Civicist

CIVIC TECH NEWS & ANALYSIS
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First Post Uncategorized

EFFECTIVENESS

EFFECTIVENESS

A report on the booming govtech market; the internet is one of the causes of Trumpism; and more.

  • Today’s civic tech must-read: The founder of the Govtech Fund, Ron Bouganim, has penned an excellent update on the state of “govtech,” which he defines as “the ‘operating system’ for government—the infrastructure and tools government agencies use everyday to do their jobs.” He says the field is booming, thanks to a number of trends including “government adoption of the cloud, budget constraints, a massive government personnel retirement cycle and an open data movement have coalesced to create an openness on the part of government agencies to embrace new technologies and a dramatically shortened sales cycle.” And he helpfully distinguishes govtech from civic tech, the “operating system” of the citizen, in which he includes “community organizing, petitions, advocacy, connecting with elected officials, politics and campaigns, the citizen journalist, and much more.”
  • Speaking of community organizing, a group of longtime feminist online organizers, including Civic Hall members Deanna Zandt of Lux Digital and Jeanne Brooks of Datakind, along with Tracy Van Slyke of Culture Lab and Sabrina Hersi Issa of Be Bold Media (longtime Personal Democracy Media friends all, I should add), have launched ShineSquad to organize a systemic response to the problem of sexual harassment and assault in social change organizations, as Juana Summers reports for Mashable. Their effort is a direct response to the collapse of FitzGibbon Media but is rooted in a much longer and largely hidden history of abuse and neglect of the issue.
  • The Sunlight Foundation’s president, Christopher Gates, is stepping down, the organization’s co-founder Michael Klein announced yesterday. Stepping in as interim executive director is longtime Sunlight policy director John Wonderlich. We wish the best of luck to them both!
  • Trump watch: Donald Trump’s new TV ad, the first of his presidential campaign, which you should not ignore because it is going to play constantly in Iowa and New Hampshire for the next few weeks, blatantly conflates being Muslim with being a terrorist, and shows ominous pictures of dark-skinned people while promising to build a border fence that “Mexico will pay for.” Despite the ad’s explicit racism, many political commentators have generally confined themselves to asking whether it will be “effective.” As if they were in the 1930s covering the German parliamentary elections like they were a normal event: Wolf Blitzer: “How do you think the new radio ad the Nazis have been running—the one where they blame the Jews for the economic collapse and Germany’s weakness in the world—is going to play as we head into the final weeks of the election, panel? Cokie Roberts: “Well, honestly Wolf, the tone is a bit strong but it’s clearly working for Adolf. German voters seem attracted to his ‘tell-it-like-it-is’ style.” Mark Halperin: “It’s just another amazing piece of work by Goebbels. He’s really got his finger on the pulse of the German electorate.” Etc. etc.
  • Or, they’ve tried to “fact-check” it, as Politifact’s C. Eugene Emery Jr. and Louis Jacobson point out, its image of people swarming a border is actually from footage of migrants trying to cross from Morocco to Spain, and marked the ad “pants on fire.” Asked about that supposed error, his campaign manager Corey Lewandowski told NBC News, “No sh—it’s not the Mexican border but that’s what our country is going to look like. This was 1,000 percent on purpose.”
  • Among the “Eight Causes of Trumpism,” longtime political commentator Norman Ornstein writes in the Atlantic, one must count the internet. He blames it for “a dramatic deterioration of civil discourse and social standards” (i.e. comment pages and chat rooms where “nothing is too course or off limits anymore”), the ease with which conspiracy theorists can now engage in collective action (i.e. Here Comes Every Birther!), and the rise of echo chambers where we can “all actively seek out the information sources [we] want—and actively avoid those that provide dissonant information.”
  • Brave new world: Liberty Mutual has just launched a new partnership with Subaru, offering drivers discounts for installing and abiding by a car app that tells them when they are accelerating or braking too fast, and Brian Fung of the Washington Post uses that news to offer a warning about how these new usage-tracking technologies may also endanger drivers’ privacy, lead to new kinds of legal liabilities and potentially higher rates for non-compliance.
  • Security researchers believe a power failure that hit regional power authorities in Ukraine last week was caused by malicious code designed to sabotage industrial control systems, Dan Goodin reports for ArsTechnica. This may be the first time a cyber-attack on energy targets actually caused a blackout.
Categories
First Post

