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First POST: Worth the Wait

BY Miranda Neubauer | Thursday, December 6 2012

In case you missed it: Driving this week's conversation

  • Politico's Lois Romano writes that Democrats regard the data Obama for America has collected on volunteers with covetous eyes:

    Building the voter list and metrics took an enormous amount of work and money. Sources estimate that the campaign spent $100 million on specially designed software that allowed aides to home in on voters through their connection with other supporters, a process called Targeted Sharing. Data was collected from a variety of sources that included Facebook, voter records, door-to-door canvassing, and information provided by outside vendors.

    Messina also ruled out selling other candidates access to the campaign’s organizing tools. “I don’t think the president is going to get into the business of selling things,” he said at the POLITICO breakfast.

    Some insight just for First POST readers: Obama for America's data was so good because every volunteer and staffer was also a pollster, passing back the results of every voter contact and carefully noting every event attendee or new donor. And the data was useful because OfA had technologists to build Targeted Sharing and analysts to use them. Those analysts have told techPresident that the best aspects of the data for political use are the factors that are either already public record or were generated by the campaign itself — for instance, by knocking on doors and asking voters if they were likely to vote or not.

    All of that data went into an instance of VoteBuilder, voter database software spun up for the campaign but also used by hundreds of other campaigns all over the country. It is both more feasibly useful for other campaigns and an easier lift to transfer. But the campaign needed Narwhal, its purpose-built integration software, to generate datasets that merged those basic data points with ones stored elsewhere, such as email contact history or donor information. If you have an OfA-level technological operation, that's doable. If you don't, your Narwhal would look more like ORCA. Current and former DNC staffers say it's unlikely the committee would be able to generate the funds necessary to pay the people who would keep Narwhal fed well enough to still be potent in 2016.

    Similarly, as Romano notes, OfA points out that many of the people on that list were interested in Obama but less interested in what was happening further down the ballot. For many campaigns, OfA's volunteer and donor database would be useful only for lead-generation at best.

    Democrats, Democratic organizations and their vendors are surely still hashing out next steps.

WCIT Watch

  • Reuters reported that a U.S. and Canadian proposal to limit the International Telecommunications Union's rules to regulate only telecom operators and not companies like Google and Facebook had received an early setback, but ZDNet reported U.S. Ambassador Terry Kramer, says that report is inaccurate.

  • Ethan Zuckerman suggests there are "good and bad reasons to be worried about WCIT."

    Shorter Zuckerman: As we noted on Monday, the ITU's regulations reflect views on how the Internet should work that concern a combination of engineers and privacy activists; the ITU is opaque compared to existing institutions like the Internet Engineering Task Force; and the ITU takes input from governments explicitly opposed to American-style concepts of "Internet freedom." Conversely, it's potentially harmful to demonize the ITU for being multilateral without acknowledging that existing organizations like the IETF have been "slow" to adapt to the needs of Internet users and makers in the developing world; it is unhelpful to suggest that regulatory bodies shouldn't regulate; and it is absurd on its face to suggest that the Internet is perfect and needs no changing. Zuckerman's point seems to be to quit demonizing the ITU, and that people who think U.N. bodies are not an appropriate venue for concerns from the developing world or for dealing with the interests of repressive regimes should engineer some other mechanism for voices from those quarters to be engaged.

  • The House, following an earlier Senate vote, voted unanimously calling on the U.S. to oppose U.N. control over the Internet. Tim Maurer from the New America Foundation also examines what's at stake at the conference.

From techPresident

  • The Obama for America organizing machine has a future, it just isn't clear exactly what that future holds:

    One thing that hasn't been sorted out yet is how and where to move OFA's assets. Though he is involved in the discussions--one White House staffer refers to Bird as "the keeper of the flame"--he isn't saying much yet about what form this will take. Obviously, the data hasn't all been collected and analyzed, and the Decider-in-Chief hasn't decided.

    Where the Obama forces have already been quicker is in communicating back with their core supporters about this unfolding process, and in encouraging the creation of a temporary vehicle for their energies called "TheAction.org" that can do some things the campaign is legally prevented from doing.

