Get My Vote: NPR’s User-Generated Political Commentary Initiative

From Andy Carvin’s Waste of Bandwidth by acarvin on 3/12/08

Eighteen months ago this week, I [Andy] started working at NPR as senior
product manager for online communities. [Andy] spent a lot of that time
working with shows on social media experiments and educating NPR staff
about the role Web 2.0 can play in journalism. But [Andy] also spent much
of the last year working on a big project – one that would have NPR
dive head-first into user-generated content. The project is called Get My Vote, an [they have] just launched a public beta of the website.

As the name suggests, the project is based around a basic premise:
what will it take for political candidates to get my vote? Every person
has their own reasons for selecting a particular candidate, their own
litmus tests, and we’re asking the public to articulate this in the
form of open letters to the candidates. Using Get My Vote, you can
upload your own commentary – audio, video or text – and talk about what
issues or concerns will drive you to the ballot box. NPR is then
planning to incorporate these commentaries into our shows throughout
the rest of the election cycle.

[They have] also designed the project in such a way that local stations –
both NPR and PBS stations – can create their own Get My Vote
initiatives on their websites by embedding Get My Vote widgets. That
way, a station can localize the project. A station in Arizona, for
example, might create a local version of Get My Vote focusing on
immigration perspectives, while a station in Massachusetts might
challenge users talk about what it would take for local mayoral
candidates to get their vote. So while most users might end up talking
about the presidential candidates, I’m hoping it’s used for state and
local races as well.

On the Get My Vote homepage,
you’ll see that we’re using a tag cloud prominently. These tags are
submitted by users when they upload their commentaries. For example, a
commentary from an Iraq war vet about healthcare for vets might include
tags like “Iraq,” “healthcare” and “Walter Reed.” The more often a
particular tag is used by commentators, the larger it appears in the
tag cloud. That way, you can get a sense of what topics and ideas are
being referenced most often by commentators. Clicking any tag also will
show you all commentaries associated with that word or phrase.

The site is now in public beta. This means that anyone can now
access the site, upload their own commentaries and explore the site in
general, but we’re still working out a few bugs and other minor fixes.
[They’re] hoping that if you have any problems with the site you’ll alert
[them] through the contact form.
Over the next few weeks [they’ll] continue to tweak the site, and soon
after that, we expect some of our shows to begin using it on air.

So when you get a chance, please visit npr.org/getmyvote, upload your own commentary and please let [them] know what you think. [Their] team is really eager to hear what you have to say. -andy

www.scribd.com (free on-line books & document sharing)

Scribd Redefining Online Documents

Scribd Platform

Scribd (pronounced skribbed) has developed a new iPaper platform you can use free, to share, store, and/or read documents.  Previously the only way to share a document was by email, sending a direct link to the document or attaching the whole document. With Scribd you can email a document without having to actually open an email program… Scribd also provides you with an embed code that allows you to share a doc by embedding it in another website. Using a flash format, it avoids file incompatibility problems that commonly arise when you send someone a document in a program (or version) that the recipient does not have. As an example, here is a 354 page book from internet law guru, Lawrence Lessig that you can read free.

Link to Document:

Title: “Lawrence Lessig – Freeculture

Eyewitness: American Originals from the National Archives

Eyewitness: American Originals from the National Archives
Drawing on rarely displayed documents, audio recordings, and film footage culled from the extensive holdings of the National Archives and its Presidential libraries, “Eyewitness” features first-person accounts of watershed moments in history.
Online exhibit

Games for Social Change: How games and video are playing well together

That was the title of a panel I attended tonight at A.U. It questioned how online games are mobilizing audiences around social issues? The panel explored how video games can double as tools for conflict resolution, and maybe even save the environment!

Here are a few examples:

PeaceMaker

challenges you to succeed as a leader where others have failed. Experience the joy of bringing peace to the Middle East or the agony of plunging the region into disaster. PeaceMaker will test your skills, assumptions and prior knowledge. Play it and you will never read the news the same way again.

http://www.peacemakergame.com/

In February they are launching a closed beta of its new online product: “Play the News”, imagine if you will Fantasy Sports meets the Evening News. As a player you can choose your role and participate in a variety of real events: domestic, global, serious news as well as softer issues and entertainment. You can gain a deeper understanding of the day’s headlines while voicing your opinion. You will be measured vs. reality as well as against the performance of other community members.

FOOD FORCE

This PDF provides a summary of the Food Force project and outlines the game’s six missions.
Download food-force-flier-front.pdf (96k)
Download food-force-flier-back.pdf (75k)

ICED
Breakthrough’s video game, (COMING SOON) puts you in the shoes of an immigrant to illustrate how unfair immigration laws deny due process and violate human rights. These laws affect all immigrants: legal residents, those fleeing persecution, students and undocumented people. Learn about the issue here.

Columbine

http://www.columbinegame.com/
A new documentary about opposition to Columbine Game:
http://www.playingcolumbine.com/
http://www.playingcolumbine.com/promo/PC30sec.mp4

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Inspire Connect Change

TakePart.com is a social action network™ where you connect actions to entertainment to make change.

Join TakePart today:

– Get inspired by entertainment: films, television, music, books and online media
– Connect relevant social actions to the entertainment you love

– Add your own user generated content and actions to the mix 

– Create your personal action dashboard + challenge yourself and others to make change

Who is Participant Media?

Participant Media, the company behind AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH; SYRIANA; GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK; DARFUR NOW; THE KITE RUNNER; CHARLIE WILSON’S WAR and the upcoming releases CHICAGO 10 and THE VISITOR, was founded of the belief that entertainment can inspire social change in the world. But Participant’s commitment to inspiring social change goes beyond producing and financing film, TV and home video content.

The company decided to establish a social action network where people interested in making a difference would have access to the information they need on a variety of issues, including those tied to Participant projects, with the ability to interact with, learn from and inform other like-minded individuals and non-profits from all over the world.


TED Talks

TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from those three worlds. Since then its scope has become ever broader. The annual conference now brings together the world’s most fascinating thinkers and doers, who are challenged to give the talk of their lives (in 18 minutes).
ted_mh.gif
This site makes available the best talks and performances from TED free. Almost 200 talks from our archive are now available, with more added each week. These videos are released under a Creative Commons license, so they can be freely shared and reposted.

iTunes U: the campus that never sleep

iTunes U has arrived, giving higher education institutions an ingenious way to
distribute audio and video content. Presentations,
performances, lectures, demonstrations, debates, tours, archival
footage…

Designed to be completely intuitive, iTunes U is based on the iTunes Store,
where millions of people already get their music, movies, and TV shows.
Now there’s an area of the iTunes Store devoted entirely to education,
where it’s easy to search thousands of audio and video files from
schools across the country. It’s for anytime and
anyplace you’ve got a Mac, a PC, or an iPod.

Already, more than half of the nation’s top 500 schools use it to
distribute their digital content.

It’s free, you just need to download and install itunes software (also free)

http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/