FEEDING

FEEDING

The new Huffington Post; the rebirth of Politwoops; inside Facebook’s News Feed (kinda); and more.

  • News feeders: Politico’s Nancy Scola offers a smart look at why so many political players are turning to Medium to post their thoughts, rather than running the gauntlet of old media’s op-ed editors. (I have to add: isn’t Medium just the Huffington Post with a much better publishing platform and less of an overtly liberal slant?)
  • On Medium (naturally), Andrew Hayward of MIT Media Lab’s Electome project offers some first findings from the project’s comparison of political news coverage to Twitter conversation (in English) related to the presidential election. Given that Electome has access to the full Twitter “hose,” there’s good reason to expect some fresh insights here from exploring what Twitter users talk about compared to what the media focuses on, but count me dissatisfied so far. Heyward gives us some pretty charts that imply that Electome’s data scientists have figured out how to measure such things as Donald Trump’s percentage share of media coverage—when in fact they are only looking at 12 news publications, not the entire universe of news media. Nor does he explain how his team counts the coverage a candidate gets when they are one of several mentioned in a story, or how they weight headlines vs text. But hey, it’s “big data,” so enjoy!
  • CrowdTangle tracks engagement on Facebook, and here lists the top ten progressive Facebook pages in terms of the total engagement they drove in 2015. It’s worth noting that none of these ten pages had even one-tenth the total interactions that Crowdtangle’s list of the top ten overall most influential pages on the social networking site. No, we haven’t heard of any of them.
  • Will Oremus of Slate got an inside look at how Facebook keeps tweaking its News Feed algorithm, and the result is a long piece that impressively manages to avoid asking any hard questions about its workings.
  • Government works: Here’s a lovely ode to the value of public infrastructure, disguised as a paean to the U.S. Post Office, by Zeynep Tufekci writing for the New York Times.
  • It remains a mystery how a database containing the voter records of 191 million Americans briefly surfaced online. Here’s the full report from Chris Vickery, who originally found the database, working with DataBreaches.net and Steve Ragan of Salted Hash. Their assumption is that the data came from NationBuilder, given that some of the fields in the database used NationBuilder’s data format. But Jim Gilliam, NationBuilder’s founder, issued a statement denying that the database belonged to it.
  • This is civic tech: Self-described “govgeek” Abhi Nemani offers some pungent thoughts on what he’d like to change about how we talk about and do civic tech in 2016.
  • Here’s how cities like Los Angeles are using open government data to save lives, reports Alex Howard for the Huffington Post.
  • Twitter has come to an agreement with the Open State Foundation and the Sunlight Foundation allowing them to restart their “Politwoops” services tracking deleted tweets by politicians in dozens of countries worldwide, the company’s VP for global public policy Colin Crowell announced.
  • The online townhall startup Agora will be live-streaming next week’s New Hampshire primary student convention, at which several presidential candidates are expected to speak, Olivia Vanni of BostonInno reports
  • Brave new world: Internet connection speeds in the United States have risen in the last three years, according to a new report from the FCC, but they are still below those of two dozen other countries, David Shepardson reports for Reuters.
  • Uber is having trouble expanding in Germany, the New York Times’ Mark Scott reports, as both drivers and customers have been repelled by its no-holds-barred tactics. General Motors is partnering with Lyft to develop a fleet of on-demand driverless cars to be hailed exclusively through the Lyft platform, Johana Bhuiyan reports for BuzzFeed.