October 1st, 2006 by Guy West

18 Doughty Street is a new web based internet TV channel. They won’t hide its rightwing agenda. I wonder if it will be Fox News for the UK. Discussing politics is always good for democracy in an age where civil liberties are compromised for the Anti Terror crusade. I am looking forward for the 10th of October to watch the channel. I tend to the left and currently live overseas. Good luck to the 18 Doughty Street team.
David Cameron, Conservative party leader, has launched his own vlog (video weblog) to try to get his message across to young people. Blogging is the latest PR and marketing weapon for political parties, trying to look fresh. David Cameron shows his domestic charm in the kitchen, dining room, the car and in the office. The question is will Web 2.0 help Cameron win the next elections.
Posted in Politics
, Government
, Media
, Digital Culture
, internet
, blog
, web
, democracy
| 1 Comment »
August 23rd, 2006 by Guy West
Papadizi played by Israeli actor Menashe Noy, a goat shepherd from Macedonia who is looking for an American wife. The short videos were released to the internet via youtube and are part of a viral marketing campaign by producer OUri Sasson
MISTER GOOGLE FIND ME AMERICAN WOMAN
hello internet village
i am papadizi
and i will kill my self
if i dont fined
american woman
חשיפה: מי זה פאפאדיזי ?
Posted in Israel
, Digital Culture
, internet
, web
| 2 Comments »
August 5th, 2006 by Guy West
Israel. The war against the Hezbollah in Lebanon and bloodshed are having their toll on the population. The majority of the Israeli general public support the war and numbers haven’t declined since it started, 3 weeks ago.
The other day Gili challenged me and asked me if I could help her with an online petition. I said that I don’t write code, but I could help her and find a solution.
Orit and Gili have been petitioning the government for a ceasefire and needed way to collect signatures in an easy way.
The WordPress Blogging software is very easy to skin. You can create and design your own theme very easily if you have basic knowledge of HTML and CSS (PHP is also usefull).
How to create a petitioning software with Wordpress?
- I used the default WordPress theme Kubrick and changed the commenting system and internal instruction to a form for adding names, emails and addresses. I shortened the comment field and labeled it as the place for entering the address.
- I added a Page template that creates a list of all the signatures collected.
Basically this is it. The first version was in Hebrew I started working on English one adding a printer friendly version and thinking of other features.
Shortly, I will post the Wordpress Petition theme \ code on the internet and share with others.
Here is the English test site and the Hebrew working version of the petition, calling the Israeli government for a cease-fire and the opening of negotiations with Lebanon.
Posted in Politics
, Israel
, Digital Culture
, blog
, web
, democracy
| 1 Comment »
April 6th, 2006 by Guy West
An unparliament is a conference where the content of the meeting is driven and created by the public rather than by elected politicians. The unparliament is the reality gathering where Open Politics are debated, a meeting place for the community.
The concept based on Unconference, an idea by Lenn Pryor when discussing BloggerCon but popularized by Dave Winer in his blog.
please add ideas to this short definition.
Posted in Politics
, Brainstorming
, Digital Culture
| No Comments »
March 22nd, 2006 by Guy West
Politicians must abandon the old broadcast model of communicating if they are to harness the current high public interest in ‘podcasting’ to increase citizen participation in democracy, a leading academic has warned.
Podcasting, which uses the internet to distribute audio and video content to computers and portable devices such as mp3 music players, could become a significant way for people to become politically engaged, according to Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication at the University of Leeds. But if politicians use it to distribute prepared speeches, the public will turn off, Professor Coleman told E-Government Bulletin.
“Seeing or hearing a politician just deliver a speech isn’t terribly exciting,” he said. “These new technologies only work well if they link the perspective of a politician with those of other people. If it is seen by politicians as another broadcast medium like TV or radio, they will meet with the same indifference,” he said.
Unlike in the US, few high-profile UK politicians have moved to exploit the new technology, although several MPs including Wantage and Didcot Conservative MP Ed Vaizey and Dunbartonshire East Liberal Democrat MP Jo Swinson are making use of a new political podcasting site ‘Politics on demand’ (http://www.politicsondemand.co.uk) to offer short talks on their work. According to Coleman, Vaizey is also considering offering a more sophisticated service by podcasting his surgeries and public meetings in his constituency.
In the US, some leading politicians such as John Edwards, former running mate to Democrat candidate John Kerry, appear to have grasped how to use the medium to communicate their personality effectively. “John Edwards’s podcast is good. He seems to understand the grassroots, person to person nature of the web pretty well for a national US politician,” leading US-based podcasting guru Brian Russell (http://www.audioactivism.org/) told E-Government Bulletin.
source:E-GOVERNMENT BULLETIN - Issue 207, 20 March 2006
Posted in Politics
, Podcast
, Government
| 1 Comment »
February 23rd, 2006 by Guy West
Social software enables people to rendezvous, connect or collaborate through computer-mediated communication and to form online communities.
Broadly conceived, this term could encompass older media such as mailing lists and Usenet, but some would restrict its meaning to more recent software genres such as blogs and wikis. Others suggest that the term social software is best used not to refer to a single type of software, but rather to the use of two or more modes of computer-mediated communication to engage in community formation.[1] In this view, people form online communities by combining one-to-one (e.g., email and instant messaging), one-to-many (Web pages and blogs), and many-to-many (wikis) communication modes.[2] In many online communities, real life meetings become part of the communication repertoire. The more specific term collaborative software applies to cooperative work systems.
Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_software
References
- Stowe Boyd, “Are You Ready for Social Software?”
- Christopher Allen, Tracing the Evolution of Social Software
- Adrian Chan, “Research, Notes, Investigations into Social Software issues”.
- Clay Shirky, “A Group is Its Own Worst Enemy”.
- Matt Webb, “On Social Software”.
- Joseph M. Reagle Jr., Social Protocols: An Introduction
Posted in General
, blog
| No Comments »
February 22nd, 2006 by Guy West
Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS’05) - Track 5 p. 117b
David T. Green, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, IL
John M. Pearson, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, IL
David T. Green, John M. Pearson, “Social Software and Cyber Networks: Ties That Bind or Weak Associations within the Political Organization?,” hicss, p. 117b, Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS’05) - Track 5, 2005.
The 2004 U.S. Presidential election has tapped into the online medium to reach the growing demographic of online citizens. In the Democratic Party’s primary season, the Howard Dean campaign organization proved to be phenomenally successful at incorporating the online medium into its fundraising and grassroots mobilization, going beyond the online organizing and fundraising success of campaigns of John McCain in 2000. Both the Dean and McCain organizations were praised for their use of the Web to organize at the “grass-roots” level as well as their accomplishment in raising money. The current paper examines the unique social network ties that are created through the use of social software (i.e. blogs, email, instant messaging, meetup.com), specifically focusing on its use by political campaigns to engage potential voters in what could be considered a growing electronic democracy. Media richness is also taken into account.
Full Article Text: pdf Text
Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
Posted in Politics
, Digital Culture
, internet
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