[Winona Online Democracy]


Our humble efforts in Winona, sparked by Steve Clift's talk here in April of 2000 are part of global activity. Congratulations to Steve for the recognition.
From:
http://www.politicsonline.com/pol2000/specialreports/25Changing_2003



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: SEPTEMBER 26, 2003 Contact: Phil Noble [EMAIL PROTECTED] Telephone: 1 (843) 296-1490 or David Abel [EMAIL PROTECTED] Telephone: 1 (843) 853-3002 Fax: 1 (843) 722-4283


4TH WORLD FORUM ON E-DEMOCRACY AND POLITICSONLINE ANNOUNCE THE 25 WHO ARE CHANGING THE WORLD OF INTERNET AND POLITICS Issy-les-Moulineaux, France - PoliticsOnline and the 4th World Forum on e- Democracy announce the results of its second world wide survey recognizing the top 25 individuals, organizations and companies that are having the greatest impact on the way the Internet is changing politics.

In recent years, the Internet and burgeoning information technologies
have inexorably altered our body politic, fundamentally changing the
way we do democracy. On Friday, at the 4th Annual Worldwide Forum on
Electronic Democracy, PoliticsOnline recognized the best of the best -
- the innovators and pioneers who blaze the e-political trails.

PoliticsOnline asked it's 30,000 readers and subscribers to name the
people, organizations and companies that are changing the world of
Internet and politics. From these nominations, 25 world changers and
five rising stars were selected.

"From the beginning, politics has been about two things - ideas and
the people that make these ideas realities," said PoliticsOnline
President Phil Noble, a guest speaker at the annual Worldwide Forum
on Electronic Democracy. "With this announcement, we honor the most
innovative ideas and the most influential individuals.

"With so many people doing so much in this field, narrowing the list
down to so few proved a more difficult task than we ever could have
imagined - we thank everyone that submitted nominations, and we
congratulate all those that were nominated", said Mayor Andre Santini
founder of the Forum. "As with any list of the best, debate is sure
to follow. We certainly hope it will, and that the ongoing
conversation about the Internet and politics is carried further."

Noble, PoliticsOnline and other PoliticsOnline affiliates were not
eligible for recognition.

The following is the alphabetical listing of honorees.


25 Who Are Changing the World of Internet and Politics


Al Jazeera
http://www.aljazeera.net
What began as a joint venture between the British Broadcasting
Corporation barely 10 years ago is now a self-regulated news
powerhouse. Although plagued with controversy, to many Al Jazeera has
recently been the symbol of free expression in the Middle East. The
news site is now the world's foremost uncensored Arab news service.
Since the War in Iraq, the news service has fought to say online
despite hackers and accusations.

Africa Online
http://www.africaonline.com
This African news and information site is the most comprehensive
Africa-based online news source about the continent. They provide
more information about political developments that anyone on the
continent. As such they are a vital source on information not only
for African but countless millions that want a full and fair view of
politics and the forces that are shaping the continent.

America Online
http://www.aol.com
Through the creation of comprehensive voter and government service
guides - available to all online users, not just members - AOL has
helped to change the way in which the American electorate learns
about and engages with politicians and the political process. Over 30
million voters have accessed our political content since the 2000
election. Plans for AOL's Election Guide 2004 are already under way.

BBC News and iCan team
http://news.bbc.co.uk
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) website is arguably the
leading global authority in political news. However, the broadcasting
company is venturing into new online initiatives hoping to combat
voter by funding a new online experiment in grassroots activism. The
iCan website is being designed to help citizens investigate issues
that concern them, find others who share those concerns and provide
advice and tools for organizing and engaging in the political
process. The iCan site will use public forums to help connect like-
minded citizens, and a "democracy database" packed with information
on tips for grassroots campaigning and the legislative process.

Carl Bildt
http://www.bildt.net
Carl Bildt was one of the very first leading politicians in the world
to use e-mail (in a famous correspondence with President Bill Clinton
in 1994). He also introduced an e-newsletter which quickly received
more than 10,000 subscribers - one of the largest in Europe at that
time. He has written numerous articles on Internet-related subjects
and has held a number of speeches. Among other innovative projects,
he is now working with global Internet governance issues for ICANN.

