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Rem Palpitt

Bloomberg Campaign Connects to Facebook - 0 views

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    Facebook Connect could ultimately give political campaigns more viral exposure for their online efforts. Campaign supporters who join Mr. Bloomberg's social network can easily invite their friends to join them in various online activities; if they sign up to attend a political event, that gets transferred back to Facebook too. Users are presented with options to withhold any and all of this information from Facebook if they wish.
stan mag

Is Facebook Helping Presidential Campaigns Get Out The Vote? - AllFacebook - 0 views

  • In fact, the campaign of President Barack Obama, and then the Mitt Romney team, released Facebook applications to aid in the effort to get their supporters to the polls. And there are myriad apps by third parties that are aiming to do the same.
  • Take the talking about numbers for the Republican ticket, and he said the Romney campaign has far exceeded the Obama/Biden engagement metrics.
stan mag

Twitter Is a Critical Tool in Republican Campaigns - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • With 100 million active users, more than 10 times as many as in the 2008 election, Twitter has emerged as a critical tool for political campaigns
  • Not just the press element, but the organizing element and the fund-raising element and the relationship building that all campaigns try to do.”
  • Twitter allowed the team to see what was resonating with both voters and reporters.
stan mag

Book Review: SMS Uprising - Mobile Activism in Africa | DigiActive.org - 0 views

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    ""SMS campaigns to promote violence, blogs to challenge mainstream media narratives, and online campaigns to promote awareness of human rights violations.""
Arnault Coulet

@digiactive what do you think about @evgenymorozov blog post "From slacktivism to activ... - 0 views

  • I've grown increasingly skeptical of numerous digital activism campaigns that attempt to change the world through Facebook and Twitter.
  • He started a Facebook group, which implied – but never stated so explicitly – that the city authorities were planning to dismantle the fountain, which of course was NEVER the case. He seeded the group to 125 friends who joined in a matter of hours; then it started spreading virally. In the first few days, it immediately went to a 1000 members and then it started growing more aggressively. After 3 days, it began to grow with over 2 new members each minute in the day time. When the group reached 27.500 members, Jørgensen decided to end the experiment. So there you have it: almost 28,000 people joined a cause that didn't really exist!
  • "just like we need stuff to furnish our homes to show who we are, on Facebook we need cultural objects that put together a version of me that I would like to present to the public."
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • acebook users shape their online identity implicitly rather than explicitly
  • This shopping binge in an online identity supermarket has led to the proliferation of what I call “slacktivism”, where our digital effort make us feel very useful and important but have zero social impact
  • In a perfect world, this shouldn't even be considered a problem: better donate a penny than not to donate at all. The problem, however, is that the granularity of contemporary digital activism provides too many easy way-outs: too many people decide to donate a penny where they may otherwise want to donate a dollar
  • The problem is that most of these campaigns do not have clear goals or agenda items beyond awareness-raising.
  • Asking for money could also undermine one's efforts to engage groups members in more meaningful real-life activities: the fact that they have already donated some money, no matter how little, makes them feel as if they have already done their bit and should be left alone
  • Some grassroots campaigns are beginning to realize it: for example, the web-site of "Free Monem", a 2007 pan-Arab initiative to free an Egyptian blogger from jail carried a sign that said “DON'T DONATE; Take action” and had logos of Visa and MasterCard in a crossed red circle in the background
  • his was a way to show that their campaign needed more than money as well as to shame numerous local and international NGOs that like to raise money to “release bloggers from jail”, without having any meaningful impact on the situation on the ground.
  • Psychologists offer an interesting explanation as to why a million people working together may be less effective than one person working alone. They call this phenomenon “social loafing”.
  • Reading about Ringelmann's experiments, I realized that the same problem plagues much of today's “Facebook” activism:
  • For example, FreeRice, a web-site affiliated with the UN Food Program
  • This is a brilliant approach: millions of people rely on the Internet to study English anyway and most of them wouldn't mind being exposed to online advertising in exchange for a useful service. Both sides benefit, with no high words exchanged. Those who participate in the effort are not driven by helping the world and have a very selfish motivation; yet, they probably generate more good than thousands of people who are “fighting” hunger via Facebook. While this model may not be applicable to every situation, it's by finding practical hybrid models like FreeRice's that we could convert immense and undeniable collective energy of Internet users into tangible social change.
  • on't give people their identity trophies until they have proved their worth
    • Arnault Coulet
       
      clé
  • create diverse, distinctive, and non-trivial tasks; your supporters can do more than just click “send to all” button” all day.
    • Arnault Coulet
       
      second point
Rem Palpitt

"Where is My Vote?": Iranian Expats Organize Online - 0 views

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    The question is, will this structure allow for the sustained campaigning necessary to overturn the vote? In the language of Gaurav Mishra's 4 C's of Social Media, this campaign has achieved Content creation and Collaboration on collective action, but will
Arnault Coulet

Learning from Obama: Lessons for Online Communicators in 2009 and Beyond - 0 views

  • Based on a series of articles published on Epolitics.com in the spring and summer of 2009, the 49-page Learning from Obama provides a comprehensive overview of Barack Obama’s online campaign for President of the United States
  • Based on a series of articles published on Epolitics.com in the spring and summer of 2009, the 49-page Learning from Obama provides a comprehensive overview of Barack Obama’s online campaign for President of the United States.
  • Based on a series of articles published on Epolitics.com in the spring and summer of 2009, the 49-page Learning from Obama provides a comprehensive overview of Barack Obama’s online campaign for President of the United States.
stan mag

voter et faire voter via les réseaux - - 0 views

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    US campaign: "one in five people contacted by a Facebook friend acted on a get out the vote request because they were contacted by someone they knew."
stan mag

Politicians, Campaigns Have No Idea How to Go Viral | Fast Company - 0 views

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    ""The big takeaway point is you don't [reach the middle] with social media--I've yet to see any evidence that social media is going persuade truly persuadable voters,""
stan mag

Digital Activism: An Interview with Mary Joyce - 0 views

  • The measuring of impact thus becomes extremely subjective.  Digital activism proponents want to count mobilization as success even when the goal is not achieved, while skeptics and pessimists point out that, by traditional measures, most digital activism campaigns are failures. 
  • The measuring of impact thus becomes extremely subjective.  Digital activism proponents want to count mobilization as success even when the goal is not achieved, while skeptics and pessimists point out that, by traditional measures, most digital activism campaigns are failures.
Rem Palpitt

Election 2010: New digital battlefield, same old politics (par le Digital Director de l... - 1 views

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    None of the parties have leveraged new media in this campaign to build support in the way Barack Obama did
Rem Palpitt

Politics goes mobile | Pew Research - 1 views

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    More than a quarter of American adults - 26% - used their cell phones to learn about or participate in the 2010 mid-term election campaign. In a post-election nationwide survey of adults, the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project found that 82% of adults have cell phones. Of those cell owners, 71% use their phone for texting and 39% use the phone for accessing the internet. With that as context, the Pew Internet survey found that:
Arnault Coulet

Obama '12 Has Its Digital Director - 0 views

  • Teddy Goff will lead the digital efforts of the 2012 Obama campaign, says a campaign source, confirming chatter that has been floating around in online politics circles.
Rem Palpitt

Democracy 2.0 Awaits an Upgrade (NYTimes, via @fondapol) - 0 views

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    President Obama declared during the campaign that "we are the ones we've been waiting for." That messianic phrase held the promise of a new style of politics in this time of tweets and pokes. But it was vague, a paradigm slipped casually into our drinks. To date, the taste has proven bittersweet.
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