Wikipocrisy
BY Nancy Scola | Thursday, March 24 2011
When is an experiment in bottom-up politics not quite an experiment in bottom-up politics? Over on Daily Kos, Jed Lewison points out that the Karl Rove-led Crossroads GPS's new Wikicountability, rather un-wiki-like, can't actually be edited by users:
[T]here's a problem: if you want to contribute to Rove's new crowdsourcing wiki, you can't. As of 7:30 AM Pacific Time today, it did not permit any new users to register. Pretty hard to claim your site is all about crowdsourcing when you won't allow anyone from the crowd to provide any of the sourcing, isn't it?
Which really drives home the point that the very idea of the everybody-in "wiki" is useful political imagery to have working for you. The DCCC is out of the gate with Wikipocrisy.org, which harps on the fact that Crossroads GPS, the 501 (c)4 wing of American Crossroads, raises millions while not disclosing who's actually contributing the funds to them.
Correction: Updated to fix the spelling of Jed Lewison's name. I regret the error.