama Wins</a>.&#8221;</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Voter File 2.0: Catalist, Democratic Tool</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1901/voter_file_2_0_catalist_democratic_tool" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1901/voter_file_2_0_catalist_democratic_tool</id>
    <published>2008-05-09T16:11:58-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-09T16:11:58-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Micah L. Sifry</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Catalist" />
    <category term="New Democratic Network" />
    <category term="Vijay Ravindran" />
    <category term="voter file" />
    <category term="Web 2.0" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I'm in a breakout session at the New Democratic Network's daylong conference on "New Tools, New Audiences," listening to <a href="http://www.catalist.us/staff.html#3">Vijay Ravindran</a>, the CTO of <a href="http://www.catalist.us/">Catalist</a>, talk about web 2.0 and its development of an "Enhanced Voter File." As usual, these are my rushed notes, and at best a good paraphrase of what was said, not direct quotation.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I'm in a breakout session at the New Democratic Network's daylong conference on "New Tools, New Audiences," listening to <a href="http://www.catalist.us/staff.html#3">Vijay Ravindran</a>, the CTO of <a href="http://www.catalist.us/">Catalist</a>, talk about web 2.0 and its development of an "Enhanced Voter File." As usual, these are my rushed notes, and at best a good paraphrase of what was said, not direct quotation.</p>
<p>The traditional voter file, which is collected by state bodies, is just name, contact info and party registration, and past voter behavior.</p>
<p>The enhanced voter file, something that Democrats, Republicans and sometimes other organizations build and maintain, contains commercial data, census data, historical information about your behavior, and specialized data (like lifestyle choices). (Vijay notes, later in the Q&amp;A, that this kind of data is often a weak indicator of people's actual political preferences, and hypothesizes that someday under an OpenID framework, campaigns or organizations like his might be more interested in highly accurate information that individuals volunteer about themselves.)</p>
<p>Enhanced voter files are used for canvassing, and also for modeling campaigns.</p>
<p>Catalist is building on the lessons of 2004 (where Democrats had a database meltdown) and working to build a 50 state national database:</p>
<p>Catalist's voter file has the names of 180 million registered voters, plus 75 million unregistered people (for use by voter registration groups), enhanced with commercial data, specialty data (like who owns hunting licenses), integrated it with the Democrat's VAN application, and with a tool for subscribers to mine the data.</p>
<p>Catalist's goal is to be a permanent piece of progressive infrastructure. Vijay talks about Tim O'Reilly's <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html">"What is Web 2.0"</a> paper as his "baseline in driving Catalist." So he goes thru some of O'Reilly's key points about the development of web 2.0.</p>
<p>1. <em>The web as a platform</em>: Examples are Amazon, Facebook, Google. For Catalist, this means: if our data is inaccessible, it doesn't exist. (This is another reference to the Democratic data disaster of 2004.) A database administrator is a poor excuse for an interface where people can self-administer. From the very beginning, having a back end web interface was essential. We also created a web services API for progressive organizations with technical staff.</p>
<p>2. <em>Harnessing collective intelligence</em>. Examples are Wikipedia, Amazon, Flickr. For Catalist, this means storing, organizing and utilizing in perpetuity the collective personal data of its customers. It means removing the technical limitations around cooperation, building value-added meta-data that no one else can, and relying on its customers to make its data more correct. (This is sort of the open source model for bug fixing, but Catalist isn't an open product. But inside its ecosystem, it sounds like it's applying the same logic.)</p>
<p>3. <em>Data is the next "Intel inside."</em> For Catalist, this means instant access to information about nearly everyone over 18 in the US in a single format, easy upload of proprietary data for integrated data mining, giving back unique identifiers for each data point, and the creation of a proprietary matching system for the data. What this means you can combine field canvass lists, fundraising, membership, polling info and online engagement, to get a 360 degree view of people and figure out more ways to engage them (or ask them for money, he notes, if you haven't already).</p>
<p>4. <em>End of the software release cycle</em>. Examples are eBay, Netflix, who make their fixes in real time online. The same can be true for politics. Data can be updated in critical election months; no more stale data. And new features and bug fixes need to be deployed rapidly. (No more 2004 horror shows for the Democratic side, in essence. He draws a parallel to Christmas season at Amazon.)</p>
<p>5. <em>Lightweight Programming Models</em>. Examples are Amazon Web Services, YouTube's embed feature. Catalist's approach is to not try to do everything. Their web service is designed to allow other's creativity to take advantage, like MoveOn's "Vote Poke" application. Their formats are usable by microtargetters, and other groups can syndicate their data (like America Votes)</p>
