Keynote at SXSW Interactive 2012 Panel about Latinamerican Civic Media Experiences and Challenges.
Presentación en panel Experiencias y desafíos de medios cívicos en Latinoamérica. SXSW Interactivo 2012.
This is Poderopedia, we map who is who in business and politics in Latinameri...Poderopedia.org
May 2014 update on our journey since we launched Poderopedia.org, a open source non profit project to map who is who in business and politics all over the world starting in Latinamerica. You can create a Poderopedia chapter in your country. Join us to promote transparency, accountability and expose potential conflicts of interest and corruption. Ping us on Twitter @poderopedia Facebook.com/poderopedia or via Poderopedia.org
An overview presentation about using social media and social networking for social causes that I gave for the Dallas Social Venture Partners on Feb. 5, 2010.
The State of Social Media in Federal Government - April 2012GovLoop
The document discusses the increasing use of social media in government to improve transparency, engage citizens, and respond to issues in real-time. It provides statistics on how Americans use social media and highlights 5 mega trends transforming government, including demands for transparency, citizen engagement, humanizing government interactions, crisis management, and real-time response. The document also offers tips for integrating social media and leveraging existing resources.
The document discusses the potential consequences of open public data and presents differing scenarios. It outlines both positive outcomes like transparency, new services, and citizen empowerment, as well as potential negative consequences like unequal access to data and privatization of public services. The document explores levers that could influence these outcomes, such as data licensing and public sector funding, and calls for an ongoing discussion on managing open data.
Organizations should (1) articulate clear goals for their digital storytelling, such as increasing donations or volunteer recruitment. They should (2) identify their target audiences and understand those audiences' interests and motivations. Finally, organizations should (3) set specific, measurable objectives for their storytelling, such as getting 1,000 shares of a story on social media. Developing a clear strategy is necessary to craft engaging content and reach the right people.
Few could argue that stortelling is a powerful tool to inspire action and change, and to influence thought leaders and decision makers. The shape and delivery of stories has also shifted dramatically in the digital era. Long-form narrative and conventionalism journalism now share a stage with messages 140 characters or images that disappear in seconds after they are opened. There have never been more ways to reach audiences, but it's also never been more difficult to really reach them.
This is Poderopedia, we map who is who in business and politics in Latinameri...Poderopedia.org
May 2014 update on our journey since we launched Poderopedia.org, a open source non profit project to map who is who in business and politics all over the world starting in Latinamerica. You can create a Poderopedia chapter in your country. Join us to promote transparency, accountability and expose potential conflicts of interest and corruption. Ping us on Twitter @poderopedia Facebook.com/poderopedia or via Poderopedia.org
An overview presentation about using social media and social networking for social causes that I gave for the Dallas Social Venture Partners on Feb. 5, 2010.
The State of Social Media in Federal Government - April 2012GovLoop
The document discusses the increasing use of social media in government to improve transparency, engage citizens, and respond to issues in real-time. It provides statistics on how Americans use social media and highlights 5 mega trends transforming government, including demands for transparency, citizen engagement, humanizing government interactions, crisis management, and real-time response. The document also offers tips for integrating social media and leveraging existing resources.
The document discusses the potential consequences of open public data and presents differing scenarios. It outlines both positive outcomes like transparency, new services, and citizen empowerment, as well as potential negative consequences like unequal access to data and privatization of public services. The document explores levers that could influence these outcomes, such as data licensing and public sector funding, and calls for an ongoing discussion on managing open data.
Organizations should (1) articulate clear goals for their digital storytelling, such as increasing donations or volunteer recruitment. They should (2) identify their target audiences and understand those audiences' interests and motivations. Finally, organizations should (3) set specific, measurable objectives for their storytelling, such as getting 1,000 shares of a story on social media. Developing a clear strategy is necessary to craft engaging content and reach the right people.
Few could argue that stortelling is a powerful tool to inspire action and change, and to influence thought leaders and decision makers. The shape and delivery of stories has also shifted dramatically in the digital era. Long-form narrative and conventionalism journalism now share a stage with messages 140 characters or images that disappear in seconds after they are opened. There have never been more ways to reach audiences, but it's also never been more difficult to really reach them.
