Clearing the Cache: Pause, Read, Retweet
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, September 24 2010
Today finds me up in central New York at a radio station "barnraising" event, so in place of, you know, blogging, I'm leaving you with an extended cache. See ya Monday.
- A Liberal MP in Canada apologies for prematurely tweeting a link to an article that contained anti-Israel passages: "I went back to the article and was upset to realize that the article I bhad [sic] read on my berry had truncated and that I hadn’t read the last paragraphs before I retweeted the article. This is a serious lesson for me."
- Andrew Stott, the UK's director for digital engagement and the force behind Data.gov.uk, is taking his leave.
- And he's being replaced by Katie Davis. (An American!)
- David Carlucci is running for a seat in the New York State Senate on his record -- his record of digitizing records, setting up election assistance via text message, and building a better website while the Clarkstown town clerk.
- Media Matter's recalls "Barack Obama is Your New Bicycle" in rolling out a snarky microsite-sized version of the new House Republican "Pledge to America."
- Sierra Leoneans gather in New York to discuss that west African country's Open Government Initiative.
- The Brighton (UK) city council tells a town councillor that he can't YouTube clips of their meetings for "political purposes."
- Peter Roskam worries that, in the age of constituents who can quote legislative chapter and verse, Congress is ending up on the wrong side of the digital divide.
- Google opens up further about what the U.S. government asks of it when it comes to information on users and the services they use.
- New York's Republican gubernatorial candidates dropped about one percent of their budgets on online ads.
- Daily Candy subscribers weren't thrilled to find a "Message from Meg Whitman" in their email inboxes.
- And on a blogger-White House conference call, a Crooks and Liars blogger went after Obama adviser David Axelrod for treating the netroots like "the girl you'll take under the bleachers but you won't be seen with in the light of day."
