Archive: Year: 2012

12/31/2012

Technology is changing politics, government and civic life. We built this timeline to show the accelerating pace of change in the United States, in the international arena, and online. The initial research was done by Kristina Redgrave, Diane Chang, Becky Kazansky, Andrew Seo and Micah Sifry, and edited by Micah Sifry. It is a work-in-progress. To view the actual timeline, visit this page: www.techpresident.com/timeline. This topic page aggregates our ongoing updates to the timeline....

12/31/2012

Here's our subjective list of the top events and developments in the world of technology and politics in 2012. It's drawn from our just updated "Politics and the Internet" Timeline, and is built on the work of techPresident's editors and writers along with suggestions from an array of friends. We've added about 35 new items to the overall timeline, by the way. If you think we've left something out, or want to suggest a change to an existing item in the timeline, use this form to let us know. January 18, 2012--SOPA/PIPA blackout day Wikipedia, Google and other large sites lead online campaign against the "Stop Online Privacy" and "Protect IP" Acts. In total over 150,000 websites participated in the January...

12/30/2012

Since launching our "Politics and the Internet" Timeline last August, we've gotten dozens of suggestions for revisions and additions from all kinds of people. We made a few right off the bat, and then decided to let them accumulate and do updates on a more periodic basis. The winter holiday break also seemed like a perfect time to get some distance on events, in terms of deciding what to include or leave out from recent developments in our world. As I noted in the original post on the timeline, this isn't an "official" list, but rather just our subjective judgment of the most important and notable developments at the intersection of technology and politics in the United States, online, and...

12/17/2012

It's Friday afternoon and some folks think the world is supposed to end today, so we thought, while we wait for the apocalypse, why not make it fun to relive the highlights of the last year? What really did or didn't happen in the world of tech-politics last year? This quiz covers the hard questions. So, for your pleasure and amusement, try to match your wits against ours. No cheating. Answers at the bottom of the post. 1. Which of these topics were not covered by Deanna Zandt and Baratunde Thurston on their NPR All Things Considered "Social Media Advice" chats? a) How to manage having two personalities on Twitter; b) How to not share naked photos of yourself on Facebook with...

12/10/2012

The Obama political operation took a big step today, sending out an email to its millions of supporters asking them to call Members of the House of Representatives to pass a Senate-approved bill aimed at preventing the expiration of the Bush-era tax cuts on the bottom 98% of U.S. taxpayers. In some cases, recipients are being asked to call their own Member; in others, where their Member is already in favor of the Senate bill, Obama activists are being asked to call Obama supporters whose representatives may be a swing vote. In case there's any doubt, these emails are aimed at putting heat directly on Republican House members. "We know we can affect change in Washington when we raise our voices...

12/06/2012

It's not too soon to register for Personal Democracy Forum 2013, which will be happening June 6-7 (exactly seven months from now) at New York University's Skirball and Kimmel Centers. If you act now, you'll lock in our lowest rate for tickets, and considering who we already have coming, you should have no worries that this will be our best event yet. This will be our tenth annual conference, and we're excited to announce our first wave of keynote speakers: Becky Bond, the President of CREDO SuperPAC and the political director of CREDO Mobile; Catherine Bracy, the co-director of the Obama 2012 Technology Field Office in San Francisco; Robin Chase, founder and CEO of Buzzcar.com and the founder and former CEO of Zipcar; Sasha Issenberg,...

12/05/2012

"We weren't quick enough out of the gate," four years ago, says Jeremy Bird, the national field director of President Obama's re-election campaign. "We will be quicker this time." He's not talking about the race just concluded. He's talking about how Organizing for America, the president's political organization, operated in the days and months after Obama's first election in 2008, compared to what is coming now. Bird should know. A Harvard Divinity School graduate who studied organizing under Marshall Ganz, worked on Howard Dean's 2004 primary bid, and then went to work for the United Food and Commercial Worker's Wake-Up Wal-Mart campaign, he's been working for Obama since March 2007. He was the campaign's South Carolina field director during the primaries,...

11/26/2012

While not all of the numbers are in yet, we thought it would be useful to put in one place all the relevant data currently available about online and offline engagement by the Barack Obama and Mitt Romney campaigns. Some of these factoids are essentially unverifiable, but represent the claims being made by the campaigns in press reports. Others are drawn from available social network profiles and/or contemporaneous Google searches. Number of Barack Obama Facebook friends on Election Day 2012: 32,313,965 Number as of November 26, 2012: 33,752,862 Net gain since Election Day: 1,438,897 Number of Barack Obama Facebook friends on Election Day 2008: 2,397,253 Number of Mitt Romney Facebook friends on Election Day 2012: 12,135,972 Number as of November 26, 2012: 11,906,351 Net decrease: 229,621 Number of...

11/21/2012

What next for the millions of people, tens of thousands of volunteers and several thousand staff who came together to propel Barack Obama to re-election? While public attention in Washington has turned to the so-called "fiscal cliff" negotiations and the cable news shows are now fixated on the violence in the Middle East, how this question is answered may be the most consequential of Obama's second term. Will there be a real "outside" Washington strategy to put pressure on recalcitrant Members of Congress? Will they use the massive lists and online presence that were built around the campaign? Will the extraordinary machinery of tracking, targeting and mobilization that the campaign built be used to maximize such efforts? Will Obama supporters...

11/20/2012

Ever since Election Day, the White House's "We the People" page has experienced a surge in e-petitions from people who, to put it kindly, don't especially like the Obama Administration. Petitions calling for individual states to be allowed to secede from the USA and form their own governments have received more than 900,000 signatures so far. Considering that as of mid-September, "We the People," which was launched a year earlier, had just hit a total of 3.4 million signatures, this is a big surge in public engagement with the platform. The secession boomlet has drawn a wide range of media attention, from gushing coverage in the rightwing Daily Caller to bemusement and derision from all over the liberal left. Signers...