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February 22, 2007

Update on Second Life as a Platform for Online Community Building and Politics

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Posted by Andrew Hoppin

Back in August, when I started investigating it for the first time, I
wrote about Second Life
, the (for now) runaway winner in an emerging niche of online 3-D virtual worlds that are not (according to their publishers) games. It's high time for an update on what I've discovered in the six months since.

Second Life's greatest utility, to me, is that it better mimics the experience of being offline in the same room together than any other online medium... The experience of interacting there is vastly more social and immersive than, say, an online blogging community. High trust relationships are built quickly.... Therefore, I think it is destined to become an important new platform for online organizing / community building / social networking.

Think Meetup, except that you don't need 40 people to be in the same place on the planet to have an effective Meetup. Therefore a niche group-- let's say "Doctors for Tax Justice" can achieve critical mass to "meet" and form an action-oriented community for readily than if they needed 40 Doctors For Tax Justice in San Francisco. In this vein, we run RootsCamp in Second Life every week.

Think of a conference like YearlyKos in Chicago this summer, in which ~1000 people will attend in person, but which we expect to sell out early... People who can't afford the time or the money to attend in Chicago, or who miss getting registered before we hit capacity, will be able to attend a concurrent "mixed-reality" YearlyKos conference that we will be running in Second Life, complete with Second-Life-only panels that we have insufficient space for in Chicago, streaming of the Chicago panels and keynotes, etc.

Think of a political campaign with staff around the country who need to trust each other and work closely together every day-- Cisco, IBM and many other Fortune 500 companies have already found that Second Life meeting environments can help their distributed teams work together-- and in some cases work directly with their clients-- more effectively than a combination of email, telephone, video conferencing, and airplanes for face to face meetings. That's why these companies are investing millions of dollars in researching and testing virtual worlds. We recently brought NASA into Second Life for the same reason.

Second Life is also a rich medium for content creation that can be "surfaced" to the Web for broader exposure... ~200 people participated in an anti-war "virtual march on virtual capital hill" that we organized between CodePink and RootsCamp in Second Life recently, and one of our volunteers made a video of the event that went mildly viral with over 50,000 views... The cost of creating it was $0.

Clearly Second Life is not a panacea for online organizing, and there is a great deal of hype... User base growth statistics of 30% per month and >$1 Million transacted between Second Life users every day are somewhat misleading, though the growth rate is torrid nonetheless. To hear Mitch Kapor, the founder of Lotus and the Chairman of Linden Lab (the company behind Second Life) tell it, Second Life "promises to be disruptive… comparable to both the PC and the internet itself, which started as something “quirky” for geeks, and then entered and transformed mainstream society. Ultimately, Second Life will displace both desktop computing and other two-dimensional user interfaces. As a hothouse of innovation and experiment, Second Life may even accelerate the social evolution of humanity.”

Hype or not (and I'm actually not at all certain that it is- Mitch is smarter than I am), I do think we're seeing the early stages of a massive trend towards extensive use of immersive 3-D online environments as a primary medium for online social and professional online interaction with each other and with data that can be represented visually. There is already great utility for me and communities I am helping to build in the context of RootsCamp, NASA, and YearlyKos in Second Life, and I think it likely that the utility I experience today will prove to be just the tip of the iceberg, as Second Life's technology improves and as its user base grows.

Comments (3) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Online community | Tools | connections | e-Government | e-Politics | e-activism | e-campaigning

September 20, 2006

Help is on the way for the Dutch elections

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Posted by Rolf Kleef

Yesterday, the third Tuesday in September, Queen Beatrix read the "Troonrede", the Dutch "state of the nation" speech for the combined First and Second Chamber in Parliament. Lots of good news, of course, with elections coming up in The Netherlands in two months. This year, Politix is offering new ways to help you determine what party matches your position on various issues.

...continue reading.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: e-Politics

August 26, 2006

Green screens join the e-participation toolkit

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Posted by Alexandra Samuel

Stephen Colbert's Green Screen challenge -- where the talk show host asks fans to upload their own videos, based on footage of Colbert in a light sabre fight in front of a green screen -- should be inspiration for everyone trying to boost participation in an online community. Imagine a political candidate challenging voters to a green screen debate (risky! edgy! but sure to attract interest.) Imagine an advocacy group uploading green screen footage of an SUV (insteady of waiting for GM to set up its Tahoe ad campaign) and inviting people to make their own anti-SUV ads. Or imagine someone making a simple donation request in front of a green screen and inviting people to make it into a compelling video.

