Post relacionados con el tag: USA

Vote With Your Dollars! – Corporate Political Contributions infographic

via cool infographics

Vote With Your Dollars, is a corporate political contributions map.  Using the public data from the Center for Responsive Politics (2004-2008), GoodGuide.com has plotted the balance of contributions from companies.  Mouse-over a specific company logo to see the detailed data (like Dell above).

FedThred: Participación ciudadana en el Registro Federal de EEUU

Via #oGov

Recientemente se anunciaba el lanzamiento del portal Data.gov del gobierno de EEUU, desde el que se ofrece información pública en diversos formatos. Aprovechando que el Registro Federal de EEUU empezó a publicar sus datos en formato XML, el centro tecnológico de la Universidad de Princeton los ha importado y adaptado a una web en la que los ciudadanos pueden opinar, buscar documentos y suscribirse a contenidos específicos. La puesta en marcha de FedThread se produjo en sólo diez días.

El Registro Federal es la publicación diaria oficial de las agencias federales, entre otras organizaciones, para dar a conocer el trabajo del gobierno, al margen de los medios de comunicación. La novedad de la página web es que permite hacer anotaciones en cualquier párrafo de las publicaciones e interactuar, aportando un nuevo valor al gobierno.

fedthreadcap

Otras ventajas son la búsqueda avanzada por texto, fecha, o agencias, y sobre todo, configurar feeds a medida, para una búsqueda determinada o para seguir via RSS las conversaciones en torno a una notificación del gobierno.

Does your social class determine your online social network?

Via: CNN.COM

Like a lot of people, Anna Owens began using MySpace more than four years ago to keep in touch with friends who weren’t in college.

Our real-world friendships are often a reflection of who we connect with online, experts say.

Our real-world friendships are often a reflection of who we connect with online, experts say.

But soon she felt too old for the social-networking site, and the customizable pages with music that were fun at first began to annoy her. By the time she graduated from the University of Puget Sound, Owens’ classmates weren’t on MySpace — they were on Facebook.

Throughout graduate school and beyond, as her network began to expand, Owens ceased using MySpace altogether. Facebook had come to represent the whole of her social and professional universe.

“MySpace has one population, Facebook has another,” said the 26-year-old, who works for an affordable-housing nonprofit in San Francisco, California. “Blue-collar, part-time workers might like the appeal of MySpace more — it definitely depends on who you meet and what they use; that’s what motivates people to join and stay interested.”

Is there a class divide online? Research suggests yes. A recent study by market research firm Nielsen Claritas found that people in more affluent demographics are 25 percent more likely to be found friending on Facebook, while the less affluent are 37 percent more likely to connect on MySpace.

More specifically, almost 23 percent of Facebook users earn more than $100,000 a year, compared to slightly more than 16 percent of MySpace users. On the other end of the spectrum, 37 percent of MySpace members earn less than $50,000 annually, compared with about 28 percent of Facebook users.

Social networking by the numbers

Users with household income above $75,000
Facebook — 41.74 percent
MySpace — 32.38 percent
LinkedIn — 58.35 percent
Twitter — 43.34 percent

Users with household income under $50,000
Facebook — 28.42 percent
MySpace — 37.13 percent
LinkedIn — 17.34 percent
Twitter — 28.36 percent

Female users
Facebook — 56.33 percent
MySpace — 56.69 percent
LinkedIn — 48.11percent
Twitter — 53.59 percent

Users aged 18 to 24
Facebook — 10.27 percent
MySpace — 15.46 percent
LinkedIn — 3.99 percent
Twitter — 9.51percent

Users aged 35 to 49
Facebook — 31.54 percent
MySpace — 29.09 percent
LinkedIn — 43.64 percent
Twitter — 34.02 percent

Source: The Nielsen Co.

MySpace users tend to be “in middle-class, blue-collar neighborhoods,” said Mike Mancini, vice president of data product management for Nielsen, which used an online panel of more than 200,000 social media users in the United States in August. “They’re on their way up, or perhaps not college educated.”

By contrast, Mancini said, “Facebook [use] goes off the charts in the upscale suburbs,” driven by a demographic that for Nielsen is represented by white or Asian married couples between the ages of 45-64 with kids and high levels of education.

Even more affluent are users of Twitter, the microblogging site, and LinkedIn, a networking site geared to white-collar professionals. Almost 38 percent of LinkedIn users earn more than $100,000 a year.

