Archive: Category: TechPresident

10/04/2011

“Young people like me have felt politically powerless for most of their lives. We came of age during the Obama campaign and we were fed the idea that the campaign represented the peak of progressive organizing. Now, my Facebook feed is full of 18 and 20 year-olds who all want to go to an occupation.” --Guido Girgenti, a student organizer from Occidental College, speaking at the Take Back America conference's bank accountability panel yesterday in DC. The Occupy Wall Street movement has spread to more than 200 cities, according to this crowd-sourced list built by longtime netroots blogger/activist Chris Bowers on DailyKos. Later tonight, I hope to have a tally of how many are actually signed up on all those pages, but...

10/03/2011

This is going to be a very interesting week for the Occupy Wall Street movement, for three reasons. Other more mainstream organizations, like MoveOn.org, Rebuild the Dream, the NY-based Working Families Party, and an array of local unions, are urging their supporters to join in. Their calls are definitely gaining traction: the number of people signed up on this Wednesday's "Community/Labor March to Wall St." Facebook page has more than doubled in the last 24 hours, as have the number of people being invited by their peers. While most of these people are just going to show up at the end of one work-day, rather than bring their sleeping bags and stay, their presence can only help the #OWS core...

10/02/2011

Since Saturday afternoon, when I took a snapshot of 30 Facebook "Occupy X" groups corresponding to an array of large and midsize American cities, the number of people who have signed up (aka "liked") on these groups' pages has grown by 23.5%. That is, from 92,143 when I did my tally yesterday, to 113,802 mid-afternoon today. The numbers are impressive and steadily rising; indeed, as I glanced at some Facebook pages and then refreshed, they gained another 10 or 12 within minutes. I've expanded my spreadsheet to include a little over 50 Facebook "Occupy" pages, including a few that aren't just for cities (such as Occupy Maine and Occupy Michigan) and a few that aren't in the US (including Occupy...

10/01/2011

I've built a partial spreadsheet listing some of the many cities across America where people are creating and joining "Occupy X" groups in solidarity with the OccupyWallStreet protest. Not counting the 49,000 people on the latter's page, a semi-random mix of 28 other mid-to-large cities have another 40,000 or so people signed up. OccupyTogether.org has links to more than 100 cities in all, so a simple extrapolation suggests that easily well over one hundred thousand people have signaled their support. It remains to be see how many will show up and stay on the ground. If you'd like to help flesh out this spreadsheet, email me at msifry at gmail dot come, or message me on Twitter @mlsif and I'll give...

10/01/2011

"During movement times, the people involved have the same problems and can go from one communication to the next, start a conversation in one place and finish it in another. Now we're in what I call an organizational period, which has limited objectives, doesn't spread very rapidly and has a lot of paid people and bureaucracy. It's completely different from what takes place when there is a social movement." --Myles Horton, from his book "The Long Haul", talking about his work with two American social movements, the labor movement of the 1930s and the civil rights movement of the 1960s America is about to experience the same youth-driven, hyper-networked wave of grassroots protests against economic inequality and political oligarchy that have been...

09/28/2011

In case you missed it, the "paper of record" has a long front-page story today titled "As Scorn for Vote Grows, Protests Surge Around Globe." It's kind of a goulash of anecdotes from Spain to Israel to India, with the common ingredients being youthful street protests, economic inequality, social networking and a hint of networked politics. Any day the Times quotes Yochai Benkler, the dean of networked theory and peer-based commons production, is a good day in my book. But for the record, this article could have also been written in 2003 or 2007-8. For argument's sake, the Times' story on the rise of the "second superpower," ("A New Power in the Streets," February 17, 2003) which focused on the...

09/28/2011

Canadian open government activist David Eaves has another of his usually smart posts up today about the emerging foreign policy strategy behind the launch of the Open Government Partnership. He's not the first to note that advocacy "open government" in the hands of the Obama administration has been a tool of U.S. foreign policy (see Evgeny Morozov's or Sami Ben Gharbia's trenchant critiques). But Eaves places the effort in a more benign light, one that effortlessly channels language we've been hearing from people like Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her innovation advisor, Alec Ross, but situates their thinking inside the broader geopolitical context that must concern American strategists: how to contain China's growing influence in Asia, Africa and Latin...

09/28/2011

If you're on Barack Obama's email list, you've probably noticed how many of his subject lines seem highly familiar. "Put this on your car," "Frustrated," "This is actually pretty cool," and "How this dinner thing works," are all recent examples of subject lines the campaign has used. No doubt these subjects have been tested in advance and scored highly for open rates, but the treacly tone has led MentalFloss.com to make a quiz testing your ability to distinguish these real subject lines with messages "from my aunt," and Atlantic senior editor Garance Franke-Ruta has now piped up with a funny post comparing Obama to a "plaintive boyfriend worried about trying to save the relationship." We'll keep an eye on whether...

09/28/2011

Longtime readers of techPresident know we love looking at YouTube political videos because the site offers so much interesting data about what people are watching, how videos are being shared, and so on. And while we haven't yet seen the break-out satirical mashups that charmed so many politics junkies back in 2007-08, there's plenty to be learned from a look at how the various presidential candidates and related national political figures are doing on YouTube. For starters, consider President Barack Obama's YouTube channel, which has reverted to campaign mode. While it hasn't yet cranked up to the daily volume we saw four years ago, Obama's channel is now featuring more of the mini-documentary videos on the stories of his campaign's...

09/27/2011

PdF friend and conference '10 speaker Susan Crawford has a smart oped piece up on Bloomberg discussing the issues recently raised in San Francisco by Bay Area Rapid Transit's cutoff of public cell phone service during some protest marches against police brutality. BART's action has led to an emergency petition by a coalition of consumer and digital rights groups, asking the FCC to take action to uphold free speech. Crawford writes: When Earl Warren was California’s attorney general in 1942, he wanted the phone company to cut off service to a man suspected of involvement with illegal gambling. A California court ruled that disconnection was unjustified, saying that a telephone company had no right to refuse access to its facilities because...