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BHO, JSM advisers tweet-debating tech policy tonight. Useless—like Twitter. How debate with 140 char limit? http://tinyurl.com/6ypjh8 about 0 minutes ago from Trailhead
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Barack Obama just won the anonymous blog commenter vote. In
his tech plan (PDF)
released Wednesday, Obama pledged to give Americans “an opportunity to review
and comment on the White House website for five days before signing any
non-emergency legislation.” I can hardly wait for the comment war between
ObamaIsHott245 and BarackSux666.
The initiative is a small piece of a progressive Obama plan
that open-Internet
advocates love. He wants to build digital literacy, outsource government
problems to expert citizens (open-source style), and beef up the nation’s
broadband infrastructure to compete globally. The White House message board,
though, seems to be one of the most innovative pieces. It’s unclear whether
President Obama would ever sit down and read these things, but an Obama
spokesman told me it would emphasize that Americans have a digital seat around
the legislative table. I doubt Obama's reasoning behind vetoing legislation would be, "The Internet told me to."
Obama’s spokesman didn’t have details, though, about how the
White House would moderate these posts. Imagine if an elementary school kid is
surfing the Web to do research on the executive branch. He heads over to
WhiteHouse.gov to do some research and sees a message inviting him to, “Tell
President Obama what you think of the immigration legislation on his desk!” God
only knows what he’ll see when he clicks on the link.
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