Archive: Author: The Management

10/24/2013

Touchy German chancellor Angela Merkel called President Barack Obama Wednesday to demand a clarification of a report in Der Spiegel that the NSA was eavesdropping on her mobile phone. According to the Guardian, her spokesman said Merkel told Obama that "she unmistakably disapproves of and views as completely unacceptable such practices, if the indications are authenticated. This would be a serious breach of confidence. Such practices have to be halted immediately." The White House said her phone was not currently being tapped, but declined to deny that it had done so in the past. The New York Times notes that "after a similar furor with France, this was the second time in 48 hours that the president found himself on the phone...

10/23/2013

The Hypocrisy Gap Henry Farrell and Martha Finnemore have a hilariously subversive essay that they have somehow published with Foreign Affairs called "The End of Hypocrisy: American Foreign Policy in the Age of Leaks." Here's their key point: The deeper threat that leakers such as Manning and Snowden pose is more subtle than a direct assault on U.S. national security: they undermineWashington’s ability to act hypocritically and get away with it. Their danger lies not in the new information that they reveal but in the documented confirmation they provide of what the United States is actually doing and why. When these deeds turn out to clash with the government’s public rhetoric, as they so often do, it becomes harder for U.S. allies to...

10/22/2013

Kinks The Affordable Care Act is "more than just a website," says the email from the White House. "Here's What's Being Done to Make HealthCare.gov Better," says the post on the White House blog. “Nobody is madder than me about the fact that the website isn’t working as well as it should, which means it’s going to get fixed,” President Obama said Monday in the Rose Garden. Well, at least we know the White House communications operation still works. The problem, according to Obama: "kinks in the system." Which are being "ironed out." White House CTO Todd Park, who formerly was CTO of HHS, and co-founded two medical technology companies before he entered the public sector, is part of the "A-team" working to...

10/21/2013

Surging Yesterday, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) put up an unusual Sunday blog post titled "Doing Better: Making Improvements to HealthCare.gov." After two weeks of near silence, it was the agency's first on-the-record admission that "the initial consumer experience of HealthCare.gov has not lived up to the expectations of the American people." The post promised a "tech surge" of additional help--"some of the best and brightest from both inside and outside government to scrub in with the team and improve HealthCare.gov." Responses to the "tech surge" were mixed. Longtime open data activist Carl Malamud tweeted "Out here in the country, we recognize the smell of bs." Technologist Clay Johnson responded, "It'd be great if they had 10 $150K...

10/18/2013

The Bloggers Edward Snowden tells James Risen of The New York Times that he didn't take any secret documents with him to Russia, giving them to the journalists who met him while he was in Hong Kong. He also made an eloquent defense of his decision to blow the whistle by going public: “The secret continuance of these programs represents a far greater danger than their disclosure…So long as there’s broad support amongst a people, it can be argued there’s a level of legitimacy even to the most invasive and morally wrong program, as it was an informed and willing decision,” he said. “However, programs that are implemented in secret, out of public oversight, lack that legitimacy, and that’s a problem....

10/17/2013

Kludgeocracy* With the government shutdown over (for a few months at least), will attention shift to the broken HealthCare.gov portal? Two weeks after its launch, the site is "still broken," reports Politico. CGI Federal, the prime government contractor at the center of the HealthCare.gov meltdown, is a big government porker, and a big internal mess, reports WonkBlog. Before the shutdown fades from memory (i.e. before next week), stop and read this breathtaking statement from Chamath Palihapitaya, a Facebookillionaire (he joined the company in its first year) who now invests in disruptive start-ups. Is it possible that some in Silicon Valley think the Washington shutdown crisis was irrelevant? That's the takeaway from this tidbit spotted by Kevin Roose at New York Magazine. Palihapitaya...

10/16/2013

Boom BuzzFeed's Ben Smith reports that Glenn Greenwald is leaving The Guardian to start a "brand new, large-scale, broadly-focused media outlet." The details, Greenwald told Smith, will be "unveiled very shortly." The venture will be based in New York City, Washington, DC and San Francisco, Greenwald said, and will be "a general media outlet and news site — it’s going to have sports and entertainment and features. I’m working on the whole thing but the political journalism unit is my focus.” Reuters reports that Greenwald's financial backer is Pierre Omidyar, the founder of e-Bay. Back in 2011, Omidyar's Civil Beat news-site in Hawaii editorialized strongly against the decision of Amazon, Visa and Mastercard to cut off service to WikiLeaks, and in recent...

10/15/2013

Harvesting Washington Post contributor Barton Gellman and privacy analyst Ashkan Soltani break new ground in the NSA files story, reporting that the agency "is harvesting hundreds of millions of contact lists from personal e-mail and instant messaging accounts around the world, many of them belonging to Americans." The data, which is collected daily, "enables the agency to search for hidden connections and to map relationships." The data is collected overseas but sweeps up the accounts of millions of Americans. Primed with federal anti-terrorism dollars, police forces across America are expanding their routine data collection on their residents, reports The New York Times. "The New York Police Department, aided by federal financing, has a big data system that links 3,000 surveillance cameras with...

10/14/2013

Malala, Malia The AP's Martha Mendoza reports on a "growing backlash to government surveillance" in the wake of Edward Snowden's revelations. "Activists are fighting back with high-tech civil disobedience, entrepreneurs want to cash in on privacy concerns, Internet users want to keep snoops out of their computers and lawmakers want to establish stricter parameters." Another Snowden repercussion: the core institutions managing the Internet are moving away from their longstanding relationship with the US and towards "accelerating the globalization" of Internet governance. Snowden received an award from the "Sam Adams Associates," a group of retired CIA officers, for "Integrity in Intelligence" last week in Moscow. Here he is talking about the need for greater government transparency in the US, one of several short videos...

10/11/2013

Greased Politifact, home of the "Truth-o-Meter" and one of the US's main fact-checking sites, is soon launching a sister site called PunditFact, which will check claims made by pundits, columnists, bloggers and the hosts and guest of talk shows. Seed money came from Craig Newmark's craigconnects, and additional funding ($625,000) is coming over two years from the Ford Foundation and the Omidyar Network's Democracy Fund. IMHO, this couldn't be more needed. Revolution Messaging, the mobile politicking shop that grew out of part of the 2008 Obama campaign's online team, just launched DrunkDialCongress.org, a site that helps you blow off some steam at a random Congress-critter, preferably after you've had a few. Type in your phone number and it will call you...