Jim Moore’s blog: Innovation, Strategy, Public Policy

Dave has a knockout demo prepared for tonight….

December 18th, 2003 · Comments Off

The following is from Dave Winer’s http://scripting.com this afternoon.
Dave has made an interesting discovery out in the blogosphere…

I’ve got a total kickass demo for tonight’s
Berkman meeting, which is on, and Murphy-willing will be webcast.  Permanent link to this item in the archive.

More about tonight’s demo. I’ll explain how the
Dean campaign is using the Internet in ways you didn’t know about, and
that I didn’t know about until last night. My eyes popped when I saw
what they were doing. Jay Rosen, whose nephew Zack is the Dean
developer, got a sneak preview. “Very exciting Dave. Mega cool. Did
Zack help with this?” To which I said: “Yes he did, but due to the
power of standards, he didn’t know he did. ;->” That’s the way it’s
supposed to work. Open level playing field. Anyone who wants to can
innovate. Small pieces, loosely joined. Tune in to tonight’s webcast.
The app I’m demoing is a Web app so you’ll be able to follow along from
home. 7PM Eastern. 
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PS: Please don’t construe this as an
endorsement by Berkman Center, Harvard Law School, or myself for any
particular candidate. Sorry if this is a bummer, but that’s very very
important.  height=”9″ border=”0″ alt=”Permanent link to this item in the archive.”>

Hey Dave, what is the address for the webcast?

Tags: Economics and cybenetics

Scientists for Dean

December 18th, 2003 · Comments Off

This post from Scientists for Dean today:

Looking for Well-Known Scientists


Submitted by David Isenberg on Thu, 12/18/2003 – 12:46.

Community

Bob
Kopp and I are looking for a few well-known scientists who we can work
with to write a letter to other scientists inviting them to join
 Tags: Economics and cybenetics

Grassfire.org

December 18th, 2003 · Comments Off

Zephyr Teachout, Joe Rospar, Joe Costello (front to back) writing for Dean for America..

Obviously those of us doing grassroots work for Dean and others need to
be aware that the Right  is way ahead of us on grassroots
organizing.  In fact, our only advantages are that Americans are
on the whole pretty open and progressive, and that we lie less than the
Right.  That said, check out this site,
which is a Right-wing grassroots site, courtesy of Zephyr Teachout at
the Dean campaign.  Zephyr says this site is very effective at
using petitions and fundraisers online for the Right.  Here is a
quote from today’s Grassfire.org:


Grassfire TV Ad Turns Tables on Radical Left

Radical
left groups – led by MoveOn.org — are stepping up their attacks
on the President, calling for independent investigations and
running attack ads designed to create doubt and mistrust of
President Bush. Grassfire has just released a new 30-second
commercial that turns the tables on the radical left.

Watch the Ad

Donate
to help air the Ad

More on MoveOn’s radical agenda

Feedback
– send us your comments

Tags: Economics and cybenetics

Participate in a first experiment: an open peer-to-peer online policy discussion co-sponsored by a presidential campaign

December 18th, 2003 · Comments Off

From John Palfrey this morning:

Are citizens really re-engaged in the political process?  And if so,
what would a president elected by a citizen-powered groundswell do once
elected to govern in a manner consistent with how s/he was elected? 
Participate in a discussion ongoing
here;
it’s free and experimental and it’s only going to work if lots of
us dig in.  You’ll just have to sign up with a simple form,
join the project
called “Internet and Society” and reply to the question posted by Jim
Moore and Kelly Nuxoll.  (We at the Berkman Center don’t support any
candidate, but we do support citizen engagement in the political
process using Internet technologies.)

This is an opportunity for YOU personally right now this day–yes you Steve, Ingrid, Ralph, Sherry, Dave, Yossi–to participate in a very significant experiment in
online presidential policy making.  The Berkman Center for
Internet & Society and the Howard Dean campaign invite you to an
online policy discussion in the Harvard Law School/Berkman Center
developed “H2O” format. This is not your father’s Oldsmobile online
discussion.  The way this one works, you are invited to respond at
some length, and your piece is then circulated to another participant
for her or his comment.  You are assured at least one thoughtful
reader before your piece is posted.  Reciprocally, you will be
send, by email, a different reader’s essay, and asked to comment on
it.  The result is a building dialogue that emphasizes
peer-to-peer connections and community-building, as well as public
posting of ideas.

The actual question being considered is posed in Socratic form, and
puts you in the hypothetical position of a newly elected president.

The question speaks for itself (I hope–Kelly Nuxoll and I wrote it),
but here is something to mull over: 

Perhaps Howard Dean is not
running for the same presidency as George Bush
.  That is, perhaps
in an era of online communication, combined with grassroots community
organizing, we need a new form of presidency that itself encourages
more peer-to-peer problem solving across our society.  Perhaps we
need a movement to reverse the consolidation of presidential and
legislative and judicial power at the center, because this
consolidation of power makes it harder for the society to solve its
most critical problems.

Tags: Economics and cybenetics

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