  • MoveOn.org has announced it will scale back its staff, decentralize strategic planning, and depend more on the aspirations of its members to drive its direction. Sarah Lai Stirland explains more.

Around the web

  • The White House released video from President Obama's Twitter session earlier this week, in which he talks with his staff about answering questions, notes to himself that he has to use the hashtag and that he likes the hair of one of the questioners.

  • The White House released a video to emphasize that "you don't have to be an economist" to understand the potential $2,000 increase in income taxes.

  • The Census Bureau plans to release a new Easy Stats interactive tool today to make census data more accessible.

  • The FTC agreed to a settlement with an advertising network that had been using "history sniffing" to track interest in sensitive medical and financial issues.

  • The Verge invited its readers to "Meet Lamar Smith: SOPA author, climate change skeptic, and Congress' next science boss."

  • Former Senator Alan Simpson (R-Wy.) is dancing "Gangnam style" in a video for The Can Kicks Back, an anti-debt group aimed at younger voters.

  • White House Office of Administration CIO Brook Colangelo is expected to step down this week.

  • Research suggests that U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies could acquire European data stored in cloud services under the PATRIOT Act in spite of Europe's data protection laws.

  • MapBox’s new MapBox Satellite imagery layer draws on public domain collections from NASA and the USGS. "So what MapBox is doing is taking taxpayer-funded imagery, pooling it together, adding its own software that allows users to adjust the colors and even re-label streets as needed, and re-selling it as part of its own products and services," Talking Points Memo explained.

  • The Senate Foreign Relations Committee was expected to use Google's Hangout feature to hear from a representative of an NGO based in Mali.

  • J Street is promoting a petition calling on President Obama to speak out against planned new Israeli settlement construction. Another separate online petition speaks out against boycotts of Israel.

  • New York Times Washington Bureau Chief David Leonhardt answered questions on Reddit.

  • President Obama signed the U.S. Safe Web Act, which reauthorizes the FTC's authority to go after Internet fraud and scammers based abroad.

  • A San Francisco Chronicle editorial column criticizes Verizon's argument against an FCC net neutrality rule which invokes regulation as a restriction on Verizon's First Amendment rights.

  • According to Conservative-leaning site Twitchy, the auction to have a strategy session with Sandra Fluke was closed down early due to "harassing responses."

  • The Montgomery County Council in Maryland voted in favor of an open data bill.

  • New York City Council members are recommending that the Board of Elections adopt electronic poll books.

  • As reports begin to heat up that New York MTA head Joe Lhota may run for mayor, the New York World reported that the domains Lhota2013.com, LhotaforNY.com, LhotaforNYC.com, and JoeLhotaSucks.com had been reserved in September. Lhota told the World that he was "shocked" about the domain names and wasn't involved in their purchase — the date of the purchase seemed to follow a New York Times article noting his Twitter use.

  • The Washington D.C. Council passed legislation clearing the way for Uber.

  • Two applications for the Philadelphia-area SEPTA transit system, one built by former Philadelphia Code for America fellow Aaron Ogle, and the other by the city's current Chief Data Officer Mark Headd, saw significant growth in use following a Code for America marketing campaign.

  • Occupy Goldman Sachs at 15 Central Park West outside the condominium of Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein has been ongoing since October 17 and has also evolved into an info hub for Occupy Sandy. A New York Daily News column suggests Occupy Sandy's efforts should be recognized by those who oppose big government.

  • Today Occupy activists plan a day of action focused on foreclosure and evictions, following up on a similar effort last year.

  • Commuters in New Jersey have been using social media and Change.org to demand restoration of late-night service on the PATH train.

  • Students First NY, a group backed by Michelle Rhee, is running online ads to promote a petition aimed at teacher's union members and the Department of Education encouraging the acceptance of a teacher evaluation system that is a requirement for $300 million in state funding.

  • Writing about the controversy over the New York Post photo of a victim who was fatally pushed in front of a New York City subway train, James Poniewozik from Time Magazine writes:

    The ubiquity of at-hand cameras has given us all a kind of sixth sense that would have seemed magic a couple generations ago, an ability to make sure that nothing around us goes unseen.