Nielsen also found a strong overlap between those who use Facebook and those who use LinkedIn, Mancini said.

Nielsen isn’t the first to find this trend. Ethnographer danah boyd, who does not capitalize her name, said she watched the class divide emerge while conducting research of American teens’ use of social networks in 2006.

When she began, she noticed the high school students all used MySpace, but by the end of the school year, they were switching to Facebook.

When boyd asked why, the students replied with reasons similar to Owens: “the features were better; MySpace is dangerous and Facebook is safe; my friends are here,” boyd recalled.

And then, boyd said, “a young woman, living in a small historical town in Massachussetts said to me, ‘I don’t mean to be a racist or anything, but MySpace is like, ghetto.’” For boyd, that’s when it clicked.

“It’s not a matter of choice between Facebook and MySpace, it was a movement to Facebook from MySpace,” she said, a movement that largely included the educated and the upper-class.

So why do our online worlds, unencumbered by what separates us in daily life, reflect humans’ tendency to stick with what — and who — they know?

A lot of it has to do with the disparate beginnings of MySpace and Facebook, said Adam Ostrow, editor-in-chief of Mashable, a blog about social media. Facebook originated at Harvard University and was limited at first to students at approved colleges before opening itself to the public in September 2006.

MySpace, on the other hand, had a “come one, come all” policy and made a mad dash towards monetization, Ostrow said. “They used a lot of banner ads without regard to the quality, and it really diminished the value [of the site] for the more tech-savvy demographic.”

And while the Internet can build bridges between people on opposite sides of the globe, we still tend to connect with the same people through online social networks who we connect with offline, said technology writer and blogger Sarah Perez.

“It’s effectively a mirror to our real world,” she told CNN. “Social networks are the online version of what kids do after school.”

These social-networking divides are worrisome to boyd, who wrote “Taken Out of Context: American Teen Sociality in Networked Publics.” Instead of allowing us to cross the boundaries that exist in our everyday lives, these online class differences threaten to carry those boundaries into the future.

“The social-network infrastructure is going to be a part of everything going forward, just like [Web] search is,” boyd said. “The Internet is not this great equalizer that rids us of the problems of the physical world — the Internet mirrors and magnifies them. The divisions that we have in everyday life are going to manifest themselves online.”

Jason Kaufman, a research science fellow with the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, examined the Facebook profiles of a group of college students over four years and found that even within Facebook, there’s evidence of self-segregation.

Multiracial students tended to have more Facebook friends than students of other backgrounds and were often the sole connection between white and black circles, Kaufman said.

Nonetheless, Kaufman feels that social networks may one day help us overcome our instinct to associate with those who share our income level, education, or racial background.

“I think it’s fair to say that the Web has great potential to at least mitigate everyday tendencies towards self-segregation and social exclusion,” Kaufman said. “In some ways, [Facebook] levels the playing field of friendship stratification. In the real world, you have very close friends and then there are those you just say “Hi” to when you pass them on the street.

“The playing field is a lot more level in that you can find yourself having a wall-to-wall exchange with just an acquaintance. If you pick up the unlikely friend, not of your race or income bracket, the network may [help you] establish a more active friendship than if you met them in real life.”

But MySpace’s users still find something appealing about MySpace that they don’t about Facebook, and it may have nothing to do with class or race, blogger Perez said.

“It’s not just the demographics that have people picking one over the other,” Perez said. “It also comes down to what activities you like. If you like music, you’ll still be on MySpace. If you’re more into applications, then you might go to Facebook because you’re addicted to Mafia Wars or whatever.”

In the end, boyd isn’t as concerned about the reasons behind these divisions online as she is about the consequences of people only networking within their chosen social-media groups.

“Friendships and family relationships are socially divided; people self-segregate to deal with racism sometimes,” she said. “Okay, fine: We’ve made a decision to self-segregate, but what happens when politicians go on Facebook and think they’re reaching the whole public? What happens when colleges only go on Facebook to promote?”

When and if that does happen, Mashable’s Ostrow said, we’ll know perhaps we’ve given social networks more credit than they’re worth. “When it comes to information, I don’t think social networks are the best source for that. The Internet is so open,” said Ostrow, who believes users would go beyond their networks to search out information online.

If you’re looking to branch out of your social network box, your best option may be Twitter. Nielsen’s survey didn’t find a dominant social class on Twitter as much as they found a geographical one: Those who use Twitter are more likely to live in an urban area where there’s greater access to wireless network coverage, Mancini said.

