The Problem with Crowdsourced Legislation
BY Nick Judd | Wednesday, February 22 2012
Writing for The Atlantic, Alexander Furnas, a master's candidate at the Oxford Internet Institute, critiques the platform for collaborative legislative markup built at Rep. Darrell Issa's (R-Calif.) and Sen. Ron Wyden's (D-Ore.) behest and launched with their legislative alternative to the Stop Online Piracy Act. The platform, he writes, is "flawed."
Read MoreThings Online Organizers Say
BY Nick Judd | Wednesday, February 22 2012
What do you get when you put hundreds of left-leaning, meme-obsessed activists in the same place at the same time?
One is Rootscamp, a weekend gathering of the progressive organizer tribe in Washington, D.C., that wrapped up Sunday. Hundreds of activists convened for an unconference to talk about new tools and tactics for organizing online. The other correct answer is an, um, stuff people say video targeted to their peers and with a series of guest cameos by leading online organizers, including Rebuild the Dream's Natalie Foster, MoveOn's Daniel Mintz and Julia Rosen, Reddit cofounder Aaron Swartz, and others.
Read MoreEuropean Commission to Refer ACTA to Europe's Highest Court
BY Miranda Neubauer | Wednesday, February 22 2012
The European Commission plans to refer the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) to the European Court of Justice "to assess whether ACTA is incompatible - in any way - with the EU's fundamental rights and freedoms, such as freedom of expression and information or data protection and the right to property in case of intellectual property," according to a statement released by one of the commissioners earlier today.
Read MoreThe Politics of Pinterest
BY Nick Judd and Miranda Neubauer | Wednesday, February 22 2012
On Pinterest, the hot new social network, all politics is visual. The social media darling of the month has been taking off particularly among users with an interest in food or fashion. But with an audience that's reportedly 68 percent female, it's also prime ground for political messaging targeted specifically to female swing voters. Read More
First POST: Romneyblogging
BY Miranda Neubauer | Wednesday, February 22 2012
In today's First POST: The Romney family's online footprint, new frontiers for long-distance wireless Internet, the Russian teddy bear protests, and more. Read More
Obama Administration Asks Silicon Valley How It Can Improve Immigration Process For Foreign-Born Entrepreneurs
BY Sarah Lai Stirland | Wednesday, February 22 2012
Top officials from the White House and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services are in Silicon Valley for the week to solicit viewpoints and input from the startup community on how the administration can improve the way it hands out visas to talented entrepreneurs who've landed funding to create new companies.
Read MoreThursday 2/23 PDPlus Call: How Grassroots Conservatives Are Tapping the Power of Open Networks
BY Micah L. Sifry | Tuesday, February 21 2012
Conservatives are using online social media in innovative new ways, catching up to or surpassing their counterparts on the other side of the aisle. This Thursday on the Personal Democracy Plus call, I'm looking forward to talking with Martin Avila, whose firm Terra Eclipse worked on Ron Paul's 2008 website, and more recently has partnered with Freedom Works to launch Freedom Connector, a social network that has grown to more than 160,000 active members in just one year. Read More
In France, Tension as Facebook and Twitter Enter Presidential Politics
BY Antonella Napolitano | Tuesday, February 21 2012
The French presidential campaign started last Wednesday night when President Nicolas Sarkozy officially announced his candidacy on the national TV network TF1. But it took less than a week for the campaign to become a heated heated battle online. Read More
Fact-Checking Group Launches Web Video Campaign To Discourage Flood of Deceptive SuperPAC Ads
BY Sarah Lai Stirland | Tuesday, February 21 2012
A fact-checking web site run by the University of Pennsylvania on Tuesday launched an ambitious new attempt to stem the expected flood of deceptive television advertising placed by third-party political groups on ... Read More
First POST: Defense
BY Miranda Neubauer and Nick Judd | Tuesday, February 21 2012
How microtargeting by presidential campaigns has or hasn't changed since 2008, an apology from the actress who appeared in an offensive congressional campaign ad, and an online defense from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie about his decision to veto a same-sex marriage bill all lead today's First POST, with all you need to know about news in technology and politics from around the web this morning. Read More