  • Good.is profiled a new online startup called Kicker that seeks to make news accessible to teenagers.

International

News Briefs

RSS Feed friday >

Organizing for Action Says It Can’t Move Climate Change Legislation In Congress

Beleaguered on one side by pressure to take a stand on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline and hoping, on the other, to hang on to the activist energy of the president's progressive base, Organizing for Action leadership and partners aren't holding out much hope for the power of grassroots organizing to motivate action in Congress. GO

Code for America Launches International Partnerships in Mexico, Germany and the Caribbean

Code for America today announced the launch of its first official international partnerships in Mexico, Germany and the Caribbean. After several years of recruiting technologists to spend a year in city halls across America, the organization will bring programmers and designers into close contact with governments in each of those three places to work on a specific problem area. GO

Top Russian Social Network VKontakte Briefly Banned "By Mistake"

The most popular social network in Russia worked its way onto a blacklist this Friday, allegedly “by mistake,” according to the state communications regulator. However, Pavel Durov, the founder of VKontakte, has had run-ins with the authorities in the past for allowing activists to organize protests on the platform. Some interpret this supposedly accidental blocking as a warning shot.

GO

thursday >

Anthony Weiner Launches NYC Mayoral Campaign Online With An Image of Pittsburgh

Former Congressman Anthony Weiner waxed lyrical about New York City in a YouTube video as he launched his bid to be the city's next mayor on Wednesday, but he did it against a backdrop that turned out to be the skyline for Pittsburgh, as a sharp-eyed observer on Twitter first noted Wednesday afternoon. GO

Revamped Data.gov Includes API Catalog

Federal officials are now offering a list of all APIs that have been released across the federal government as part of the Digital Government Strategy and a new data catalog that allows users to more easily search, sort and tag datasets, according to a post by Hyon Kim, deputy program director at the U.S. General Services Administration. With the announcements, the team behind Data.gov, a central public repository of machine-readable federal government data, is marking its fourth anniversary and the one year anniversary of the release of the Digital Government Strategy. GO

French Authorities Want to Tap (and Tax) Skype Calls

In spite of repeated requests from the French telecommunications authorities ARCEP, Skype has refused to classify itself as an electronic communications operator in France, which would require them to route emergency calls and allow the French police to intercept conversations. ARCEP has informed the Paris public prosecutor of Skype's refusal, and criminal charges might be brought against the company for failing to comply. This is yet another instance in recent months of France making things difficult for tech companies. Some worry that the overzealous government is discouraging technological progress in France, hindering business and economic growth.

GO

New Online Platform for Crowdsourced Videos About Human Rights Issues

Anyone with a phone and an Internet connection can be a citizen journalist, as was made clear in the hours and days after the Boston Marathon Bombings. Citizen journalism has its pros and cons, but it has popped up where most needed: after natural disasters or in war torn regions where career journalists might be barred. A new human rights initiative seeks to link citizen reporting in the form of online videos with mainstream media, governments and other policy makers. The online platform, called Irrepressible Voices, will both document human rights issues and work on solutions as a community.

GO

wednesday >

Facebook Becomes Full Member of Global Network Initiative

Facebook announced today that it has opted to become a full member of the Global Network Initiative, a group founded by Google, Microsoft and Yahoo to address the challenges technology companies face when dealing with governments about issues like freedom of expression and data privacy. GO

Russia's OGP Concerns Show That Transparency Matters

Last week, Russian officials announced they have withdrawn their letter of intent to join the Open Government Partnership. The Moscow Times has a statement to the Russian paper Kommersant from a presidential spokesman, saying, "We are not talking about winding up plans to join, but corrections in timing and the scale of participation are possible." So Russia may still be in. Just not soon. And maybe never. Confused? You're not alone. I actually find it fascinating that the Kremlin acts like "openness" and transparency matter. Here's why. GO