“The simplicity of Twitter definitely creates less of a divide, because it’s not a relationship like it is on MySpace or Facebook,” Ostrow said. “If you live in the middle of nowhere or you live in a city, you can follow anyone about anything.”

NYC Mayor Bloomberg Announces Several IT Projects

Via Government Technology

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced today his Connected City Initiative, a host of IT projects designed to make citizen interaction with local government easier and more Web-centric. The New York city Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT) will administrate most of the projects.

The mayor premiered a new iPhone application enabling citizens to submit certain types of 311 complaints from the Apple phones and to attach pictures to those submissions. The iPhone component expands upon a 311 Web interface that New York introduced last July. The updated version taps the iPhone’s GPS system to tell the city exactly where the user was when he or she sent the complaint. Citizens can override that and manually enter the location if they’re no longer standing in the location of what they’re reporting. The application requests the citizen’s e-mail address to offer an update after the situation has been resolved, but that is optional.

“We like to follow up with the user and let them know their complaint has been e-mailed,” said Paul Cosgrave, commissioner of DoITT.

The agency plans to offer more 311 services online. Currently only half of the city’s 311 offerings are accessible on the Web. New York also plans to disseminate more 311-related data on social networks, like Twitter, and to answer more questions on social networks as well. DoITT plans to help develop neighborhood wiki sites for citizens to share technology ideas for solving various New York-related problems.

The city will soon have a more multilingual presence online. Agencies that have direct interaction with citizens will be required to translate “essential” documents and post them on their Web sites with translated descriptions for each document. The project is set for completion by the end of 2010. The city will also build a Web site featuring information about municipal services of importance to immigrants available through applications and notices in English, Spanish, Russian and Chinese.

Server consolidation fever has finally hit the Big Apple. DoITT hopes to save roughly $30 million annually in energy costs by consolidating 55 non-public safety data centers down to a single-digit figure yet to be determined, according to Cosgrave. Maintaining 55 data centers that serve 42 agencies is also costly and inefficient, said Cosgrave.

The mayor’s Connected City Initiative includes a program called NYC Connected Learning designed to bridge the digital divide. NYC Connected Learning will offer low-income sixth-graders computers, training and free Internet access to special e-mail accounts and select learning sites. New York aims to deploy updated technology in libraries, community centers and various other centers of activity within low-income areas. DoITT will administrate the program, but stimulus money and corporate sponsorships are expected to fund it.

IT is set to play a role in Bloomberg’s strategy to improve parking, announced earlier this week. The city plans to create an application that would alert drivers to available parking spaces as they search from behind the wheel. Cosgrave said the DoITT was still exploring a technological way to do that, but it would likely be connected to the city’s credit card-reading parking meters. Additionally the mayor’s parking agenda includes a plan for enabling citizens to pay parking meters from smartphones online. This means a driver needing more time on the meter while at a checkout counter or in a meeting could put more money on the meter without racing back to the street, explained Cosgrave.

SF311 – Caso de exito

Presupuesto

El diario Los Angeles Times lanzo una aplicacion para balancear el presupuesto del estado, proponiendole a los ciudadanos que la cosa no es tan simple como parece.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-statebudget-fl,0,95571.htmlstory

Try your hand at closing California’s budget shortfall, now estimated at $26.3 billion. It’s not easy, but it can be done. Cut spending, raise taxes and/or borrow to get the state out of the red. For each choice — drawn from proposals from across the political spectrum — we’ve tried to give some sense of the effects. As you craft your proposal, the Deficit Meter will show your progress.

State budget balancer

Try your hand at closing CaliforniaÂ’s budget shortfall, now estimated at $26.3 billion. ItÂ’s not easy, but it can be done. Cut spending, raise taxes and/or borrow to get the state out of the red. For each choice — drawn from proposals from across the political spectrum — weÂ’ve tried to give some sense of the effects. As you craft your proposal, the Deficit Meter will show your progress.

Honolulu Cuts Costs With First All-Digital Election in the U.S.

via GovTech

In May 2009, the city and county of Honolulu tried a different approach for electing members of its Neighborhood Boards. Instead of e-voting machines, residents voted either online or by phone. No paper ballots were available. The all-digital election — which may be the first of its type in the United States — didn’t come about because the government sought to advance technology. The move was driven by a more pedestrian reason: budget cuts.

Read More @ http://www.govtech.com/gt/articles/726837?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=link