by Kelly Ferraro
Category: Digital Influence, Events
Transparency, access, engagement, participation, and collaboration are the common themes that tied together the nine different presentations during today’s Gov 2.0 Summit session “Fueling the Innovation Economy“.
During the session, representatives ranging from the U.S. Department of Education, to TED (or, as this month’s Fast Company calls it - “The New Harvard“) shared their respective formulas and designs for creating a more open, collaborative, engaged world that match our nation’s democratic ideals.
I have to admit that I was most excited to listen to June Cohen, executive producer of TED. During her 18-minute speech, she shared the wildly influential non-profit’s secret to success: radical openness.
Sound familiar?
by Virginia Miracle
Category: Events
The theme throughout all the answers to TED 2010’s title “What the World Needs Now”was the need for innovation in everything from nuclear energy to education to foreign aid to disease prevention to music to graphic design. So where does the world need to innovate?
by Virginia Miracle
Category: Digital Reputation
Day 2 of TED2010 covered everything from suspended animation in humans to the need for better democratic argument in our society. What continues to be top of mind, however, are issues of id and identity. These were touched on in some way by 4chan founder Christopher “moot” Poole, game designer Jan McGonigal, and multiple demos from both Google and MSFT.
4chan is an insanely popular and prolific anonymous imageboard that has no memory or archive - threads are deleted after a few days. While I don’t know what the causal relationship is, obscenity, porn, and rage run rampant in the environment of anonymity and inpermanence. Is it a collective online id? If you could say or post whatever makes you feel good regardless of how it will make you look or impact reputation, who would you be online? Maybe, but its not entirely bad - the community has come together and organized to do everything from protest scientology to using online tools to find and punish a board member who uploaded a video of abusing his cat. The community even organized to game Time.com’s voting system for 100 most influential people and got their founder a #1 berth. Now, “moot” is afraid that the coming specter of universal online identity will make havens like 4chan an endangered species.
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by Virginia Miracle
Category: Events

It would be impossible to wrap up the first day of TED in 1 post. Themes emerged around the power of diet (to do everything from prevent angiogenesis leading to cancer to reversing childhood obesity), taking scientific lessons from space and spiders to improve our daily lives, and the Nobel-winner-documented delta between happiness and economics (hint: means, not end).
The theme that is most relevant to our ongoing discussion here, however, is the possible societal echoes of the transparency that social media facilitates. continue reading
Crossing the Pond Working with the Media in the UK and USA