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First POST: Trump

BY Miranda Neubauer | Friday, February 3 2012

Donald Trump. Photo: Gage Skidmore / Flickr
  • Donald Trump announced his endorsement of Mitt Romney yesterday, and the Democratic Party put out a video saying that partnership made sense since they "both like firing people." At first there was some confusion as to whether Trump would be endorsing Newt Gingrich or Romney, evident in the fact that Fox News didn't remove "Gingrich" from the URL of its story on the Romney endorsement.

  • The New York Times, Reuters, paidContent, Marketingland and others look at the details that Facebook reveals in its IPO documents. Reuters notes that among its risks, the company sees the restriction of access by foreign governments such as China and Iran and regulatory uncertainty.

  • Since 2008, Joe DeSantis, Communications Director for Newt Gingrich, has made 23 edits to Callista Gingrich's Wikipedia page. Changes varied, but one change noted by Buzzfeed's Andrew Kaczynski, who tirelessly dregs the Internet, had DeSantis altering a line describing her as Gingrich's "third wife" to note her instead as, simply, his "wife."

  • The rapper K'naan is upset that Mitt Romney used his song Wavin' Flag during his Florida victory speech without his permission, and might pursue legal action.

  • Google takes a look at how nationwide search interest for the Republican candidates has developed, and also compared Florida exit poll results with search data.

  • A New York Times editorial calls for cameras in the Supreme Court.

  • A federal appeals court refused yesterday to unseal recordings from California's trial over the constitutionality of same-sex marriage.

  • The Library of Congress's THOMAS interface now provides links to committee hearing videos.

  • Even though President Barack Obama has preferred interviews to impromptu question-and-answer sessions while also interacting with voters online, the White House said he is not ignoring the traditional press corps, as the New York Times reported:

    Daniel Pfeiffer, the White House communications director, responded in an e-mail, "The idea that interacting with the public through social media is somehow going around the White House press corps is a prehistoric notion." "The media has become so diffuse that communicating ones' message requires a lot more work than it used to," he wrote. "You have to be willing to go where the viewers are, because they now have so much choice in where they get their information."

  • The White House says it can't respond to the We The People petition asking the White House to investigate the Motion Picture Association of America's Chris Dodd — after he was quoted as saying of lawmakers who did not support the Stop Online Piracy Act, "Don't ask me to write a check for you when you think your job is at risk" — because it "requests a specific law enforcement action."

  • Creative America, the MPAA-backed group which has supported SOPA and PIPA, is looking to pay people to collect sign-ups for its list, Techdirt reports.

  • According to FEC filing reports, Google spent roughly $390,000 on SOPA lobbying. Techcrunch reports that it's unclear from the documents whether Google was lobbying for or against the bill.

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  • One pro-Ron Paul Super PAC blamed a credit card company for missing a recent deadline for filing disclosure reports with the Federal Election Commission.

  • Occupy videographer Tim Poole says he feels unwelcome among some other members of the Occupy movement. Meanwhile, the People's Think Tank is still ongoing, and NYU plans to put recordings of the conversations online.

  • A federal advisory board says the release of data about a new bird flu strain is too dangerous.

  • In a larger seizure of sites illegally operating websites ahead of the Super Bowl, Immigration and Customs Enforcement shuttered 16 domains accused of illegally streaming copyrighted sports broadcasts live, or linking to sites that did the same.

  • A New York City Council member is proposing a bill that would allow residents to make campaign contributions via text message in citywide races.

  • The New York City MTA picked a multi-purpose subway navigation app for first prize in an app contest.

  • The Guardian interviewed David Karp, the founder of Tumblr.

  • An American Idol producer tweeted that he would love for the President to sing a duet with Al Green on the show.

  • A British Parliament report said the government should not scare people about cybersecurity, but still warn them how they should protect themselves.

  • Scotland Yard accidentally sent 1,000 crime victims e-mails that included the other victims' e-mail addresses.

  • A French court has fined Google $660,000 because it claims that Google Maps is abusing its dominant position by being free.

  • Hong Kong is considering a copyright crackdown.

  • Many Syrians who are in opposition to President Bashar Assad are using the web to express their protests, as the AP reports:

    The Internet provides a layer of anonymity, which is vital when retribution is a real danger, but the creativity has also spilled into the streets in the banners, signs and songs of the protesters. "Top Goon: Diaries of a Little Dictator" is one of several new online shows. It was created by 10 young professional artists inside Syria. It uses finger puppets that impersonate Bashar Assad -- nicknamed Beeshu in the series -- and his inner circle.

