Politics 2.0

Prasad Ajinkya

Prasad Ajinkya

@prasad-aSUfhP Oct 22, 2024
Well, I thought that I might as well start this thread. I recently happened to check out Digg.com's Digg the Candidates module .... you can find it #-Link-Snipped-#

Its interesting to see that a lot of people are "Digg"ing what their candidates are digging. The question I am posing here is could this be used as a means of predicting the elections in anyway? And if this could be done, then can this data be used by those candidates to swing elections their way. A form of reverse PR if I may call it so.

Or am I just blabbering, eh?

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  • Kaustubh Katdare

    Kaustubh Katdare

    @thebigk Jan 8, 2008

    I just checked out the candidate module on digg. It got me thinking. What you say is true. However, I doubt if digging can be used to predict the results.

    First of all, Digg votes might represent the opinion of few thousand users of Digg. I remember that last time most of the pre-election polls had said that Dubya won't make it. But that was proved wrong.

    These are just my first impressions about the digg thing. What do others have to say about it?
  • Prasad Ajinkya

    Prasad Ajinkya

    @prasad-aSUfhP Mar 6, 2008

    Hey Biggie,

    Found one more very interesting article on a site that I am frequenting these days about a similar concept ... <a href="https://www.marketingprofs.com/8/2008-presidential-campaign-social-media-marketing-hogeboom.asp?adref=hpbasic" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer">Customer Relationships - Web 2.0 Politics: What Brands Can Learn From the 2008 Presidential Campaigns</a>
  • Ashraf HZ

    Ashraf HZ

    @Ash Mar 7, 2008

    Politics, schmolitics.. the world will indeed be a better place once an engineer becomes the president of the US.

    Malaysians are going to vote tomorrow for the national elections. But its clear the same party will win as usual *shrug*
  • Prasad Ajinkya

    Prasad Ajinkya

    @prasad-aSUfhP Mar 7, 2008

    Ohhh ... cmon Ash ... do you know in India, there actually is a political party which was started by IITians? These are engineers from the top engineering institutions of India.

    The problem is that they cannot become a national party due to limited numbers. So, they have to become affiliated to some party or the other in the end.

    How is the political situation in Malaysia?
  • Ashraf HZ

    Ashraf HZ

    @Ash Mar 7, 2008

    Oh, thats interesting! What's their philosophy like?

    Well, we have one major coalition party, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barisan_Nasional" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer">Barisan Nasional - Wikipedia</a>, which pretty much controls most of the states except one. I think such discrepency would make them too complacent to do keep some of their promises. Oh well, im not really into the mechanics of politics anyway.

    Speaking of Politics 2.0, our present PM launched a website in which the society can put their views, comments or whatever directly to him:
    #-Link-Snipped-#

    UK has something like that.. some sorta online petition thingy.
    #-Link-Snipped-#
  • mahul

    mahul

    @mahul-ZxpiLA Mar 7, 2008

    Kidakaka i was following the progress of these IITian's but i lost track some time back. Have these guys got affiliated to some other party?? if this is what they end up doing it would destroy the whole meaning of starting up in the first place.
  • Prasad Ajinkya

    Prasad Ajinkya

    @prasad-aSUfhP Mar 8, 2008

    Mahul, I said that they are not a national party. They are currently contesting in Rajasthan (Lok Paritran). They have a good reputation over there, but in the end, they have to take a call behind either of the major national parties only.

    Nice point made by Ash ... This is to all CEans, can a government be "governed" through collective public opinion .. actual democracy? Can this take place, like how UK and Malaysia are trying. Thoughts, opinions ... let them flow.