Ligado nos Políticos at ESWC'2011 WorkshopPablo Mendes
Publishing Linked Data from Brazilian Politicians on the Web
Lucas de Ramos Araújo
Pablo N. Mendes
Jairo Francisco de Souza
At the Workshop on Semantics in Governance and Policy Modelling, Extended Semantic Web Conference 2011 ESWC2010.
May 30, 2011 - Crete, Greece
The Secret to Increasing Your NPO’s Online Donations using Social MediaSarah M Worthy
This presentation shares how nonprofit organizations can best use social media within your online marketing and fundraising efforts. The objective is to show you how making some small adjustments to your social media and web marketing can make big differences in your fundraising and awareness efforts.
Find additional online resources for getting the most out of your online social media marketing at http://tendenci.com/social-strategy.
navigating the new social: Gov 2.0 and community engagementPatrick McCormick
This document summarizes a presentation about navigating government 2.0 and community engagement. It discusses how governments are evolving to become more open, collaborative and co-productive by utilizing new technologies and tools. It explores how citizen expectations have changed with the rise of the internet and how governments need to adapt to better meet public needs and build trust through open engagement and sharing information and data. The presentation provides examples of how governments can foster collaboration internally and with citizens by encouraging content creation, gathering ideas and feedback openly, and working across boundaries to solve problems.
The document discusses the evolution of social media and web 2.0 from static websites to platforms that enable user generated content and participation. It provides statistics on the growth of major social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter. The document advocates for dental organizations like CDHA to engage in social media to remain relevant to younger members and the public who access information online. It summarizes CDHA's current social media presence and strategies for sharing information and engaging members on various platforms. Metrics like Klout scores are presented to demonstrate CDHA is a leader in online engagement among dental organizations.
Advocating for Philanthropy: Policy and the Industry InfrastructureLucy Bernholz
This document discusses the philanthropic infrastructure and its capacity for policy advocacy. It finds that the current infrastructure is isolated, inwardly focused, duplicative, and reactionary. It could be strengthened by building relationships with adjacent industries, separating policy expertise from membership associations, developing a coordinated public voice, and focusing on issues beyond tax policy like digital and investment regulations. The document examines examples from journalism, B corporations, crowdfunding, and digital humanitarianism to identify ways the philanthropic infrastructure could improve its policy influence.
The document discusses how society has formed over the last 20 years based on principles of participation, collaboration, and hackability enabled by new technologies on the Internet. It faces unique challenges that it responds to by developing new forms of organization, power distribution, and governing focused on sustainability, transparency, and efficiency. These experiences and technologies can now be applied outside of the Internet.
Social media and health care november 14, 2013ArCompany
Health Care: Impacts of Social Media and the demands of the Industry
The world of healthcare is about to experience an upheaval. Here is what is happening:
an aging population
multiple chronic conditions including hypertension, arthritis, heart disease, cancer, and diabetes
a growing strain on existing healthcare infrastructure
These days the value of information provided by peers and communities supersedes information available by companies and organizations.
In the coming years, the demands on this industry will require its stakeholders to, not only, understand where these resources reside, and what they’re providing, but also how to become part of the community to provide value and solutions. How is this going to affect government programs? How will this impact Health Care brands and pharmaceuticals? Who’s doing it right today? or How are companies like GE Health Care and their Get Fit Program making social media work for them?
This session will provide an overview of online activity and discussion within the Health Care industry, what it means for organizations, services and brands and what they need to do to adapt to the increasing demands if its population. The session will also provide case examples of organizations doing it right and how your organization can take steps to building community and credibility in this new landscape.
You should attend this session if you work in the Health care Sector: Government, NPO, Pharmaceuticals: Sales, Marketing, Operations, and Policy.
This document contains statistics about social media usage around the world from multiple sources. Some key facts presented include: there being over 1.5 billion social network users worldwide; Facebook having nearly 850 million monthly active users; and 57% of Facebook users being female. Business usage of social media is also discussed, with an increase shown in 2012 of businesses having a social media presence but also more users wanting discounts and promotions from businesses through social platforms. Predictions are made that social media will continue growing significantly.