<p>6. <em>Software Above the Level of the Single Device</em>. They're making application configurations for field, analytics, fundraising, strategy, pollsters. etc. Vijay mentions the need to make these more Blackberry friendly, given how many political staffers have them.</p>
<p>7. Rich user experiences. Catalist's Q tool has a professional UI design, maps, drag and drop crosstabls, inline updated counts and access control for organizations.</p>
<p>Where is this going? With more data and more collaboration, and web services, more innovative applications will get built both by Catalist and others. He sees the semantic web coming, intelligent crowd sourcing, integrated web mining...and ultimately more progressive power.</p>
<p>Question time. I ask about their business model. Subscriptions to Catalist are $25K to $400K per year. Several hundred organizations are clients. About 40 people on staff. 15 terabytes in size database. He analogizes it to an electric company, where no one org would ever have the wherewithal to build one, but it is essential infrastructure.</p>
<p>I also ask: "How do they insure that they're only selling their services to progressives?" He says they haven't hit the interesting question yet of "what if Joe Lieberman wants our services?" It would be up to the board. AARP would be considered progressive, he thinks.</p>
<p>In terms of how information is shared internally: A lot of nonprofits that use Catalist's data release their own results back for others to use, such as Womens Voices, Womens Vote, one of their clients. By and large, donor data, membership info tends to be kept private by clients. </p>
<p>A very impressive presentation. Ravindran, who left Amazon to lead Catalist's technology team, has clearly brought the wisdom of Silicon Valley to the political infrastructure business. He's definitely someone to watch. </p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Daily Digest: Can We Ask? </title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1900/daily_digest_can_we_ask" />
    <id>http://personaldemocracyforum.com/blog/entry/1900/daily_digest_can_we_ask</id>
    <published>2008-05-09T13:27:20-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-05-09T13:27:20-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Joshua Levy</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="color of change" />
    <category term="Congresspedia" />
    <category term="Hillary Clinton" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="Qik" />
    <category term="RNC" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Jose Antonio Vargas thinks Barack Obama's early popularity online pointed to his electoral success; Color of Change hits Hillary for "race-baiting"; Al Franken is annoyed by a pesky blogger; the New York Times botches superdelegate data, and Congresspedia gets it right; super-conservative Richard Viguerie launches anti-John McCain site; Micah Sifry livestreamed on Qik; Obama launches a huge voter registration drive; the RNC hits Obama with an attack ad, almost securing him as the Democratic nominee in the process; and Obama wins an award for its texting smarts </p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Web on the Candidates</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Reporting on the &#8220;Clickocracy&#8221; (we love that word!), the Washington Post&#8217;s <strong>Jose Antonio Vargas</strong> <a href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/05/08/how_the_web_contest_predicted.html#comments">posts</a> a provocative, and convincing, argument that Barack Obama&#8217;s early online popularity was a predictor of his eventual rise to the top.  Following the Howard Dean model, writes Vargas, Obama &#8220;tapped into new donors, many of them also first-time donors giving less than $100 online. He organized outside the party, marrying online enthusiasm with an aggressive, technologically sophisticated on-the-ground, knock-on-doors strategy.&#8221;  Voters responded.  &#8220;The Web called it early,&#8221; <a href="http://www.newpolitics.net/">New Politics Institute</a>&#8217;s <strong>Peter Leyden</strong> told Vargas.  But the jury is still out on how bottom-up Obama&#8217;s campaign really is, or if they just run a really tight, web-savvy ship. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p><a href="http://www.colorofchange.org/" title="ColorOfChange.org">Color of Change</a> &#8212; the massively popular black activism site &#8212; has been hitting <a href="http://www.hillaryclinton.com/" title="HillaryClinton.com -  Welcome">Hillary Clinton</a> hard in recent weeks, circulating a <a href="http://www.colorofchange.org/dems/">petition</a> demanding that the superdelegates &#8220;listen to the voice of the voters.&#8221;  Now, <a href="http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/09/group-tell-clinton-to-stop-race-baiting/">reports</a> the New York Times&#8217; <strong>Kate Phillips</strong>, it&#8217;s organizing a campaign to hit the DNC with a barrage of phone calls to protest Clinton&#8217;s &#8220;race-baiting&#8221; remarks in which she said support for Obama among working-class whites is slipping. For her part, Clinton denies that she&#8217;s tried to be divisive.  Glad to see things are going positive after North Carolina.     </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Comedian-turned-politician (Comedician? Poledian?) <strong>Al Franken</strong> is emerging as the frontrunner in the Democratic Senate race in Minnesota. But, as the AP <a href="http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200805/POL20080507a.html">tells it</a>, Republican blogger <strong>Michael Brodkorb</strong> is doing all he can to stop him. &#8220;Brodkorb scooped the traditional media by detailing extensive bookkeeping problems in New York and California that ultimately prompted Franken, this week, to pay about $70,000 in back taxes to 17 states,&#8221; the un-bylined story goes.  &#8220;When people talk about the right wing noise machine, that&#8217;s what it is,&#8221; Franken spokesman Andy Barr said.  Actually, it may not be the &#8220;noise machine&#8221; as much as an online citizen journalist simply doing a better job than the pros. </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Another hit for citizen media: The New York Times <a href="http://politics.nytimes.com/election-guide/2008/results/superdelegates/delegates/index.html#725">reported</a> that Washington State superdelegate <strong>Sharon Mast</strong> had thrown in her lot with Hillary Clinton, but the Tacoma-based News-Tribune <a href="http://blogs.thenewstribune.com/politics/2008/05/08/nyt_says_superdelegate_mast_is_for_clint">discovered</a> that she&#8217;s uncommitted.  Their source? <a href="http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Washington_State_2008_presidential_primary_and_superdelegates">Congresspedia</a>!  Yay for wikis!  (Congresspedia is a joint project of the Center for Media and Democracy and the Sunlight Foundation, for which techPresident&#8217;s <strong>Micah Sifry</strong> and <strong>Andrew Rasiej</strong> are advisers). </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Ur-conservative John McCain foe <strong>Richard Viguerie</strong> has launched a new anti-Mcain website called <a href="http://www.ultimatejohnmccain.com/">Ultimate John McCain</a>.  Don&#8217;t let the National Enquirer-esque design fool you; these folks are for real.  Their beef is that McCain isn&#8217;t conservative enough.  Maybe they should team up with <strong>Robert Greewnald&#8217;s</strong> liberal site <a href="http://therealmccain.com/" title="The REAL McCain: Less Jobs, More Wars.">The Real McCain</a>. That would make for some strange bedfellows indeed.   </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>TechPresident&#8217;s <strong>Micah Sifry</strong> is in Washington today at NDN&#8217;s<a href="http://www.ndn.org/events/050908.html"> New Tools, New Audiences Forum</a>, where he&#8217;s discussing changes in campaign strategies.  This morning social media consultant extraordinaire <strong>Beth Kanter</strong> caught up with him and <a href="http://qik.com/video/74318">recorded an interview</a> on her Nokia N95 &#8212; the crack of the techie set &#8212; and livestreamed it on Qik, catching a glimpse of his talk, which focuses on networked politics and how it&#8217;s changing the political system in the U.S. </p>
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</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>The Candidates on the Web</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>With an eye towards November, the Obama campaign is launching a nationwide voter registration drive called <a href="http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/vfchome">Vote for Change</a>.  The Atlantic&#8217;s <strong>Marc Ambinder</strong> <a href="http://marcambinder.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/05/pay_to_attention_to_obamas_vot.php">says</a> we should resist looking at this at a simple GOTV effort.  &#8220;Obama aides won&#8217;t say much more, but I gather that the campaign is constructing an incredibly elaborate online interface to allow its more than a million donors and volunteers to directly persuade their neighbors through a variety of media&#8230; On election day, Obama might have more than a million individuals volunteering on his behalf. That should scare the beejeesus out of the McCain campaign and the RNC.&#8221;  Meanwhile, is McCain &#8212; whose opponents are still getting votes in state primaries &#8212; doing anything to bolster the ranks of Republican voters?  </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>In another sign that Barack Obama is, for all intents and purposes, the presumptive Democratic nominee, the RNC is attacking him for his &#8220;empty rhetoric.&#8221; <a href="http://net.gop.com/canweask/">Can We Ask</a> is both a video and an interactive campaign in which voters are asked to submit questions for Obama via text or video. The RNC staff will then review submissions and press Obama for an answer.  It&#8217;s a cool project, and a sign that the RNC might start to do some interesting work this cycle.  McCain, are you paying attention?    </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>The Obama campaign has <a href="http://160characters.org/pages.php?action=view&amp;pid=58">won</a> a 2008 Global Messaging Award for best messaging application/service in the &#8220;Public sector/not for profit&#8221; category.  That&#8217;s a great award, though we still have very little idea of what the heck their secretive mobile strategy is.  </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>In Case You Missed It&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>Ah Friday. Brew some coffee. Take a load off. Let YouTube take over and check out our <a href="http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/25154/favorite_videos_of_the_week_it_s_hard_out_here_for_a_chick_update">favorite videos of the week</a>.  Watch as Mike Gravel sweeps Obama girl off her feet; as GOOD shows us where the money comes from in this campaign; as Cobra Commander asks for you vote; as the GOP attacks Barack Obama&#8217;s &#8220;empty rhetoric&#8221;; as Hillary Clinton raps about the campaign; as Obama and Clinton compete to control the universe; and much more. </p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
</feed>
