[Air-L] Local content, interactivity, geotagging, donating, advocacy, and more
Steven Clift
slc at publicus.net
Tue Oct 28 08:08:26 PDT 2008
I am putting together some recommendations this week for a major
national U.S. foundation and I'd like to be able to cite a few current
statistics about forms on local online participation.
I am interested in any baseline numbers you've discovered/know about
related to various local online/participation activities, like:
1. The percentage of adult Internet users who have given their e-mail
address to a neighbor, sent/received an e-mail with a neighbor
2. The percentage who have e-mailed local elected officials, signed a
local online petition
3. The percentage who have joined a local online group/forum/e-list
4. The percentage of blogs that post regularly about their local
community (placeblogs), percent of all "open" blogs that are political
blogs and at what level of politics they focus on
5. Comparative features on local online news sites - Comparisons of
reader comment policies/systems
6. Current attitudes of local elected officials about forms of online
participation, e-mail, participatory democracy generally, etc.
7. Percentage of people who have either located a local charity online
then volunteered, or have donated online to a local charity/cause
8. Percentage of people who receive an e-mail newsletter or updates from
the local government, local media site, local religious group, other
local groups
Also, I am interested in reviews of current trends related to local
content generation, particularly "user-generated content" of particular
interest to local communities, as well as local search, the use of
geotagging, and anything that seems to establish critical mass
awareness/use of content and interactivity where geography is a primary
determinate of relevancy. Instead of using the Internet to go to the
world or simply replicate/enhance private family and personal life
networks online, how are (can) people use the Internet (and related
technologies) to "come home" and be part of "real" public life?
In addition to posting on the list if you like, please send any replies
to: clift at publicus.net
Steven Clift
http://stevenclift.com
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