Local governments are adopting social media for three main reasons:
1) To directly communicate with constituents, especially younger audiences who are difficult to reach through traditional methods.
2) To attract audiences who opt-in to receive information from their local government rather than passively encountering it.
3) To share information about their work at little to no cost, as social media allow them to reach many people simultaneously in a budget-friendly way. However, adoption of social media among local governments has been mixed, with about half having no official presence on Facebook or Twitter as of mid-2009.
Blueprint 2014 - Confira as previsões do Blueprint 2014 sobre filantropia e e...ONGestão
This document provides an overview and summary of Lucy Bernholz's annual industry forecast "Philanthropy and the Social Economy: Blueprint 2014". Some key points:
- Bernholz has expanded the scope of the forecast to include perspectives on philanthropy in Europe in addition to North America.
- A new framework of "digital civil society" is introduced to help understand 21st century philanthropy trends in light of digital technologies.
- Predictions for 2014 focus on regulations, data privacy, and "civic tech", or how technology enables citizen engagement.
- Emerging ethical issues around data management and use are discussed as data becomes more integral to organizations' operations.
- The document
Presentation for the NC Tech4Good conference. Discussed: What is data science? How can data science help social good organizations? What is NC Data4Good?
This document summarizes the findings of a 2003-2006 study on media consumption and public engagement. The study was replicated across Europe, the Americas, and New Zealand. It used both quantitative (surveys) and qualitative (interviews, diaries) methods to examine how people understand and engage with public issues through their media diets. Key findings included that digital media do not replace traditional sources; social media consumption does not imply online deliberation; and communicative deliberation does not necessarily lead to political engagement. The study also found that traditional models in political science do not fully capture new forms of participation emerging online.
Social Media for Public Safety Telecommunicatorsglarsen911
Instruction, advice, and resources for telecommunicators and other law enforcement agencies wanting to use Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and other social media services.
This document discusses making data more accessible to society through open data, communication, and technology. It begins by introducing an online discussion on opportunities and challenges of using open data, data visualization, and other technology approaches.
It then discusses three main ways of making data more accessible: open data, which freely shares data for public use; communication, where data is explained through storytelling and visualization to broad audiences; and interactive technology, like apps and crowdsourcing, that enable public participation as data producers. Examples like Mappiness and OpenStreetMap demonstrate how crowdsourced data can benefit society.
The document provides context for an online discussion on these topics from June 11-24, 2014 and invites participation from both experts
decidim.barcelona, from e-Participation to the Devolution of SovereigntyIsmael Peña-López
OP@LL Conference. Online participation on the local level – a comparative perspective. 13-15 December 2017. Düsseldorf: Düsseldorf Institute for Internet and Democracy
More information: http://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=3491
The letter recommends Harvey Low, the Toronto Consortium Lead for the Community Data Program, as Canada's civil society representative for the Open Government Partnership annual meeting in Brazil. It outlines Harvey's 20+ years of experience advocating for open government and data access in Canada. It also provides details about the Community Data Program, a network that facilitates data sharing and use among municipalities and civil society groups to inform public policy.
The letter recommends Harvey Low, the Toronto Consortium Lead for the Community Data Program, as Canada's civil society representative for the Open Government Partnership annual meeting. It outlines Harvey's 20+ years of experience advocating for open government and data access. It also provides details about the Community Data Program, a network that facilitates data sharing and use among municipalities and civil society groups to inform public policy. The program recognizes the need to engage non-technical users and has helped build grassroots capacity to access and use data for over 25 years.
This was the second lunch presentation of DSVP's Social Innovation Series. The presentation "Social Media for a Cause" was given by Kim Young, the forest and the trees.
Ligado nos Políticos at ESWC'2011 WorkshopPablo Mendes
Publishing Linked Data from Brazilian Politicians on the Web
Lucas de Ramos Araújo
Pablo N. Mendes
Jairo Francisco de Souza
At the Workshop on Semantics in Governance and Policy Modelling, Extended Semantic Web Conference 2011 ESWC2010.
May 30, 2011 - Crete, Greece
The Secret to Increasing Your NPO’s Online Donations using Social MediaSarah M Worthy
This presentation shares how nonprofit organizations can best use social media within your online marketing and fundraising efforts. The objective is to show you how making some small adjustments to your social media and web marketing can make big differences in your fundraising and awareness efforts.