But why should the mash-up be limited to video? Let's think about audio mashups by providing an audio file (of a speech, a song, a debate). Or video collages by offering image files and online editing tools. Or make-you-own newsletters that offer a mix of Creative Commons licensed text and image and encouraging people to customize their own outreach campaigns using your online content.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: NPTech | Online community | e-Politics | e-campaigning

July 24, 2006

24 ways the Internet can make the world better for your kids

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Posted by Alexandra Samuel

This month I gave birth to our second child, Jonah. (How is that as an excuse for lapsed blogging?) A few days later, I realized that this kid won't be able to vote until 2024! To me, 2024 sounds like the unfathomable future: the territory of Buck Rogers, Star Trek and Battlestar Galactica. A future in which we'll be governed by giant robots and vote through telepathic connections to a satellite tower that reaches into outer space.

I was all geared up to write a blog post predicting what online politics will look like in 2024, but I came up against a stumbling block. And not just the usual stumbling block of worrying that my predictions will be proven wrong. That's not that scary: from what I can see, people forget about the 19 incorrect predictions and just remember the one thing you get right.

What made me hesitate was a far more fundamental uncertainty: will our politics -- or our Internet -- look even remotely like our current system by the time 2024 rolls around? Or will the ever-mounting number of colossal political, economic, environmental and social catastrophes -- global warming, the war in Iraq, peak oil, rogue terrorism -- accumulate to the point at which our society essentially collapses?

On our current, unsustainable path, it's hard to predict much of anything with confidence. All I can see is today: today's opportunities for making that path more sustainable, for turning these accelerating catastrophes into pressure to revise and reform our political, economic, environmental and social decisions.

And I think the Internet is a crucial part of that reform. It gives more and more people an ever-broadening number of effective, engaging and often easy ways to voice and press for their priorities. It puts us in touch with a wider range of our fellow citizens so that we can understand how other people are affected by our current disasters. And it's a medium in which ordinary folks can engage from a position that is equal to -- or even more powerful than -- the traditional power-brokers who dominate other media.

If 2024 is to be a time in which technology still holds the promise to support our political, social and economic needs -- rather than a time of post-catastrophe chaos -- then we all need to use today's technology to turn the world from its current destructive path. For Jonah, and for all the other folks who should have the opportunity to vote, engage and thrive in 2024, I've put together a list of 10 ways that the Internet can make the world better for our kids:

