Archive: Author: The Management

05/29/2012

It's been months since WikiLeaks, the whistle-blowing website, has posted anything other than appeals for support for its embattled founder Julian Assange. Weakened by internal dissension with Assange's imperious management (starting in mid-2010) , hampered since December 2010 by an extra-legal blockade by credit card companies that have hurt its funding, and distracted and drained by Assange's extended legal battle against his extradition to Sweden, WikiLeaks is a long cry from the heady months when it rattled Washington with the release of Afghanistan and Iraq war records and State Department cables and helped set off the uprisings in Tunisia and elsewhere in the Middle East. Though it's in the news again today because of the British Supreme Court's decision to...

05/23/2012

Do you have a minute? Marriage What got me to apply I am just so happy My best friend Romney economics Romney's qualifications 1,959,743 Americans and counting "The defeat of Barack Hussein Obama" GottaVote.org My place, June 14th I'm hosting An evening with two presidents Sarah Jessica is hosting Anna Wintour, too --B.H. Obama, May 2012 Going up I need your vote today Lucky you Thank you, America Almost over Elections are about choices It's still the economy We're not stupid Not fooling us Meeting you --W.M. Romney, May 2012...

05/22/2012

I'm really looking forward to talking with author Howard Rheingold this Thursday on the next PD+ teleconference. His new book, Net Smart, is a concise and thoughtful guide to understanding and making the most of the hyper-networked, always-on, firehose of information and distraction that is the contemporary experience of anyone who uses the Internet. And it's built on top of 25 years of close observation and participation, plus Howard's careful curation of the latest research on how we learn, how we collaborate and how we as individuals and a society can improve ourselves using digital tools. If you've ever wanted a master class with a real "Internet guru," then this call is a must for you. RSVP here to join in....

05/17/2012

A year ago, Microsoft mega-billionaire Bill Gates gave a talk at TED about state budgets and education funding, entitled "How state budgets are breaking US schools." It was an attack on state budgeting practices. All but one of the fifty states are supposed to balance their budget, but Gates argued that most states used gimmicks "that would make Enron blush" such as borrowing money, selling off state assets, deferring payments to schools, tapping tobacco settlement payouts early, and abusing workers' withholding taxes to cover cash flow needs. He also pointed out that states faced a growing generational divide, with increasing pension obligations and health care costs destined to shift spending towards the old and away from the young. At one...

05/15/2012

The mainstream media has spent much of the last year looking for the next tool or app that is supposedly going to change the election of 2012 — "It's the Twitter Election! It's the Facebook Election! It's the Tumblr Election!" While it's certainly worth noting how the campaigns are using these sites — playing elite spin games in public on Twitter, mining voters' social data on Facebook, and charming the cool kids on Tumblr — none of them are really changing the role of activists or ordinary voters all that much, the way that newly emergent online platforms disrupted politics as usual in 2007-08. In the meantime, Change.org, a social action site built around the oldest and arguably least sexy tool in...

05/14/2012

As David Karpf wrote here ten days ago, the Americans Elect third-party experiment of 2012 looks like it has hit a dead end. No declared candidate is anywhere close to hitting the group's requirement of earning 10,000 supporters across at least ten states, with at least 1,000 from each state. Former Louisiana governor Buddy Roemer the closest at just 5,840. He has less than 600 from California. As Jonathan Tilove points out in his story in the Times-Picayune, that means Roemer has more followers on Twitter than he has supporters who actually want him on AE's presidential ballot line. Americans Elect had an ambitious plan to hold several rounds of online voting to winnow down what its leaders had hoped would...

05/02/2012

We all know how the Internet is enhancing the power of citizens to band together to take action around common causes. And these days you can hardly spend more than a few minutes online before you bump into some campaign led by consumers taking on a company, demanding changes and often getting them. But what if while all this is going on, a deeper power shift is under way that is quietly tilting the playing field towards anyone with the money and motive to manipulate web users by collecting all kinds of data about them and then assiduously targeting people in ways they're barely aware of? That's just one of the big questions I'm looking forward to covering on this Thursday's...

04/30/2012

Last weekend in Washington DC, about five hundred intrepid reporters, influential insiders, bloggers, media mavens, and a handful of glitterati came together to swap tales of their bouts with the powerful, impress each other with their savvy, trade gossip, and have a good time. No, I'm not talking about the annual White House Correspondents Association shindig, which has grown from a fancy dinner into an all-out onslaught of glittery parties, complete with Hollywood celebrities and too much elated self-congratulation by a media industry that seems to be less-and-less about anything other than itself. I'm talking about Transparency Camp, the Sunlight Foundation's annual two-day unconference for open government. (Full disclosure: Along with Andrew Rasiej, I helped set up the Sunlight Foundation and...

04/26/2012

Tomorrow, the Federal Communications Commission is scheduled to vote on a proposed rule that would require broadcasters to post online their "public file," a list of all the political ads that run on their channels, who bought them, and what they paid. The rule would also enable the agency to build a central website compiling all the data in an easy-to-search portal. Right now you have to literally visit each TV station in person to access the paper records. As ProPublica's Daniel Victor has pointed out, this would be a "transparency gold mine" that would allow the public to see much more easily who is trying to influence elections. Making this kind of public data available online is especially valuable at...