Archive for the ‘Recent Trends’ Category

Recovery.gov: transparency and its complications

by Jennifer Berk | Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Yesterday, President Obama signed the $800 billion economic stimulus bill, and as announced a couple weeks ago in his YouTube address, his web team has created Recovery.gov to allow people to track where the money goes. Some observations:

  1. There isn’t much there yet. Not too surprising, but there are very few pages on the site so far. They haven’t even yet copied the whole bill text over from its place on WhiteHouse.gov, letting people see the plan and its implementation in one place.
  2. Lots of interactive items. I particularly like the scrolling timeline (apparently a Drupal module). The jobs map’s pop-up information blocks look far more utilitarian than the rest of the (lovely) site design, and I can’t click through for more specifics, but perhaps they’ll come. The challenge with providing lots of data (which the site will do) is to also allow people to effectively visualize it.
  3. Consistent design with WhiteHouse.gov and Change.gov. Very smart. You know you’re on an Obama administration site the moment you land there, and with Obama’s approval ratings high, the new site will have an automatic boost in people’s trust. Branding was a strong point of the campaign, so much so that it inspired copying.
  4. It’s built on Drupal. (Announcement by project founder Dries Buytaert.) This is a technical point, but with sociological implications. Drupal is software designed for community sites, not for one-way information flow. Hopefully the site will take advantage of crowd-sourcing, building a community of news gathering like the one that made Talking Points Memo Time’s best blog of 2009. Change.gov included discussion, but it would be nice to see a post-inauguration site allowing more input than a comment form – though the privacy policy doesn’t offer evidence that will happen, alas.
  5. How many sites can the White House manage? The stimulus is an unusually important bill, but I could see them also launching sites for health reform, for energy policy, etc., along with the already-announced FinancialStability.gov (and AStrongMiddleClass.gov, but that redirects to the main White House site). They’ll need to consider how much staff time it takes not just to build but to manage each site: adding new information, guiding any discussion, and communicating with users who’ve requested updates. Updating WhiteHouse.gov has already proven challenging, though most of those issues seem to have been worked out.

A few reactions from the political technology community:

Nancy Scole of Personal Democracy Forum’s TechPresident: What’s Missing: (1) A Responsible Party. The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board which will oversee Recovery.gov, hasn’t been formed yet. So, email away! But know that there isn’t really yet anyone on the receiving end. (2) Data. Data. Data. Of course, with the act three hours old, there just isn’t much yet. That said, whether Recovery.gov will give open-government advocates the raw data that they’re hungering for is still an open question. The site is, thus far, populated by the shiny consumer-end charts. A that’s good start, but no replacement, advocates say, for raw XML data then can then use for mash-ups and number crunching.

Ellen Miller of the Sunlight Foundation blog: The basics are pretty simple. Recovery.gov must make the raw data available and it must be housed in system so that data can flow in and out easily. There should be open programming interfaces that allow developers to share and analyze data. Timeliness is key, so is accuracy. That, plus a few simple tools for easy citizen access would be a great place to start. A little blogging now might help with a few of the basics: What data is getting collected and how often? Who has to report? How often will the data be updated and how often will it made available to the public? What’s the database going to look like what’s the relationship to USASpending.gov? What kinds of content will Recovery.gov produce around the data? (Will there be regular emails when new information is available, blogging with analysis, etc.)?

Dennis McDonald: It’s not just the performance of the “stimulus” package that will be interesting to track, though. How the Administration develops the systems and processes that are needed to track and report on progress in an open and interactive fashion will also impact the recovery. Whether you call these systems and processes “e-government” or “government 2.0” or something else entirely, they will need careful planning as well as speed and experimentation. No one has ever tried to do “open government” before on such a massive scale. As I’ve pointed
out already, the challenges that must be faced are great.

Micah Sifry of Personal Democracy Forum: I’m sure Obama’s pronouncements on the shape of Recovery.gov are probably keeping his new media team awake 24-7, but his political team ought to be paying attention too. Imagine if citizens take his exhortations to heart and start monitoring their local government(s) to track how the money is being spent, and the site makes it easy for them to visibly share and pool those reports. Who exactly is responsible if, say, a school construction grant isn’t being used properly? Recovery.gov could be a great tool for making government work, but along the way, it might also make a lot of existing government workers pretty unhappy.

Hopefully I can add more later – I’m particularly waiting for Colin Delany’s take, as well as Patrick Ruffini’s and Mindy Finn’s.

