Archive: Year: 2012

01/24/2012

In the wake of last week's online uprising against the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act, there's a fascinating dynamic starting to unfold as technology leaders and grassroots activists wrestle with the question: now what? On one side, I'm seeing signs of a new willingness from tech leaders to not just engage Washington the old-fashioned way (by expanding their expenditures on lobbying and campaign donations) but by also addressing the underlying "pay-to-play" system that made it almost possible for one industry, the entertainment sector, to use legislation to impose its will on another industry, the Internet sector. Grassroots activists clearly are pressing in this direction. On the other hand, there's also clearly some reticence on the part of...

01/17/2012

A Personal Democracy Media Editorial Last year, when Senator Patrick Leahy introduced the Protect IP Act (PIPA) and when House Judiciary Committee Chair Rep. Lamar Smith introduced the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), they probably had no idea that they, along with a bipartisan group of cosponsors, would awaken a sleeping tiger. After all, the proposed legislation was fairly technical in nature and would cost the government little to implement. But in the days and weeks that followed, it has become exceedingly clear that Leahy and Smith and their allies in the entertainment industry misread the political landscape. Instead of a slam dunk designed to crack down on so-called "online piracy," the bills have backfired on Hollywood, fostering the emergence of...

01/17/2012

We're pleased to announce that Chris Wong is joining Personal Democracy Media to curate this June's ninth annual Personal Democracy Forum. He comes to us with a wide range of experience in the world of open knowledge, free culture and creative new approaches to civic collaboration. He's a postgraduate fellow and lecturer at the Institute for Information Law & Policy at New York Law School, and a visiting fellow at both the Princeton University Center for Information Technology Policy and the Yale Law School Information Society Project. Currently, he is leading research on the NSF-funded Open Patent project exploring the tagging and visualization of patent information, and was previously the founding project manager of the IILP’s historic Peer To Patent...

01/17/2012

Of all the tech companies that have gotten involved with big media players around the Republican primary debates, Twitter continues to show the most genuine interest in producing something meaningful out of what, for the most part, appears to be co-marketing opportunities. Which is only saying a little--the media bigfoots running these events really don't appear to care about online user input and feedback much, and just want a little of that internet buzz to rub off on them. But that's of a piece with the media's general approach to this cycle's juggernaut of debates. (See Republican Mark McKinnon's excellent new discussion paper, "Gone Rogue: Time to Reform the Presidential Primary Debates," for a chapter-and-verse dissection of just how bad...

01/16/2012

In preparation for tonight's Republican presidential debate, which is featuring a collaboration between Fox News and Twitter similar to their last event using the hashtags #answer and #dodge to involve viewer feedback in the conversation, I went looking on the FoxNews.com website to see if there was any more information about how they were going to handle the Twitter feedback. (You may recall that last time around, this experiment was essentially a bust.) Well, I didn't discover anything about the so-called "Twitter election," but I did stumble on this interesting fact. According to the latest Fox News poll, President Obama has a 45% approval rating, with 57% of those surveyed disapproving of him and 8% undecided. That's a very impressive 110%...

01/16/2012

The battle over so-called 'online piracy' has awakened a sleeping tiger. For years, the Internet community has been outgunned and outspent by Hollywood and the copyright cartel in Washington. Now, proposed legislation that would enable the government to take drastic action against rogue websites and force internet service providers to police content moving through their services far more stringently has triggered a growing response from tech companies large and small. From COICA to Protect-IP to SOPA and PIPA, the acronyms have changed but the goal has been largely the same: make sharing of content harder, even impossible, to shore up the business models of intellectual property owners. But as we have been reporting, this push in Washington is now being...

01/13/2012

Thursday morning, Politico announced that it was joining with Facebook to "measure GOP candidate buzz" and give its readers an "exclusive look at the conversation taking place on the social networking site" ahead of the January 21 South Carolina primary. "Mitt, Paul winning Facebook primary" was the headline on their first story on the project. "'Social media has forever changed the way candidates campaign for the presidency,' said John F. Harris, editor-in-chief of Politico, in a press release about the new partnership. He added, “Facebook has been instrumental in expanding the political dialogue among voters and we couldn't be more excited about the opportunity to offer our readers a look inside this very telling conversation.” At the core of the partnership are...

01/11/2012

Can we use interactive real-time media to make the political process more engaging and accountable? In particular, can we make candidate debates and live town halls into something more than a joint TV appearance for the regurgitation of sound-bites and talking points? Since 2007, we've had more than a detached interest in this topic, launching our own interactive platform for crowdsourcing questions called 10Questions.com. We've worked with partners like the Knight Foundation, the Omidyar Network and Yahoo! News and Finance to try to inject some new ideas into the process. And we've kept a close eye on all kinds of interesting and not-so-interesting partnerships between conventional media organizations and digital platforms. Join the conversation here....

01/11/2012

Before they fade further into the past, a quick note on last weekend's back-to-back presidential debates in New Hampshire and the role of online platforms therein. In case you've forgotten, I'm talking about the ABC News/Yahoo event Saturday night and the NBC/Facebook event Sunday morning. And neither made a dent, when it comes to using interactive media to involve the public in the debates. For the record, according to a transcript, Yahoo was mentioned four times during the ABC event, and co-moderator Diane Sawyer sourced one question back to Yahoo, saying "Yahoo! sends us questions, as you know. We have them from real viewers. And I’d like to post one, because it is about gay marriage." (Yes, her overall performance...

01/09/2012

This is where we distinguish between the truly important and the simply shiny, the technology efforts that matter and the ones that are just fluff, the bold claims vs the reality. From social media to fundraising to community engagement, there's plenty of hype. We need to become digitally literate enough to distinguish what is smoke and what is real. What follows is an eclectic selection of posts that try to put the discussion on solid ground....