In Denmark, Online Tracking of Citizens is an Unwieldy Failure

Six years after Denmark passed a law mandating that telecommunication companies retain and store their customers' personal data for up to two years, local advocacy groups and the telecom industry are pushing for immediate changes to the legislation. The practice of keeping records of private citizens' Internet use is an unjustifiable invasion of privacy, they say. The police, meanwhile, have concluded that requiring telecoms to store subscriber data has not helped them track criminals, which was the the ostensible purpose of the practice. But the Danish government still wants to postpone an evaluation of the law for another two years. GO

"Accidental" Blocking of Australian Websites Raises Concerns About Government Censorship

An Australian government agency admitted last week to unintentionally blocking more than 1,200 perfectly legal websites in the process of shutting down one allegedly fraudulent site. In their defense, they pointed out that they have successfully blocked a number of websites in the past nine months without such digital collateral. This assertion came as no consolation to Australian netizens concerned about Internet censorship, especially opaque and hazily legal censorship.

GO

tuesday >

Honda Campaign Rolls Out Endorsements From Asian American Stars

Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.) rolled out several additional endorsements from Asian American leaders and celebrities Tuesday, with one of them vouching for his high-tech bona fides. GO

Here Are The People President Obama Hopes Will Repair American Elections

The Presidential Commission on Election Administration established by President Obama after problematic 2012 elections now has a web presence at SupporttheVoter.gov. Obama established the commission by executive order on March 28 "to identify best practices in election administration and to make recommendations to improve the voting experience." GO

After Oklahoma Disaster, Neighbors Look Online for Ways To Help

In echoes of the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in the Northeast, social media sites and small business websites in and around tornado-wracked Moore, Okla., are full of offers of help, questions about missing pets and loved ones, and evidence that neighbors are willing to reach out to help one another in a disaster. On a single Facebook group, there's a Mexican restaurant in Oklahoma City promising free meals to first responders or people hit by the tornado; a mother a few hours' drive from Moore offering to open her door for children who might need a place to stay; a resident sharing a picture of a found dog and contact information for the owner to get in touch. GO

Change.org Lands $15 Million From Omidyar

Change.org capped an extraordinary few years of growth Tuesday with the announcement that it has landed a $15 million investment led by the Omidyar Network. GO

What German Politicians Think of Google Glass

The German government led by Chancellor Angela Merkel has not had the easiest relationship with Google. The company launched a public campaign against a law backed by her coalition that would require search engines to pay to show news articles in search results, with mixed results. What's more, Google has long had to navigate the privacy waters in Germany and throughout the European Union. But that has not stopped her federal minister for economics and technology, Philipp Rösler, from giving Google Glass an enthusiastic test run as he leads a delegation of German technology companies and politicians on a trip to Silicon Valley this week as part of German Valley Week. GO

Crowdsourcing Waste Management Solutions in Montenegro

For once we aren't talking about the worldwide scarcity of toilets, just good old-fashioned household waste. Montenegro has a garbage problem so bad even the tourists are complaining about it. A new mobile app sponsored by the Agency for Environmental Protection, NGO Ozon and United Nations Development Programme in Montenegro will hopefully get citizens involved in reporting illegal garbage dumps. GO

monday >

Her Majesty's Government Wants to Monetize Open Data

A new paper from the chair of the U.K. government's Open Strategy Board outlines the best practices for the government's open data policies. The government-commissioned Shakespeare Review – after author Stephan Shakespeare – looks into ways to monetize open data, and recommends an all-encompassing National Data Strategy.

GO

Will Silicon Valley "Disrupt" Politics With a Candidate for Congress?

Sean Parker, of Napster fame and now executive general partner at venture capital firm Founders Fund, has invested in political startups before. But last week, he went a step further — co-hosting a fundraising event for a candidate for Congress. Parker and SV Angel co-founder Ron Conway organized a crowd of Internet industry luminaries to support Ro Khanna, a former assistant deputy secretary in Barack Obama's Commerce Department. Khanna is preparing a challenge to Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.), whose newly redrawn congressional district encompasses Silicon Valley. GO

Burma's Upcoming Telecom Revolution Will Probably Not Bring Internet Freedom

Burma (Myanmar) is on the threshold of an Internet revolution, but Human Rights Watch has warned companies to proceed with caution or risk trampling Burmese citizens' rights. GO

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