THE POWER OF VIDEO

by Sam Simon | Friday, August 1st, 2008

It seems like this should be a video posting.  I am deeply impressed by the ever growing power of video as a tool for change.   Yes, YouTube has been making change for awhile now.  Most recently, and for me the most dramatic, demonstration of the power of video was the story about the human rights group B’Tselem in Israel that gave over 100 cameras to Palestinians.  The purpose was to document abusive actions by Israeli Soldiers, West Bank Settlers and others against Arab and Palestinian people.  The videos have captured some awful things.

To its credit, Israel, when it received these videos acted swiftly to denounce the actions and to punish those involved.  The videos have now appeared around the world thanks to the Internet, blogs and YouTube.   It is fair to say that today; no one can assume their actions will remain hidden.  Of course, there are a host of privacy issues when video is taken of people engaged in ordinary acts of living and have no reason to expect their actions to be documented.

The impact of the video/internet combination as a tool to hold power accountable is a game changer.   There are other examples.  In Virginia former Senator George Allen was brought now largely by the video tape made by a Warner campaign worker. And there are be more examples I am sure.

Video is of growing importance in all campaigns.  The equipment is inexpensive and the quality is incredible even when taken by the least experienced.  Expect to see more and more organizations figure out how to integrate video into their work.  And expect to see the more change in the world as a result

The Presidential Election Blogosphere

by Blogger Relations | Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Preswatch2008

Have a few minutes to explore? Spend some time at Presidential Watch 2008 (I know, not the best name). This site tracks the 292 most influential blogs and web sites covering the election. Use the mapping tool to find out which sites have the most influence. And, the trend charts will show you the relative popularity of the candidates (as topics of discussion) over time. Warning: You will spend more than a few minutes on this site if you aren’t careful.

(Thanks to Trend Central for highlighting this.) 

- Kevin 

YouTube goes to Washington

by Jennifer Berk | Monday, April 14th, 2008

YouTube, which has since September had a program that assists nonprofits to get the most out of their videos, and which runs a special channel for the US presidential election, is now giving its help to sitting legislators as well. On Friday, the Washington Post reported that YouTube will be creating a special commercial-free area for Congress to post video.

It’s against House rules to link to commercial sites, but many offices have been ignoring that – their in-house system doesn’t deal well with the bandwidth requirements of video. YouTube’s cooperation will mean they can do what everyone else does: outsource this problem to Google.

We’ll have to see whether lawmakers will pay attention to privacy questions around online advertising if their offices are insulated from the ads – and whether the videos they post are viewed enough for anyone to notice they’re now playing by the rules.

Fact: Women now outnumber men online

by Blogger Relations | Saturday, April 12th, 2008

Here are some compelling facts from Yvonne Divita’s recent blog post, "What DO Women Do Online?" Do you know who your reader is? Consider these statistics the next time you post to your blog…

  • Women now outnumber men online
  • This trend is being driven by the wave of teenage girls logging onto the Internet
  • Boomer women are logging on, too!
  • A new study by Blogher shows that over 36 million women actively participate in the blogosphere every week; 15 million of the these women are publishing a blog
  • Increasingly, these online women are organizing themselves offline, too.

For some more insight and advice, see Yvonne’s recap of the Blogher conference in NYC earlier this month:

"Engage your women customers. Don’t treat all of us alike. Know what you want to accomplish up front and create trackable content. Which is way easier online, btw. While this isn’t new…I’ve talked about it before, it bears repeating. Women like to talk to each other – we communicate. We complain loudly, and we praise profusely. Find out how to get us to do the right one."

Good advice!

- Kevin

Want More Twitter Followers?

by Shana Glickfield | Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Of course, the first step in getting more Twitter followers is to follow more people yourself.  And not cewebrities (web celebrities) who are unlikely to reciprocate, although, those are good too.  But see who your favorite Twitterites are following and grab some of their friends.  Most folks will reciprocate the follow.

And if that doesn’t work, I think my friend Jeff Hibbard has found a great way to promote himself on Twitter…

Do Influentials Matter?

by Blogger Relations | Saturday, March 8th, 2008
For a quick review of Malcolm Gladwell’s Tipping Point concepts, watch this entertaining, short video on how "connectors," "mavens" and "salesman" can influence trends.

Business Week’s Stephen Baker asked an interesting hypothetical question this week on his Blogspotting blog:

"You’re running a company that’s selling a product or service. You have only 50 pieces of stationary left. Who do you send them to? Who will be most likely to spread the word?"

Conventional thinking — as described in books like The Tipping Point and The Influentials — says that some people are better targets for your marketing message than others because they are more likely to spread the word to large numbers of people.

It was only a month ago that the whole world of "Word-of-Mouth" marketing was turned upside down following an article in Fast Company by Clive Thompson about a series of experiments completed by Duncan Watts, a network-theory scientist. His research shows that anyone can start a trend. That’s right… you do not need to be one of Malcolm Gladwell’s "connectors" or Ed Keller’s "influentials" to start a trend.