With Raphael Majma

News Briefs

RSS Feed monday >

The Wisconsin Recall and the "Compas Effect"

Here and there in the run-up to the Wisconsin recall on June 5, we've noted the campaign of Lori Compas, a grassroots candidate who came from nowhere to challenge Republican State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald for his seat. Her campaign went from a single Facebook post to petitions to trigger a recall against him to, finally, running to oppose him. Compas' unlikely campaign will come to a head Tuesday, and win or lose it has already triggered a growing bloom of insurgent campaigns in the Wisconsin recall, according to a new profile in Mother Jones. GO

The Instagram Filter As Design Aesthetic

The photos used in this Obama campaign get-out-the-vote site have a very Instagram vibe. If 2008 was the year of the Gotham font, maybe 2012 will be the year of the photo filter? GO

Obama 2012's Getting "Back to the We:" How's That Going? BuzzFeed Says Not So Well

Nobody disputes that the Obama campaign needs to use all the tools at its disposal to mobilize a grassroots base that is not as active and energized, or at least not yet, as it was in 2008. What's at issue is how effective the campaign has been so far in doing so — and we'll all find out by November, to be sure. GO

#PDF12: Announcing This Year's PDF Google Fellows

We're pleased to announce the following people have been named Google Fellows for Personal Democracy Forum 2012. Fifteen highly creative and talented people were selected out of a competitive pool of more than one hundred. Congrats to you all and see you next week at PDF12. They are: Joseph Agoada, international strategic communication ... GO

friday >

Cherokee Nation Members Start Online Effort Against Elizabeth Warren

Self-described members of the Cherokee Nation have begun an online effort critical of Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren's controversial claims of Native American heritage, as was first reported by The Republican in Springfield, Massachusetts. GO

Poetry of the Email Subject Line: Deadline Edition

There's something about a monthly fundraising deadline that brings out the romantic in our presidential campaign email subject line writers... GO

thursday >

California State Senate Moves Key Transparency Bills

The California State Senate approved on Thursday a couple of key transparency bills that will both help to make government documents more accessible online, and provide funding for the state's decrepit online finance disclosure system Cal-Access. GO

What to Make of "Twitchy," Michelle Malkin's Fan for Twitter Flames

The GOP new media machine tries to chase the spotlight anywhere it goes online, even going so far as to famously jump in on hashtags used by the White House or Obama campaign. It's just not clear what this exactly does for them. A case in point is Twitchy, a platform launched earlier this year by conservative commentator Michelle Malkin that picks out individual tweets to present on a website along with a few words of commentary. While it ventures into sports and culture news, its primary use seems to be to amplify the conservative hashtag wars, starting some fights and continuing others. GO

Obama Ad Targets Romney on Boston Globe Homepage

As various campaign officials pointed out on Twitter, the Obama campaign has bought a large ad criticizing Mitt Romney on the front of one of the Boston Globe's homepages, Boston.com. Apparently limited to Massachusetts-area web visitors, the ad proclaims that "Romney Economics didn't work for Massachusetts. It won't work for America." ... GO

wednesday >

California Controller John Chiang Hires Open Data Advocate And Tech Industry Outreach Director

California Controller John Chiang has hired open government advocate Tina Lee as the office's Bay Area director of outreach and innovation. GO

Democrats Create "Unlikeable" Romney Facebook Timeline for Video

The Democratic National Committee has released a video that constructs its own version of Mitt Romney's Facebook timeline. Using the motto "Little to Like," it's a "celebration" of Romney officially winning enough delegates for his nomination. GO

Transparency Advocates Frustrated With House Appropriators' Plan To Make A Plan

Open government advocates are up in arms over what appears to be another attempt by government bureaucrats to stall the move to enable bulk data downloads of legislative information online. GO

Open-Source Software for Governments in Spain

Two autonomous regions of Spain have recently made strides towards promoting open-source software for governmental use. GO

tuesday >

Twitter Hires a Director of Public Policy for Europe

Twitter has hired Sinéad McSweeney, director of communications for Garda Síochána, Ireland's national police service, as its director of public policy for Europe, according to Twitter's government account. McSweeney previously worked in the same role for the Police Service of Northern Ireland, and also served as special adviser to two attorneys general, David Byrne and Michael McDowell. She will be based in the company's office in Dublin. GO

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