Archive: Category: TechPresident

10/03/2007

While a quick glance at the biggest political blogs suggests that none of the presidential candidates have caught fire, lots of political bloggers are declaring their allegiance to a candidate, either with a post or by putting a button or badge on their site. But it's not all that easy to find those blogs. There are a couple of great sites devoted to particular candidates that serve as hubs or aggregators of bloggers devoted to that person. Those include Blogs for Fred (Thompson), RudyBlogs (Giuliani), The 35Percenters (Kucinich), and the DailyPaul (Ron Paul). (And if you google for "blogs for hillary" the top result is a site called Blogs Against Hillary, which has dozens of sites listed in its blogroll. I...

09/27/2007

[Here's a snippet of my and Andrew Rasiej's latest "Politics 2.0" column in the Politico.] Most of the time in American presidential politics, if you’re a voter who doesn’t live in one of the early-primary states, or in one of the handful of major cities that generate serious cash for candidates, the odds of you ever seeing a candidate at this point in the election cycle are pretty low. According to The Washington Post’s “Campaign Tracker” database, Iowa has seen 1,240 candidate events; New Hampshire, 571; South Carolina, 268; California, 238; D.C., 174; Florida, 146; Nevada, 111; and New York, 103.The odds of a candidate coming to a small town in Kentucky, which has neither money nor an early primary, are basically...

09/25/2007

Google the words “DailyKos” and you’ll get about 2.6 million results. Google the words “Democracy Alliance” and you’ll get about 44,000 hits, and from them you won’t find out much. You’ll learn that the DA is a partnership of some 80 to 100 wealthy liberals, who have each pledged to contribute $1 million or more over several years to fund think tanks and advocacy groups, inspired by the hundreds of millions that a handful of rich conservatives spent in the 1970s and 1980s building the infrastructure of the New Right. You’ll learn the names of some of its biggest supporters, like George Soros, Peter Lewis and, indirectly, Herb and Marion Sandler. If you go to the group’s modest website, you...

09/23/2007

It looks like only one presidential candidate understood the value of OneWebDay: John Edwards. (Here's my original post on the topic.) That's not really a surprise, given how well-stocked his campaign is with veterans of the Howard Dean campaign, the contribution of policy advisers like David Weinberger with a deep understanding of the web, and Elizabeth Edwards' longstanding involvement online. Here's his statement: "As avid users of the Internet, Elizabeth and I are proud to salute OneWebDay 2007. "Thanks to the Web, millions of people around the world have the opportunity to effect change and make profound differences for good in their communities. "That is why it is vital that we overcome the digital divide which prevents many of our rural and African-American...

09/20/2007

Given how much the presidential campaigns are relying on the internet to get their message out, raise money and rally supporters, I wonder if any of them are planning to mark OneWebDay this Saturday. As Susan Crawford, the founder of OneWebDay, puts it: It’s easy to take the web for granted. But it’s worth taking a moment to reflect on what the web could mean to humankind in the future. That’s the purpose of OneWebDay, held each September 22. There are substantial threats to the free flow of information online, all over the world. Many governments censor online content. (see opennet.net). Many people in developing nations can’t get online at all. We need to ensure that the internet used by future...

09/20/2007

Cell phone service is coming to New York City's subway system, which is good news, so the guy pictured below on the front page of the Daily News' website won't have to use an aluminum can with a wire attached to it so he can get an emergency message out to the streets above...

09/12/2007

Here's the top half of my and Andrew Rasiej's latest "Politics 2.0" column in The Politico: We could be wrong, but here’s a prediction about the power of viral campaigns: By the time the dust settles on the storm kicked up by MoveOn.org’s highly provocative “Petraeus/Betray Us” ad in The New York Times on Sept. 10, the online group will have seen its 3.2-million-strong e-mail membership list grow substantially. That’s because MoveOn understands the way messages move in our new Internet-driven media environment. It’s not enough to make a speech or issue a press release or buy a newspaper ad. Nor does it matter if you have a great press list, or ins with all the top political bloggers on the planet...

09/10/2007

Do Americans for whom Spanish is their primary language talk about politics online anywhere? I'm far from an expert on this, and I'd love some community feedback. But as best as I can tell, the answer is no. I've been surfing around this morning, looking for reactions to the Univision Democratic debate, which took place last night in Miami and which was broadcast in Spanish, with English subtitles. (Though, oddly, the rules of the debate prevented the candidates from speaking directly in Spanish, something both Bill Richardson and Chris Dodd tried to ignore.) First place I looked was on Technorati. Bloggers definitely perked up around the debate, with mentions of the word "Univision" jumping from about 40 or so per day...

09/06/2007

Seth Godin credits me, I think (how many other Micahs does he know?), for sending him a link to news report about a JupiterResearch study that found that most viral campaigns fail because they only work 15% of the time. Umm, , I didn't send him that link, but his post prompts me to add my two cents and a link to another piece, by Duncan Watts and Jonah Peretti, on the Harvard Business Review's site. First cent: I agree with Seth, you can't market something virally in the sense of getting people to share something by word-of-mouth/email/blog that they're not inherently into. The Jupiter study notes that most marketers aim their campaigns at influentials as if those people can somehow,...

09/06/2007

Looking to build a "people's movement"? Like to hang with "fellow travelers"? Or are you a campaign field organizer looking for an easy-to-use online tool to help supporters and volunteers share car rides to events? Then check out GoLoco.org, a new service from the people who brought you the ZipCar. The idea, says Robin Chase, GoLoco's CEO, is to help people quickly share rides between friends, neighbors, and co-workers, as well as facilitate sharing costs online. She describes the service as "Facebook meets the Rideboard, with paypal thrown in." Here are some of the things you can do with GoLoco: * organizers can create an event and invite others to it * you can group all...