  1. Give online: Set up a regular online donation to at least two charitable causes: one advocacy group that is working to change the world, and one front-line service group that is working to help people today.
  2. Spam smart: I dread mass e-mails from my friends that pass along the latest Internet joke or chain letter. But when a friend who usually abstains from mass e-mailing sends out a rare plea to support a cause with a donation or signature, I pay attention. If you limit yourself to one or two mass e-mails a year, personally asking your friends and colleagues to support a cause can be a powerful act.
  3. Be an informed citizen: Public ignorance enables elite control. Keep an eye on the powers that be by using the latest information tools to stay up-to-date on crucial news. Set your browser’s home page to a newspaper web site or a personalized news page like Google homepage.
  4. Turn your kids onto persuasive games instead of shoot ‘em up games: Does anyone think that the world’s prospects for survival are improved by kids spending time learning how to kill? Get your kids out of those first person shooters, and encourage them to spend time playing games where they learn about political issues.
  5. Participate in an online community: Researchers have suggested that one of the most corrosive forces in our society today is the social disconnection that sees people alone at home, watching TV, rather than engaging in their communities. Virtual communities can help to turn that tide, so get off that sofa, sit down at your desk, and find an online community (like a group blog or social networking site) that will help to deepen your own social connectedness.
  6. Hook up a kid: Help your local school or community centre extend Internet access to more people by donating an old computer, or better yet, money to help buy a new one.
  7. Track the news you can control: What are the institutions, people or issues over which you personally have some small amount of influence? Maybe it’s your employer. Or the city councilor who happens to live down the street. Or the big retailer where you buy most of your groceries and household goods. Keep track of what they’re up to with an RSS aggregator and an RSS feed (what’s RSS?) that tracks news about that person, business or issue….and use your knowledge to hold them to account.
  8. Sign here: Online petitions may be a dime a dozen, but they’re a great way to get your political juices flowing. Make a point of signing at least one every month, and it will ensure you pay attention to at least one new political issue.
  9. Adopt a blogger: The blogosphere is full of worthy bloggers who need recognition – or in the case of bloggers in authoritarian countries, active protection. Help to encourage a voice that wouldn’t otherwise get heard by promoting that person’s blog on your own blog or web site.
  10. Volunteer online: Lots of nonprofits are parceling out jobs that can be done online (like the PeopleFinder project that tapped volunteers to assemble a database of Hurricane Katrina survivors.) Even if you can’t make time to get to an office, the Internet can ensure your spare time helps a good cause.
  11. Help (un)wire a good cause: Lots of valuable community groups still aren’t tapping the power of the net because they lack the time or expertise to set up a web site or to develop more advanced web services. If you’re tech-savvy.
  12. Think different: Make a point of regularly reading at least one blog written by someone who looks at the world from a different perspective – better yet, a perspective that you loathe. At worst, you’ll get some strategic insights into your political opposition, and at best, you might discover some common ground.
  13. Find some co-conspirators: Howard Dean isn’t the only person who can use the net to find political sympathizers. Check out the groups on meeetup.com to find a group of like-minded folks in you community, and start making trouble.
  14. Stand up and sit down: Stand up for a good cause by participating in a virtual sit-in.
  15. Yours truly, World Peace: Your e-mail signature can do more than offer contact information. Add a link to your favorite cause and encourage your correspondents to support that organization.
  16. Give that landfill a break: Use sites like Consumer Reports, CNET and epinions to research your purchases so that you buy stuff that lasts. Dead computers are a major contributor to landfills – so take the time to find the tech, appliances and household goods that won’t have to get junked next year.
  17. Telecommute: Get your car off the road and that CO2 out of the air by working from home, and stay in touch via web, e-mail, IM and Skype.
  18. Wear your heart on your sleeve: Let people know you care about an issue by ordering a T-shirt that speaks to your cause – and kicks back a few dollars to an organization working on that issue. If you can’t find the message you’re looking for, .
  19. Love a do-gooder: Governments, schools, hospitals and charitable organizations are full of folks who are doing hard work to make the world better or more livable, often with little financial or social rewards. If you’ve been helped by someone in one of these organizations, take five minutes to send an e-mail to their supervisor, and copy the person who helped you out. That kind of positive feedback is crucial to encouraging public service.
  20. Ask your friends to vote: That low voter turnout rate isn’t an abstraction: chances are that many people you know don’t bother to vote. A personal appeal by e-mail, in which you tell people why you think it’s important to them to vote, can help encourage people to take part in this most fundamental rite of democratic participation.
  21. Stop buying and start swapping: Reduce consumption and waste by using swapping sites to get rid of your old stuff and find (rather than buy) the items you need. Just do a google search on “swap” plus the name of your city (or the nearest city) to find a site that lets you swap with other people in your community.
  22. Cut down on car use: Use the web to find rideshares instead of driving alone. Or help promote bike riding by finding or organizing a < a href=” http://www.critical-mass.org/”>critical mass ride in your community.
  23. Kill your television: Don’t let your TV run your life or schedule anymore. Use bittorrent or iTunes to watch the shows you can’t miss – but at your own convenience. No more passing up community events in order to catch that crucial episode of Lost!
  24. Turn off your computer: Sometimes the best thing the Internet can do for the world is to remind you that the world still exists. No amount of online organizing and activism can take the place of real-world interaction. So turn off, tune in and drop into the real world to see what you can do there, too.

Comments (1) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: e-Politics

July 17, 2006

Track your MP (UK)

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Posted by Rolf Kleef

An interesting set of sites in the UK, volunteer-run, to keep track of Parliament. TheyWorkForYou lets you check who your MP is, based on postcode: voting record, topics they're interested in, and "performance" like participation in debates, recent appearances, responsiveness to email, and expenses.

...continue reading.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: e-Politics

July 3, 2006

YearlyKos Conference Portends Democracy 2.0

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Posted by Andrew Hoppin

In the business world, the Wisdom of Crowds has been mashed up with Web 2.0 to create Crowdsourcing, and generally a more dynamic two-way relationship between corporations and their customers (see "Five Techniques for Using Web 2.0 to Reinvent the Customer Relationship").

