Voter-Generated Content: A Better Buzzword

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Barack Obama's Mystifying Web Presence

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Obama Teams Up with Brightcove

Steve Garfield recently announced that, according to Jeremy Allaire from Brightcove, an up-and-coming challenger to YouTube, Barack Obama's video announcing his presidential exploratory committee received 140,000 hits on Tuesday, the day he announced. That's almost 40,000 more views than the total number of views of John Edwards' announcement video on YouTube.

Clinton Ahead of the Pack?

When Hillary Clinton announced she was running for president in an online video, it was a gesture towards the undeniable fact that candidates must make a minimal effort online, and must at the very least pay lip service to the netroots and the political blogosphere. As David Weinberger recently pointed out, although Hillary calls her campaign a conversation, the execution actually suggests "a TV-style interview answering safe questions with safer answers."

2008: Daily Digest 1-30-07

We’re about to launch a new PDF blog on the 2008 presidential campaign that will focus on how the candidates are using the web, and vice versa, how voter-generated content is affecting the campaigns. One feature of the blog will be a daily digest, out each morning, that reports the latest news in both categories. What follows is a taste; stay tuned for launch details.

- The Editors

2008: The Daily Digest, 1/31/07

Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE) launches his presidential bid this morning and according to Beth Fouhy of the Associated Press, the longtime senator will announce his candidacy via online video to supporters.

While in Iowa this weekend, Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) was caught on microphone singing the national anthem out of tune, reports the New York Times' Patrick Healy. The new media that sparked a "conversation" about her announcement message quickly turned on her as the video made it to YouTube within hours.

2008: The Daily Digest, 2/2/07

Jake Tapper, senior national correspondent for ABC News, has a series of web videos outlining the historical racial insensitivities of presidential aspirant, Senator Joe Biden (D-DE).

Copies of Senator Hillary Clinton's (D-NY) "I'm in" video has appeared on YouTube and, collectively, amassed over 7,100 views, according to Donna Bogatin at ZDNet. However, the official upload, Bogatin writes, is not a "viral video sensation," registering only 550 views and eight subscribers to the "hillarydotcom" channel.

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More on the Marcotte-Edwards Non-Scandal

So, I wrote Danny Glover a note this morning about his coverage of the brouhaha online over John Edwards' hiring of Pandagon blogger Amanda Marcotte to be his campaign blog-master. (If you think this controversy isn't roiling the political blogosphere, just take a look at this over-the-top performance by A-list rightwing blogger Michele Malkin). I got a reply within minutes from Danny.

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Daily Digest 2/27/07

The Web on the Candidates

Danny Glover at AirCongress posted a 45-minute video (it's hosted on YouTube; since Google owns it, they made an exception for the 10-minute video length rule) of Hillary Clinton speaking to with Google CEO Eric Schmidt at the Google headquarters last week. According to the Mercury News, Clinton first discussed policy issues with Google execs before speaking before a crowd of 200 Google employees. Although Bill Clinton enjoyed high popularity in Silicon Valley, Hillary still needs to work for their support. "She can draw on what Bill Clinton meant to the valley; it's definitely an asset. But I don't think it's immediately or fully transferable," says Santa Clara County Assessor Larry Stone. [via AirCongress]

Chris Cilliza of the Washington Post takes a look at the battle for netroots support among Democrats and sees that, unlike 2004 when the nascent movement supported Howard Dean, "the support of the netroots is less unified this time around." His three measures of support? The fundraising numbers on Act Blue (John Edwards leads the pack with over $900,000 raised), the DailyKos monthly poll (Edwards is first place with 26; Obama trails at 25 percent), and... techPresident, who provides the MySpace stats (Obama's on top).

Daily Digest, 2/28/07

The Web on the Candidates

Heather Greenfield of Technology Daily writes about the use of Google Adwords and Google-bombing in political campaigns. Despite search-engine operators' objections, bloggers from the left and right -- people like Chris Bowers of MyDD and John Hawkins of Right Wing News -- have used Google bombing to influence Google's search results.

TechPresident blogger David All has a poll up on his site asking readers, "Which website/service will have the most impact during the 2008 Presidential campaign?" So far, 18 out of 21 voters have chosen YouTube. Giuliani advisor Patrick Ruffini rightly suggests, however, that we don't yet know what the killer app in 2008 will be: "...the killer app of 2008 hasn’t been invented yet. It will be invented in a garage in August of this year, start gaining critical mass by the end of the fourth quarter, and be on the tip of everyone’s tongue by the middle of next year."