Presentation to the State Legislative Leaders Foundation (SLLF)
and the Holloran Center for Ethical Leadership's Professions 2015 Upper Midwest Ethics & Leadership Summit (University of St. Thomas School of Law)
3. The New, New Brave New World Aldous Huxley
Is it better to be happy or free?
A dystopian view of science, technology,
conditioning and the future of society
written in 1931
11. Snapchat: Ephemeral and Wildly Popular DMR, August 2015
Active Users: 100 million
Proportion that are Women: 70%
Snaps per day: 400 Million
Photos per second: 8,796
Proportion of all US Social Users: 18%
Engineered not be retained.
14. A US Governor, broadcasting live from Cuba, using his phone
@AsaHutchinson
15. Get Personal – and get out of the FB Suburbs Kik, Tango, WhatsApp
16. A Startup that Knows You, and Coaches on How to Talk to Me
17. Time Matters US Department of Labor
Facebook / eMarkerter.com
Average time in daily activities
Phone calls and emails
:09Civic and religious activities
:19Social Media
:21
18. Time Really Matters Seabourne
Information Providing
Information Seeking
7 Days
21. The Fishbowl has gone Social Flickr: Thomas Hawk
Think of Social
Media as the New
Open Meeting
No Hate Speech
No Commercial
Speech
No Campaigning
Social Mentions
are:
(a) Public Records,
(in most
states); and,
(b) Documents of
the 21st Century
22. Watch What You Say and How You Say It Flickr socialmedia_nl
29. What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Original caption on Instagram
As it First Appeared on Her Official Twitter account
Account
@nikkihaley
After the Twitter Fail, a Second Try
41. 1. Have a social media policy
2. Define the purpose and conditions of use
3. Interns as necessary but not necessarily interns alone
4. “Haters gonna Hate”: but as the kid’s say, “Let it go.”
• Criticism is protected speech
• Respond respectfully and responsibly
• Do not use official means to respond to personal attacks
5. Social posts are not your own: You are making policy
statements every time you speak, write, tweet, retweet (RT),
mention or use emoticons or emoji or even hit the “Like” or
forthcoming “Empathy” button
6. No posting after 3:00AM.
Doing Social In Public: 6 Takeaways` GovTech Social
42. One City’s Social Media Comment PolicyCity of Evanston Social Media Policy Link: ow.ly/ubea
The purpose of this social media site(s) is to provide information about City of Evanston services and
programs, as well as other information that is of public interest to residents, businesses and visitors. We
encourage you to submit your questions, comments, and concerns, but please note this is a moderated
online discussion site and not a public forum.
City of Evanston reserves the right to delete these kinds of submissions:
1. Vulgar language;
2. Personal attacks of any kind;
3. Comments or content that promotes, fosters, or perpetuates discrimination on the basis of race, creed,
color, age, religion, gender, marital status, genetics, status with regard to public assistance, national
origin, physical or intellectual disability or sexual orientation;
4. Spam or links to other sites;
5. Discussion not relevant to topic
6. Advocates illegal activity;
7. Promote particular services, products, or political organizations or causes;
8. Infringe on copyrights or trademarks;
9. Personally identifiable medical information; or
10. Information that may compromise the safety, security or proceedings of public systems or any criminal
or civil investigations.
43. Manage Risk and Stay Safe through Social Archiving`
Social Mentions and
Comments are
Public Records …
treat them that way
45. Going Social in Public
Dedicated Channel on GovTech
Monthly Newsletter
Podcast
govtech.com/social
46. Still at the Beginning of Something Big
Paul W. Taylor
@pwtaylor
ptaylor@erepublic.com
Chief Content Officer
Presentation available at
pwt.net/speaking
Editor's Notes
This is a story of technological, societal, and behavioral changes
Much of which taps social side of the Internet – social matters because it returns to the unique attribute of the Internet – that is two-way engagement.
Digital engagement is a boon for public life – it also sets traps for public officials, which we will illustrate and suggest safeguards to help prevent you ending in the ditch….
Finally, I’d like to introduce you to a joint project between SLLF and Governing that was conceived at this event a year ago.
Plus AI is coming so it can be your virtual assistant and anticipate what you are looking for
Simple. Personal,.Real-time Messaging
September 29,2015 - A US governor, broadcasting live from Cuba, using his phone. A sentence that would have been impossible as little as 18 months ago.
Simple. Personal. Real Time Messaging
Crystal is a tech startup that scrapes the web for a person's online information to analyze his or her personality. Its purpose is to help people interact more effectively with one another.
Founder Drew D'Agostino came up with the idea for Crystal to suit his own needs. He was heading up an engineering team at a software company and wanted a better way to foster work relationships. Crystal wasn't meant to be a stand-alone business -- D'Agostino was simply trying to understand his coworkers.
"I figured out a way to detect people's personalities based on anything they've had written about themselves online," he said, of the original prototype.
Using available information, Crystal assigns a person to one of 64 different personality types. It provides one sentence about communication style, then breaks down how to speak to that person, how to email them, work with them, recruit them and more.
(September 15, 2015) Mayor Greg Fischer of Louisville, Kentucky had a thought he wanted to share with the world the other morning while he was doing what many of us do when our morning coffee has worked its ineffable magic.
So, Fischer — who was reading an article in the Louisville Courier-Journal about the city’s negotiations with Google Fiber — shot a photo of a graphic he found “innovative” and tweeted it.
The trouble is that Fischer neglected to crop the photo so that viewers wouldn’t realize it was taken while the was on the toilet with the Courier-Journal in his lap and his pants around his mayoral ankles.