Similarly, online tools and communities have long (by our standards) held the promise of creating a more level playing field for our politics. A major milestone in the achievement of this level-playing field promise was attained in June at the seminal offline event of the Netroots, the inaugural Yearly Kos conference in Las Vegas.

More on Yearly Kos shortly, but first, a bit of diatribe on why the playing field of US politics has historically had such a steep incline… Of course, our democratic elections have always inherently been predicated on this Wisdom of Crowds— predicated on the feel-good idea that we all deserve to weigh in equally and independently to collectively determine who represents us, a few skeptical Founding Fathers and pesky Electoral College electors notwithstanding... The dirty little secret, of course (once we handled the dirty big secret and achieved one homo sapien – one vote with the 15th and 19th Ammendments and the 1965 Voting Rights Act), is that mass media plays a decisive role in shaping perceptions of political prospects, whether in the form of journalism, op-editorial, paid advertisement, or Foxaganda. And as a society in which consumption of mass media largely supplants more traditional and egalitarian forms of communication among citizens (e.g.: storytelling, sociopolitical socializing, etc.), mass media has an absurdly large impact on the outcome of our national elections in the USA.

Mass media is antithetical to the Wisdom of Crowds in, well, its massiveness, its unidirectional nature, and the fact that a small number of wealthy citizens and corporations (actually there is little legal difference in the US) have a disproportionately large impact on what mass media publishes… Only so many voices can be represented in aggregate and with only so much nuance, and thus the vast majority of the voices in our Crowd are never heard through Mass Media.

This phenomenon becomes self-reinforcing—the less opportunity we as members of the Crowd have to be heard or to make any impact on the views of those around us, the less likely we are to strive to speak, and the more likely we are to resign ourselves to being consumers of mass media. Rinse lather repeat. Not voting, for the ~50% of the country that does not, is merely the natural experiential evolution of this communal vocal impotence.

A potent "Netroots" community of active political bloggers and online activists would seem to hold one of they keys to reuniting the reality with the potential of our democratic politics. Having a voice begets speaking. As long as Net Neutrality is upheld, and increasingly with the inexorably growing penetration of inexpensive fixed and mobile Internet access devices and broadband connectivity, an individual’s vocal potential through the Netroots is generally gated only by the quality and authenticity of your voice. While the same mass media dynamics of celebrity cults of personality and a limited number of players with large scale influence persist in the Netroots to some degree, the playing field in the game of becoming influential is far more level and iterative online than in mass mediums, and money is rarely the decisive factor in attaining critical mass of influence. An intelligent and passionate voice can still create its own mass market audience of political consumers without regard for funding or pre-existing reputation, and once this audience level is attained, it is likely to fade if that audience is not engaged ongoingly as a peer in the political discourse. In fact, the most powerful online voices in the Netroots are actually many voices cohered as online communities of a distinct character. The voice in this Crowd is actually the collective and iterative pulse of that of 100,000s of individuals. Case in point is the DailyKos community, whose namesake actually creates little of the content that is written and read there by 100,000s every day.

The Netroots have flourished and matured since the 2004 election from whence they were born, and are currently passing major milestones in their evolution that portend their ability to finally meaningfully democratize politics in the most brass tacks realm of the ballot box / touchscreen (ok ok-- well maybe only at the ballot box, depending who owns and services the touchscreen). The Netroots are now being mashed up with traditional offline organizing techniques and organizers to create a vibrant community of practice whose impact has now transcended the "blogosphere" and become an important force in the more traditional realms of offline grassroots organizing and meet and greet politicing.

And mainstream media, and mainstream politicians has noticed. Exhibit A was the YearlyKos conference earlier this month. Billed as an “unconference” “uniting the Netroots”, more than 1000 active contributors to the preeminent Progressive blog community-- DailyKos-- convened a star-studded very face-to-face conference in Las Vegas. What was notable and remarkable about Yearly Kos, beyond the fact that it was organized entirely by volunteers who did all their own fundraising, was the tangible sense there of everyone being in it TOGETHER, as creators and participants, presenters and listeners.... Where the Beltway-based Take Back America conference was star-driven and worried about having security lock-out Code Pink members protesting Hillary Clinton, YearlyKos felt like an intimate family united in the flesh for the first time, seasoned veterans of online organizing all, and all galvanized for action. The passion, energy, authenticity, and commitment on display throughout were born of the rich secret sauce that so many 21st Century politicians yearn to understand and to tap.

