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Digital Democracy: Political Systems Kathy E. Gill 7 October 2008

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Page 1: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Digital Democracy: Political Systems

Kathy E. Gill

7 October 2008

Page 2: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Agenda

• Preliminaries

• Guest Lecture, Becky Bogard

• Lecture

• Discussion

• Next Week

Page 3: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Preliminaries

• 3x5 cards – jot down a question or two that might be used to focus small group discussion. Please put your name on the card, but I won’t reveal your name if I use your question.

• After Becky’s talk, some more discussion about digital democracy and technologies before discussing issues raised in our readings

• After lecture/discussion, focus on discussion leaders and projects

Page 4: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Warm Up! How A Bill Becomes Law

More Schoolhouse Rock

Page 5: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Lecture/Discussion

• Some Framing Statistics

• Digital Democracy (revisit)

• Technologies/Terms

• Politics (or government) as “business”

• Message Customization

• Policy Issues

• Summary

Page 6: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Then And Now: Web Site Growth

See LivingInternet.com. Source: Internet Systems Consortium

Page 7: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Then And Now: Who’s Online, 2001

Source: Vint Cerf, 20 May 2002

Page 8: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Then And Now: Who’s Online, 2008

Source: Internet World Stats

Page 9: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Why These Data Are Relevant:

• “The fragmentation of culture and the recurrent circularity of the hypertext leads to the individualization of cultural meaning in the communication networks. The … decentring of power, and the individualization of experience, are reflected, amplified, and codified by the fragmentation of meaning in the broken mirror of the electronic hypertext—where the only shared meaning is the meaning of sharing the network…”

Manuel Castells as quoted in A new agenda for e-democracy, Oxford Internet Institute, Forum Discussion Paper No. 4, January 2005

Page 10: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

In Moving Pictures:

Page 11: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Digital Democracy

• “Digital democracy is a kind of political culture, a political variant that must be treated as a complexly coded system for organizing and acting on public and private preferences.” – Howard, p 71

Page 12: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

“Coded System”

• Social code

• Software code

• Legal code

Page 13: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Another Take:

• Democracy is defined by Webster’s as ‘a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation.’ Electronic democracy is simply the use of technology tools to facilitate democratic activities.

• Source: A new agenda for e-democracy, Oxford Internet Institute, Forum Discussion Paper No. 4, January 2005

Page 14: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Electronic Democracy

• “E-democracy (…) covers those arrangements by which electronic communications are used by those with power and the citizens they serve to interact with each other in order to inform and modify the way that power is used. e-Democracy is NOT about paying speeding fines over the Internet (that is e-government); it IS about consulting on whether the speed limit on a particular stretch of road should be raised, lowered or left as it is. It may, one day, be used as a way of empowering citizens in the process of making major national decisions.”

• Source: A new agenda for e-democracy, Oxford Internet Institute, Forum Discussion Paper No. 4, January 2005

Page 15: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

DD: Other Phrases

• Politics Online

• Virtual State

Page 16: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Why These Issues Are Important

“The new art or science which the electronic or post-mechanical age has to invent concerns the alchemy of social change…When information moves instantly to all parts of the globe it is chemically explosive.”

- Marshall McLuhan

Page 17: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Technologies/Terms

• Relational Database

• Data Mining

• Hypermedia

• Viral

• Gatekeeper

• Technological Determinism

Page 18: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Politics As A “Business”

• Discuss:What comes to mind when you hear this phrase? What judgments are you making?

Page 19: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Accenture/Arthur Anderson

• My-Democracy.com (Howard, p38) “Scam”

• Current Homepage

• “Public Service” Industry

• Begs the question: proprietary v open source

Page 20: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Howard: Customized Web Sites

• How many folks were disturbed by the concept of web site customization: e.g., different views for a woman from Georgia than a woman from Washington?

Page 21: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Customization, Privacy

• Discuss:When and under what conditions should a commercial, private or governmental organization be allowed to gather electronic information about an individual? How can they use that information? What digital rights should reside with the individual?

• Let’s look at McCain and Obama 2008

Page 22: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: Splash = Video

Page 23: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: Spash = $

Page 24: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: Post-Sign Up

Page 25: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: Post-Sign Up

Page 26: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: One-Step Sign Up

Page 27: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: Two-Step Sign Up

Page 28: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: Now See Dashboard

Page 29: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: Not Logged In

Page 30: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: Logged In

Page 31: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: Not Logged In

Page 32: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

McCain: Logged In

Page 33: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: First Page, Not Logged In

Page 34: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: First Page (Initial Account)

Page 35: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Obama: First Page After Logged In

Page 36: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Policy Issues

• Last week we talked about Net Neutrality

• Other issues:– Privacy/Security/Digital Signatures

– Cryptography (export)

– Trademarks, Copyright, Domain Names

– Regulatory Framework

– Censorship/Filtering

• See InterPlanetary Internet, Internet Society

Page 37: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Summary

• “Digital Democracy” is an evolving concept – elaborate to make sure you’re being understood

• Technology matters. So does law. Disruptive technologies lead to pushback from the powerful.

• Don’t Be Evil should be our motto and the rubric we use to measure others’ efforts.

Page 38: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Going Forward

• Discussion Leader Sign Up

• Remember: three weekly essays – you should have the first one done no later than week 4 (to pace yourself)

• Project Ideas (example, Christy & Margery)

Page 39: Political Systems, Week01 07 2008

Blog Action Day: Poverty

• Consider becoming part of Blog Action Day on 15 October.

• It’s the second annual nonprofit event designed to unite the world's bloggers, podcasters and videocasters to discuss the same issue on the same day. Currently participating: 5,498 sites

• Promo on Vimeo