Find additional online resources for getting the most out of your online social media marketing at http://tendenci.com/social-strategy.
navigating the new social: Gov 2.0 and community engagementPatrick McCormick
This document summarizes a presentation about navigating government 2.0 and community engagement. It discusses how governments are evolving to become more open, collaborative and co-productive by utilizing new technologies and tools. It explores how citizen expectations have changed with the rise of the internet and how governments need to adapt to better meet public needs and build trust through open engagement and sharing information and data. The presentation provides examples of how governments can foster collaboration internally and with citizens by encouraging content creation, gathering ideas and feedback openly, and working across boundaries to solve problems.
The document discusses the evolution of social media and web 2.0 from static websites to platforms that enable user generated content and participation. It provides statistics on the growth of major social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter. The document advocates for dental organizations like CDHA to engage in social media to remain relevant to younger members and the public who access information online. It summarizes CDHA's current social media presence and strategies for sharing information and engaging members on various platforms. Metrics like Klout scores are presented to demonstrate CDHA is a leader in online engagement among dental organizations.
Advocating for Philanthropy: Policy and the Industry InfrastructureLucy Bernholz
This document discusses the philanthropic infrastructure and its capacity for policy advocacy. It finds that the current infrastructure is isolated, inwardly focused, duplicative, and reactionary. It could be strengthened by building relationships with adjacent industries, separating policy expertise from membership associations, developing a coordinated public voice, and focusing on issues beyond tax policy like digital and investment regulations. The document examines examples from journalism, B corporations, crowdfunding, and digital humanitarianism to identify ways the philanthropic infrastructure could improve its policy influence.
The document discusses how society has formed over the last 20 years based on principles of participation, collaboration, and hackability enabled by new technologies on the Internet. It faces unique challenges that it responds to by developing new forms of organization, power distribution, and governing focused on sustainability, transparency, and efficiency. These experiences and technologies can now be applied outside of the Internet.
Social media and health care november 14, 2013ArCompany
Health Care: Impacts of Social Media and the demands of the Industry
The world of healthcare is about to experience an upheaval. Here is what is happening:
an aging population
multiple chronic conditions including hypertension, arthritis, heart disease, cancer, and diabetes
a growing strain on existing healthcare infrastructure
These days the value of information provided by peers and communities supersedes information available by companies and organizations.
In the coming years, the demands on this industry will require its stakeholders to, not only, understand where these resources reside, and what they’re providing, but also how to become part of the community to provide value and solutions. How is this going to affect government programs? How will this impact Health Care brands and pharmaceuticals? Who’s doing it right today? or How are companies like GE Health Care and their Get Fit Program making social media work for them?
This session will provide an overview of online activity and discussion within the Health Care industry, what it means for organizations, services and brands and what they need to do to adapt to the increasing demands if its population. The session will also provide case examples of organizations doing it right and how your organization can take steps to building community and credibility in this new landscape.
You should attend this session if you work in the Health care Sector: Government, NPO, Pharmaceuticals: Sales, Marketing, Operations, and Policy.
This document contains statistics about social media usage around the world from multiple sources. Some key facts presented include: there being over 1.5 billion social network users worldwide; Facebook having nearly 850 million monthly active users; and 57% of Facebook users being female. Business usage of social media is also discussed, with an increase shown in 2012 of businesses having a social media presence but also more users wanting discounts and promotions from businesses through social platforms. Predictions are made that social media will continue growing significantly.
Local governments are adopting social media for three main reasons:
1) To directly communicate with constituents, especially younger audiences who are difficult to reach through traditional methods.
2) To attract audiences who opt-in to receive information from their local government rather than passively encountering it.
3) To share information about their work at little to no cost, as social media allow them to reach many people simultaneously in a budget-friendly way. However, adoption of social media among local governments has been mixed, with about half having no official presence on Facebook or Twitter as of mid-2009.
Blueprint 2014 - Confira as previsões do Blueprint 2014 sobre filantropia e e...ONGestão
This document provides an overview and summary of Lucy Bernholz's annual industry forecast "Philanthropy and the Social Economy: Blueprint 2014". Some key points:
- Bernholz has expanded the scope of the forecast to include perspectives on philanthropy in Europe in addition to North America.
