First POST: Clint
BY Miranda Neubauer | Friday, August 31 2012
Around the web
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Even if it went over well in the convention hall, online Mitt Romney's acceptance speech seemed clearly upstaged by Clint Eastwood's not always coherent effort to engage with an empty chair representing Barack Obama. Instant reaction on Twitter ranged from disbelief and confusion to glee. It did not take long at all for the Twitter accounts InvisibleObama and ClintsChair to be born, together gathering thousands of followers. An evening front page editor for the Huffington Post tweeted, "If you could only see the Clint Eastwood stats on HuffPost front right now ..."
The world-renowned actor and director's mise-en-scene last night also inspired a meme called Eastwooding.
In the end the Obama campaign got in on the action, posting a picture of Obama in a chair on Twitter and Facebook and the comment: The seat's taken.
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The Romney campaign's digital team has been rolling out new apps and features.
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Another fake photo began circulating yesterday that allegedly showed an RNC "We Built It" sign beneath a debt clock.
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The Romney campaign launched a new website and new videos dedicated to Romney's tenure at Bain Capital.
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The Romney/Ryan campaign released a new smartphone application that lets supports find events and contribute to the campaign from the phone.
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On the Media is starting a new effort to fact-check political ads.
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Apple rejected an application submitted to its App Store that tracked U.S. drone strikes.
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Time Warner Cable plans to expand its fiber-optic network in parts of Brooklyn as well as the Financial and Flatiron districts in New York City, aiming especially at businesses.
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Only about 50 percent of Kansas City, Mo. and Kansas City, Kan. neighborhoods have reached the pre-registration goals required to get access to Google Fiber, Techcrunch reported.
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The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is planning a new online video series urging Congress to protect IP rights.
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An Australian broadcaster will stream the new Dr. Who episodes online 50 minutes after they air in the U.K. to combat piracy, a week before they are scheduled to air on TV. HBO is launching a streaming only service in Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark to offer subtitled TV content.
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A new experimental feature of the Huffington Post can show which parts of a news article are being copied by readers.
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The Hollywood Reporter looked at what documents published by Judicial Watch reveal about the relationship between the government and the producers of an upcoming movie about Osama Bin Laden.
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The executive director and communications director at the Global Network Initiative take a critical look at India's recent efforts to restrict online communications.
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Herdict, which lets people figure out whether certain websites are widely inaccessible, has added some new features and redesigned some elements.
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The Jakarta local government will be providing free wifi along some of the city's main streets.
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At least 17 people in Britain have now been arrested as part of an investigation into the naming of a footballer's alleged rape victim on Twitter.
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In an unusual move, an embattled Chinese official chose to engage with his critics in an online chat, the Wall Street Journal reported.
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A Chinese dissident who was convicted based on evidence provided by Yahoo is expected to be released this week.
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Kim Dotcom is saying that he plans to reimagine Megaupload as a "massive global network."
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A German football club implemented a new high-tech surveillance system, and caught somebody unveiling a banner in support of a recently banned neo-Nazi group on its first day of use.