Mainstream media, and mainstream politicians have noticed. YearlyKos garnered traditional political star-power in abundance. Governor Warner wooed the crowd with a $60,000 party at the Stratosphere complete with free amusement park rides for all and a chocolate fountain. The press credential list—New York Times, Newsweek, Washington Post, C-Span, etc.-- read like a White House Correspondents dinner guest list rather than a gathering of some lunatic fringe. However, the likes Governor Warner, Governor Richardson, General Clark, Ambassador Joe Wilson, Senator Reid, Joe Trippi, Robert Greenwald, and the rest were as much participants in the conference as they were the stars. Exhibit A: General Clark-- former NATO Supreme Allied Commander and Presidential candidate who raised more than $20 million online in 2004-- not only didn’t have a keynote, but was relegated to being a co-panelist in one morning session along with household names like “DarkSyde” (as the science blogger is known in the Daily Kos community). And best of all, far from being surly about what many celebrity politicians would have deemed a slight, Clark started early, pitched into the panel with passion, wit, and intelligence, stayed late, and by all accounts had a fantastic time. That performance and attitude spells credibility in this Crowd, and he knows it. Many celebrities stuck around for the entire four day conference, wandering the halls chatting with would be constituents as peers. Nary a limo in sight.

Where have we seen this before, and where will it go? The best clues may come from the folks that built the very open-source software architecture that now powers the servers that empower the Netroots… Consider this quote from software business guru Tim O’Reilly:

“It was the critical mass that was brought about by the global network… It allowed for free association by developers on a massive scale. In the 80's… only companies had the resources to build critical mass around a technology. But on the internet, freely redistributable software could find adherents worldwide, and those adherents could freely associate, work together, and build something that none of them could have done alone. Still, physical proximity is useful to add to the mix once the community self-organizes on the net. I still remember the enormous buzz at the first Perl Conference I put together in 1997. All these people who'd worked together for years were meeting for the first time. "So you're Larry!" I heard more than one person say. The mind at the other end of the teletype suddenly given flesh and voice. And if they were meeting Larry Wall for the first time, how much more were they meeting each other… Open source communities can form in cyberspace, but getting together in the flesh can really help them to reach the next level of critical mass. (full article at OReillyNet.Com)

Online networks yielding critical mass. Individuals freely associating and building works at a scale that only large organizations heretofore could. Legitimate celebrities also co-existing as just one of the contributors… Conferences as an important milestone and catalyst to attain meaningful scale and impact… No wonder the other operative buzzphrase in the Netroots is “Open Source Politics.” Political Parties as we know them ought to have cold feet now more than ever.

It’s 1997 all over again.

A vast minority of citizens in this nation are wholly dissatisfied with the status quo of our government and our political parties. And, by any global measuring stick, they're wealthy, educated, creative, entrepreneurial, connected and passionate. A revolution is nigh. What form it takes depends heavily not just on the outcome of the 2006 and 2008 elections, but also on how those elections are conducted by our major political parties, the candidates, our government, and our news media. Their enduring relevance depends on how they perform.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Events | Online community | e-Politics | e-campaigning

May 28, 2006

From today's New York Times: why offline politics matters

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Posted by Alexandra Samuel

Today's New York Times Magazine has an article by Matt Bai about the upcoming YearlyKos convention, "Can bloggers get real?" The heart of the article is Bai's argument that

politics is, by its nature, a tactile business. New technology may change the way partisans organize and debate, and it may even spawn an entirely new political culture. But at the end of the day, partisans will inevitably be drawn to sit across the table from the candidates they support or oppose, just as votes will still be won and lost in banquet halls and airport hangars and all the other seedy, sweaty stalls of the political marketplace. Online politics can't flourish in the virtual realm alone, any more than an online romance can be consummated through instant messaging.

That's because politics, like dating, is as much about the experience as it is about the winning or losing. Whether we're talking about the reformers of the progressive era or the immigrant ward leaders of the urban heyday, 1960's antiwar protesters or 1980's religious conservatives, new political movements have always evolved, ultimately, into thriving social networks.

...continue reading.

Comments (1) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: e-Politics