The article (I highly recommend you read it), sparked a number of responses (Gladwell and Keller are quoted in the article) and a lot of discussion about how it should be interpreted.

For example, Andy Lark said:

"It really got me thinking. I’m ready to hold Gladwell’s ideas and Watt’s in my head at the same time. I don’t think they are exclusive."

Cory Doctorow from BoingBoing said:

"Reading through the piece, it seems to me that Watts is primarily concerned with those ideas that don’t ‘break out’ and swamp the mainstream — if you’re going to have a modestly successful idea, how can you increase that modest success two- or three-fold? It may be that the combination of a hugely influential person; a simple, easy-to-communicate idea and a receptive market can go viral and be on everyone’s lips in a few days. But what if you’ve got a hard-to-communicate, subtle idea and you want to maximize its spread?"

Seth Godin said:

"One more reason not to obsess about the A list in any media category. Worry instead about people with passion and people with lots of friends. You need both for ideas to spread. That was Malcolm’s point all along."

Now, I would have to characterize everyone I have mentioned in this post as an "influential" person, including Duncan Watts, who has made a name for himself with other ground-breaking research.

So, what if I was the one who ran these experiments instead of Watts? Would Clive Thompson have sought me out? Would BoingBoing have mentioned it on their blog? Would Seth Godin have said something about it? Maybe, but not very likely. So, influence can play a role. The question is whether or not we have any control over when it does.

The article generated enough buzz that it got the author on the radio. He does make one comment that should be particularly interesting to online communicators:

"Now, online you’ve got links, and those are very concrete, specific things. They’re not fuzzy at all. And it immediately teleports the viewer to that place, and you can count them via Google and find them.

"So I think that the way that influence works online with blogs and links may be closer to this old theory of influentials. It may be more real online than it is in the real world."

So, is influence more important online than offline?

You can listen to the full interview here:

- Kevin

Shanghai Activists Using Blogs and YouTube

by Blogger Relations | Saturday, January 26th, 2008

Community activists in Shanghai are protesting a planned extension of the city’s maglev train in their neighborhoods and are relying on blogs, bulletin boards and YouTube to get their message out to the public. For more on this story, read "Shanghai’s Middle Class Launches Quiet, Meticulous Revolt," from the Washington Post.

At top speed, the train goes over 260 mph. Neighborhood residents are concerned about noise, vibration and possible radiation.

The protests started small, but have since grown (see the video above) despite concerns about China’s "massive security apparatus" that keeps an eye on Chinese citizens.

The article notes that "…residents upload photos and videos to Chinese Web sites, which are often blocked by the government, and to YouTube, a site that isn’t." However, Danwei notes that:

"The government does not block Chinese websites; it forces Chinese websites to self-censor. If they do not comply, they can be taken off the Internet using technological means, or their web masters can be arrested. Blocking is a pleasure reserved for websites hosted on servers outside Mainland China, such as Youtube."

To learn more about the state of blogging and social media in China, visit Debbie Weil’s China Blogging Tour web site.

- Kevin

Is there another tech bubble?

by Shana Glickfield | Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

I couldn’t resist sharing this in case folks haven’t seen it yet.  To the tune of Billy Joel’s "We Didn’t Start the Fire"…


Here Comes Another BubbleFor more of the funniest videos, click here

The National Review Blogger Controversy

by Blogger Relations | Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

Former Marine W. Thomas Smith, a blogger for the National Review Online who posts to The Tank, is under scrutiny for posting at least two entries from his stay in Lebanon earlier this year that a number of independent sources have described as fabrications (See Thomas B. Edsall’s story on the Huffington Post for all of the details). Smith has publicly explained the posts and references the informality of blogs as the culprit:

"Now, should I have been more specific in my writing in terms of what I physically witnessed as opposed to what I learned from sources… I wish I had, but it was a blog, which tends to be less formal. However, when blogs contain original reporting, that reporting needs to be sourced. In the future, I’ll provide more context." [Read Mr. Smith's full post.]

If all Mr. Smith did was fail to reference sources in his blog post, it wouldn’t be so bad.  But, he has been critical of another writer, Scott Thomas Beauchamp — a private in the United States Army, serving in the Iraq War — for retelling stories that "would have been virtually impossible… to have played out the way he says they did" (Smith’s own words!). Oops.

Can reporters be bloggers? Can publications hire bloggers who aren’t reporters? Do bloggers for publications need to meet a higher standard? These types of questions will continue to come up.

Read more about the Scott Thomas Beauchamp controversy.