A new Republican group swears web domination is all about the right tools; the presidential race is the best example of the impact of blogging on politics, says Technorati; Jose Antonio Vargas gets introspective about online politics; the DNC credentialing process is on the verge of becoming a fiasco; Second Life attacks made real in Russia; Google News and Google Earth offer cool possibilities; a new, smooth pro-Obama tune; McCain says none more black!; Hillary Tweets more, conducts blog outreach; and British PM reaches out to constituents on YouTube.
| Read more ...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?
| Read more ...Jeff Jarvis rounds up the many, many ways to chop, splice, and parse online data about the elections; General JC Christian produces a Second Life parody site devoted to Mike Huckabee; Al Qaeda asks its members to submit questions to its #2 leader; what Star Wars characters do the candidates remind you of?; Ron Paul launches an effort to recruit precinct captains; and RNC online operations guy Cyrus Krohn gets a nice puff piece.
| Read more ...Ron Paul raises $4.3 million online, breaks records, and a collective "wha?" is heard across the land; a Congressman bans all incoming links from Blogspot domains and gets predictably ridiculed; Stephen Colbert drops out of the race: "It's time for this nation to heal," he says; the state of politics in Second Life; and why are all of the online campaign directors so darn young?
| Read more ...OffTheBus launches a new wiki tracking presidential campaign staffers; looking at potential FEC violations in candidates' Second Life presences; listing the top-ten anti-Hillary sites, which are collectively raising a ton of cash to stop her; and Ron Paul reports a haul of $5 million this quarter, raising eyebrows and comparisons to Howard Dean.
| Read more ...A new video investigates Rudy Giuliani's "scheduling conflicts" on the day of an African American-themed debate; a video shows that Mitt Romney has invested a tidy sum of money in Iran, despite very public calls for others to divest from the country; some missing John Edwards videos turn up on YouTube; a new social networking site aims at online liberals; Ron Paul raises over $1 million in an end-of-quarter fundraising push; and Newt Gingrich will not be running for president in 2008.
| Read more ...The Web on the Candidates
More details have emerged about a MySpace-based reality show in development called "Independent." Developed with cooperation from Mark Burnett, whose resume includes "Survivor" and "The Apprentice," the show will capitalize on the ongoing political activity on MySpace by giving users a chance to select a "candidate" -- a regular Jill or Joe, not a current candidate -- who they think will best represent them. The winner will receive $1 million, which they can give to a candidate or a PAC or use to fund their own real run for president. Jeff Berman, Senior Vice President of Public Affairs for MySpace, sees the show trying to replicate a mythical America that ensures equality for all. "One of the most amazing things about MySpace is it's a completely neutral platform. No matter how rich you are, where you come from, or what you believe in, if you have a compelling message and you deliver it well, you have a chance to find an audience. We think it's a great thing for the political process and a great thing for America," he says.
The Candidates on the Web
Two weeks ago we wrote about a new project from California Rep. George Miller called "Ask George," which will allow voters to ask Miller questions about the Iraq war using just about every technology available; they can post videos, write blog posts, participate in Facebook groups, send a text message, use Twitter, or even write an email to Miller, being sure to tag or label the questions with "Ask George." All of the submitted questions will be aggregated at Community Counts, the site run by David Colarusso that also aggregates YouTube Spotlight videos and submissions for the upcoming YouTube/CNN debate. As we've written before, this is an innovative idea, and one of the first by a national politician to truly leverage the underlying architecture of the web. Miller's team is still putting the finishing touches on the project, but check out Miller's first video response to submitted questions; it's refreshingly honest and direct. We believe this is the first time a U.S. politician has used SMS and Twitter for pull instead of push messaging, meaning that instead of spamming supporters with messages, supporters send messages to the pol. Also, go to the Community Counts page to see what they're up to. Again, this is something the presidential candidates need to be doing. Also: check out Community Counts' Town Hall, where Colarusso et al. ask other politicians to participate in similar "Virtual Townhalls."
| Read more ...The New, New Philanthropy
By Allison Fine
We appear to be reaching a tipping point of interest and activity around “new philanthropy” that is worth some examination. In particular, the efforts of the MacArthur Foundation to dip their toe into Second Life and the Case Foundation to fund individuals working to shift power locally between citizens and government are causing stirs.
Steve Nelson of Clear Ink has produced a cool build in Second Life that displays information about Congress, pulling data into the metaverse using Sunlight Labs' API. The project is an entry in the Sunlight Foundation's "Mashup Congress and Win" contest that offers a $2,000 prize for "the best 'Web 2.0 Mashup' that displays information about Congress." (PdF's Andrew Rasiej and Micah Sifry are tech advisors for the Sunlight Foundation).
1 comment | Read more ...The Web on the Candidates
Taking a cue from a question he was asked at the Politics Online conference last week, Jerome Armstrong offers a "succinct guide for doing R&D in the campaign" on MyDD. The top three suggestions: "look out onto the Internet for what's being done... in order to create innovation, look out at what's happening in areas outside of political campaign websites."; "don't try everything, less is more... doing one thing right, instead of a dozen things half-assed, makes the difference between a signal getting through and clutter lost in the shuffle."; and "work with the brand that is your candidate."
Another Politics Online post-mortem: Alex Clover from the Bivings Report lists his highlights from last week's Politics Online conference, which include Jerome Armstrong on Second Life, Giuliani advisor Patrick Ruffini on online only-events, Chuck DeFeo of Townhall (and now of techPresident) on "flooding the zone," and Joe Trippi on the end of big money. It's another great synopsis of this year's conference.
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