The Web on the Candidates
The Children are Our Future. And Election Oracles: If you were born before, oh, 1975, you might not be familiar with Channel One. Born after, and you probably know it's an in-class news and advertising network beamed out to millions of American school kids. For the fourth time, the network is holding a mock online election that asks students for their presidential picks, a project called One Vote. Results will be released next Wednesday, October 29th. Why might you particularly care? Well, because, according to the network, the contest has correctly predicted the presidential winner of the three closely-contested elections of 1992, 2000, and 2004. If you can't wait until next week, check out the results of Nickelodeon's "Kids Pick the President" poll. With more than two million votes counted, the winner is Obama -- and they've been right four out of the last five races. #
The Candidates on the Web
Average Joe's 15 Days of Fame?: The McCain campaign has launched an "I'm Joe the Plumber" video contest, the winner of which will, the campaign says, be used in a TV ad. "Be creative!," team McCain urges, asking participants to answer the question "how would Barack Obama's plan to "spread the wealth around" hurt you?" But the videos aren't displayed on YouTube or voted on on JohnMcCain.com -- they're sent directly into the campaign, which might cut down on the chance that wisenheimers will create video spoofs. Though that's not stopping some folks. Jack & Jill Politics' Baratunde Thurston, whose video submission is the first Google search result for "Joe the Plumber" video contest, cleverly uses the contest as a chance to redirect people to The Obama campaign's Tax Calculator. #
Searching for Obama's Small Donors: Obama's $150 million September haul might be sparking much interest and analysis, but the letter of campaign finance law means that the campaign isn't compelled by any legal authority to disclose the many contributions falling under the $200 mark. As Thomas Pierce notes on NPR's Vox Politics blog, the Republican National Committee is calling on Obama to go beyond the law and disclose small donors. For it's part, the RNC says its hard at work on a database of small donors to the GOP that will be updated within a day that the dollars are chipped into the party's kitty. #
Counting Chickens CTOs: BusinessWeek's Tom Lowry stops to consider who might fill the oft-discussed role of Chief Technology Officer in an Obama administration, dropping names like Vint Cerf (Google), Steve Ballmer (Microsoft), and Jeff Bezos (Amazon). Tom also explores who might ascend to the top of the FCC chair, which, if old-school Washington isn't completely upended, will likely be a more powerful post in the near term. And in a blog post, Robert Scoble points to a video conversation with Stanford's Larry Lessig on what a cabinet-level CTO job would entail. Larry, you'll note, says he's not the right person for the post, but stops well short of a Shermanesque statement. (Be sure to check out the comments on the post, for a healthy discussion about the chief technologist role and candidates.) Perhaps another contender? Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who recently hopped on the campaign trail on Obama's behalf. #
TechCongress and Beyond
In Case You Missed It...
Alan Rosenblatt was surprised recently to find that he himself was the presidential favorite of voters in AARP's latest video. You might have seen other "you're the candidate" stuff before, but the AARP's is particularly well done and the message of grassroots change is reinforced by the neat special effects. But umm, seriously -- how'd they get that little boy to scrawl my name in crayon?
Micah Sifry takes some pokes at Google's Eric Schmidt's argument, amplified by Arianna Huffington, that thanks to the Internet we're witnessing "the end of Rovian politics." While saying that we're indeed seeing "a networked public sphere that continuously scours the world for interesting information and collectively bubbles the most important stuff to greater view," Micah questions whether the Internet yet deserves its reputation as slayer of all things untrue.
Also from Micah -- a gift of "Rebooting America" to a disenchanted hedge fund manager who now says "the system is clearly broken."
And Nancy Scola has an update on the Twitter vote report project which includes a rundown of the remarkable collection of partner organizations now assembled and a look at what some ingenious developers are whipping up.