- A new framework of "digital civil society" is introduced to help understand 21st century philanthropy trends in light of digital technologies.
- Predictions for 2014 focus on regulations, data privacy, and "civic tech", or how technology enables citizen engagement.
- Emerging ethical issues around data management and use are discussed as data becomes more integral to organizations' operations.
- The document
Presentation for the NC Tech4Good conference. Discussed: What is data science? How can data science help social good organizations? What is NC Data4Good?
This document summarizes the findings of a 2003-2006 study on media consumption and public engagement. The study was replicated across Europe, the Americas, and New Zealand. It used both quantitative (surveys) and qualitative (interviews, diaries) methods to examine how people understand and engage with public issues through their media diets. Key findings included that digital media do not replace traditional sources; social media consumption does not imply online deliberation; and communicative deliberation does not necessarily lead to political engagement. The study also found that traditional models in political science do not fully capture new forms of participation emerging online.
Social Media for Public Safety Telecommunicatorsglarsen911
Instruction, advice, and resources for telecommunicators and other law enforcement agencies wanting to use Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and other social media services.
This document discusses making data more accessible to society through open data, communication, and technology. It begins by introducing an online discussion on opportunities and challenges of using open data, data visualization, and other technology approaches.
It then discusses three main ways of making data more accessible: open data, which freely shares data for public use; communication, where data is explained through storytelling and visualization to broad audiences; and interactive technology, like apps and crowdsourcing, that enable public participation as data producers. Examples like Mappiness and OpenStreetMap demonstrate how crowdsourced data can benefit society.
The document provides context for an online discussion on these topics from June 11-24, 2014 and invites participation from both experts
decidim.barcelona, from e-Participation to the Devolution of SovereigntyIsmael Peña-López
OP@LL Conference. Online participation on the local level – a comparative perspective. 13-15 December 2017. Düsseldorf: Düsseldorf Institute for Internet and Democracy
More information: http://ictlogy.net/bibliography/reports/projects.php?idp=3491
The letter recommends Harvey Low, the Toronto Consortium Lead for the Community Data Program, as Canada's civil society representative for the Open Government Partnership annual meeting in Brazil. It outlines Harvey's 20+ years of experience advocating for open government and data access in Canada. It also provides details about the Community Data Program, a network that facilitates data sharing and use among municipalities and civil society groups to inform public policy.
The letter recommends Harvey Low, the Toronto Consortium Lead for the Community Data Program, as Canada's civil society representative for the Open Government Partnership annual meeting. It outlines Harvey's 20+ years of experience advocating for open government and data access. It also provides details about the Community Data Program, a network that facilitates data sharing and use among municipalities and civil society groups to inform public policy. The program recognizes the need to engage non-technical users and has helped build grassroots capacity to access and use data for over 25 years.
This was the second lunch presentation of DSVP's Social Innovation Series. The presentation "Social Media for a Cause" was given by Kim Young, the forest and the trees.
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Article in The Times of Israel by Andy Blumenthal: China and Russia are commonly considered the biggest military threats to Western civilization, but I believe that is incorrect. The biggest strategic threat is a terrorist Jihadi Caliphate.
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Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
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El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
Acolyte Episodes review (TV series) The Acolyte. Learn about the influence of the program on the Star Wars world, as well as new characters and story twists.
3. Editorial and crowdsourced
database website that shows you
who is who in Chile
Keeps track of the civic, business
and political leaders of Chile
Maps the One Percent`s
connections and shows you how
they are linked to each other
9. Journalist + Users + Custom Ontology + Linked data + RDF + Triple Stores + Scraping
PROFILE
Editorial overview + Hard data sheet of an
entity + Relationship map + Sources/
Footnotes + Related documents
10. Poderopedia`s way
-We filter information from public sources and
crowdsourcing
-Scrape data from open gov and private databases
-Users help us by showing connections and unknown
facts, report mistakes and info that is not updated
-We write newsworthy profiles
-We connect the dots bewteen people, organizations
and companies
-We show you the sources
-Provide you the code and documentation
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