Archive: Author: The Management

09/12/2014

Data Dumps The Internet Slowdown appears to have generated at least 111,000 new public comments to the FCC on its "Open Internet" proposal, with Fight for the Future--one of its organizers--claiming that actually more than 500,000 were submitted through Battleforthenet.com, reports Alex Howard. During Yahoo's losing fight in 2008 against a secret court order demanding it turn over customer data, the US government threatened to fine it $250,000 a day, newly declassified documents reveal. As Vindu Goel and Charlie Savage report for the New York Times, "The records … provide perhaps the clearest corroboration yet of the Internet companies’ contention that they did not provide the government with direct access to vast amounts of customer data on their computers." Extending the civic tech...

09/11/2014

Positive Sums A close analysis of unofficial results from the NYC Board of Elections by DailyKos blogger "brooklynbadboy" finds that Zephyr Teachout won some of the city's wealthiest state assembly districts while Governor Andrew Cuomo won some of its poorest. "This is the inverse of what should happen in a liberal primary challenge," he writes. Tim Wu tells Conor Skelding of Capital NY says he would run again "in a more normal race." Speaking of DailyKos, it's worth noting that the site has been having its best year ever, traffic-wise, according to this recent post by Markos Moulitsas, its founder. In August, it had nearly 8.5 million unique visitors, way more than the 6.8 million the site hit in October 2012. Moulitsas attributes...

09/10/2014

Emergence The emergent coalition between open democracy advocates, environmentalists, public school proponents, anti-corruption crusaders, trust-busters and net-heads didn't do badly in yesterday's New York Democratic gubernatorial primary, with Zephyr Teachout and Tim Wu receiving 34.2% and 40.1% of the vote (with 98.3% of precincts reporting), respectively, in their challenges to sitting governor Andrew Cuomo and his hand-picked running mate former Rep. Kathy Hochul. Teachout-Wu were strongest in the counties surrounding the state capital, Albany, and along the Hudson River (including Manhattan). Cuomo-Hochul took the heavily populated outer boors of New York City, the inner suburbs, and the region around Buffalo, the state's other major city. (See Politico's county-by-county breakdown for the Hochul-Wu vote here.) As the New York Times's Thomas Kaplan noted in...

09/09/2014

Fusion Politics Zephyr Teachout and Tim Wu yesterday unveiled their tech policy for New York, garnering the endorsement of Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, our Miranda Neubauer reports. Also noted in Miranda's round-up: Google search trends show a substantial spike in interest in Teachout and Wu in New York, especially down-state. But do Googlers = voters? Yesterday, for the first time in the entire primary, NY Governor Andrew Cuomo made an indirect reference to his opponent, telling reporters, "You can be a great college professor. You can be very good at what you do. You need experience in government if you want to run the State of New York." Teachout responded, "My first qualification for being the next governor of the State of...

09/08/2014

Messiness This video of NY Governor Andrew Cuomo and NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio doing their best to ignore Fordham law professor Zephyr Teachout as she approaches Cuomo during the Labor Day parade is going viral online, reports Adam Sneed of Politico. The Democratic primary in New York is this Tuesday. Commenting on this encounter, Lawrence Lessig calls Cuomo "the Nixon of New York." The Buffalo News interviewed Tim Wu, Teachout's running mate, who is challenging western NY Congresswoman Kathy Hochul, and Wu flunked on his knowledge of the region. Speaking of not knowing anything, here's a video of liberal Democratic NY Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, campaigning with Hochul in Manhattan, and admitting he doesn't know anything about her backing by the National...

09/05/2014

This past Wednesday, we hosted a fascinating conversation with three innovative thinker-doers: Ben Berkowitz, the co-founder of SeeClickFix; Marci Harris, the CEO of PopVox; and Erhardt Graeff, an MIT Civic Media grad student who is working on a project called ActionPath. The conversation was the result of my hearing Graeff's short presentation on his research at last June's MIT-Knight Civic Media conference. He's focused on how we can improve the design of projects that aim to increase civic engagement, and envisions ActionPath as a mobile tool that would connect people with relevant civic information that literally crosses their path as they go through their daily lives. Imagine an app on your phone that knows your location and sends you push...

09/05/2014

Elevation As previously reported, the White House has confirmed that Google executive Megan Smith will be President Obama's next Chief Technology Officer. In addition, Alexander Macgillivray, Twitter's former chief lawyer, will come on board as deputy CTO. With these two picks, the White House is getting two highly respected tech leaders, one with intimate knowledge of innovation and the other a keen intellect on Intellectual property and online speech issues, the Washington Post's Nancy Scola points out. (Don't miss the photo credits she pulled for her story.) In Wired, Issie Lapowsky explains why Megan Smith's elevation is "a massive win for women in tech." 18F is looking at revamping the government's FOIA portal, Alex Howard reports. With Twitter suggesting that it will soon impose...

09/04/2014

Fireworks Etsy CEO Chad Dickerson has a great piece in Wired.com explaining why the business community should be supporting net neutrality. He writes, "The FCC proposal threatens any business that relies on the Internet to reach consumers, stream video, process payments, advertise services or products, speak their minds, or do just about anything else." Rui Kaneya takes a tour of Chicago's venerable civic hacking scene for Columbia Journalism Review, with snapshots of Open City, the Smart Chicago Collaborative, 1871 and Everyblock. Civic tech wonk Michael Connery has a long and well-argued piece on Medium explaining why he thinks Sean Parker's Brigade start-up is unlikely to revolutionize the field. The tl/dr version: the field already is given active citizens plenty of ways to self-organize...

09/03/2014

Government Clouds Google's Megan Smith is about to be named the next White House CTO, reports Dan Primack for Fortune. Less than one percent of more than 800,000 comments submitted to the FCC on its "open Internet" proposal were clear opposed to net neutrality, the Sunlight Foundation's Bob Lannon and Andrew Pendleton report. In addition, 60 percent of the comments were form letters coming via organized campaigns, which they note "is actually a lower percentage than is common for high-volume regulatory dockets." Regulators in Maryland are the first in the country to rule that Uber should be treated like other common-carrier taxi companies, as Andrew Zaleski...

09/02/2014

Endorsed We here at Personal Democracy Media are endorsing Zephyr Teachout and Tim Wu, who are running in next Tuesday's Democratic gubernatorial primary here in New York. Armed with $1.5 billion in venture capital, Uber is waging a stealth campaign to undermine Lyft and other transportation networking companies, reports Casey Newton for the Verge. Its tactics include Uber employees ordering and then canceling thousands of Lyft rides and giving them burner phones to avoid detection. Salon's Andrew Leonard picks up on Newton's story to argue that Uber's actions are the equivalent of the 19th century's robber barons and asks, "What happens when a company with the DNA of Uber ends up winning it all?…What happens when Uber’s priorities turn to generating cash rather...