Ben Casnocha
http://www.comcate.com
Fifteen-year-old Ben Casnocha is Founder & Chairman of Comcate, Inc.
of San Francisco. After holding focus groups with local governments
for 8 months in California, Ben launched his own e-government company
and is now considered a pioneer in the Silicon Valley for sparking
the e-government vision for California governments. At such a young
age, Ben frequently speaks with governments on e-government,
technology in government, and how the Internet will affect
government's day-to-day operations and political structure.

Farai Chideya
http://www.popandpolitics.com
A multi-media journalist who has worked in print, television, and
online. Five years ago she founded PopandPolitics.com, an online
journal of news and opinion for a diverse national and international
audience. She and the site have won a MOBE IT Innovator award and
been named one of Alternet's New Media Heroes. Chideya's stereotype-
shattering 1995 book, Don't Believe the Hype: Fighting Cultural
Misinformation About African-Americans is now in its eighth printing.
Using statistics, she systematically undercuts the argument that
African-Americans are at the root of problems like crime, welfare and
drugs.

Steven Clift
http://www.publicus.net
A consultant and board chair for E-Democracy.org, Steve is a tireless
advocate for expanding the use of the Internet in both informing the
public about the political and government systems, and also in
engaging citizens and policymakers in political debate. His positive,
yet realistic outlook regarding the state of Internet engagement and
political involvement today provides both an inspiration to those who
will lead the way in the future and a sound criticism of what works,
what doesn't, and how to move forward. He has become a foremost
authority in E-democracy advancements, and his speaking engagements
and written work are a strong testament to his commitment to the
field.

Dean for America and Joe Trippi
http://www.DeanforAmerica.com
Presidential Democratic Candidate Howard Dean has used the power of
the internet to mobilize supporters and secure online donations in a
way that has never been done in politics. Dean's savvy use of
Meetup.com and the ability to get tremendous numbers to contribute
small donations has garnered over 420,000 online supporters and
millions of dollars for his campaign. Joe Trippi, Dean's campaign
manager, lives and breathes the internet and politics. Where some see
the internet as a new tool to be used for campaigning in the 21st
Century, Joe Trippi has transcended what many thought possible to
bring the Dean for America campaign to the forefront of American
politics. Joe Trippi is doing for the internet what the Kennedy-Nixon
debates did for television with regard to politics.

International Simultaneous Policy Organization
http://www.simpol.org
This is a growing political focuses on the web. Its goal is to unite
people from many political and economic paths in a bid to bring
reason back to the realm of political decision making and save our
planet from the destructive effects of rampant, uncontrolled
capitalism. The International Simultaneous Policy Organization (ISPO)
is a growing association of citizens worldwide who use their votes in
a coordinated, effective way to drive all nations to co-operate in
solving our planetary crisis. ISPO goes beyond merely demanding
greater political accountability by offering citizens a new way of
restoring genuine democracy lawfully and peacefully, one vote at a
time.

Vince Keenan
http://www.Publius.org
Keenan is responsible for one of the best political sites focused on
one geographic area, the state of Michigan. Founded in 1996 by Mr.
Keenan to explore the impact of the Internet on democracy and develop
web-based tools to enhance the exchange of ideas and information. It
is a one-stop shop for politics on every level from city to state
wide elections. All candidate information for every election in every
county, city and township in Michigan was provided to the 6 million
registered voters in Michigan.

Erkki Liikanen
europa.eu.int/comm/commissioners/liikanen/index_en.htm
European Commissioner Erkki Liikanen. His influence in the way
Internet and more largely electronic communications have been
developing in the European Union and its impact in other parts of the
world. Given his position, his impact on the Internet (and there fore
politics) in Europe and globally, is huge.

Meetup.com
http://www.Meetup.com
What started as a way to organize a local gathering of people on a
global level, MeetUp has become the key tool in building online
support for politicians. Over 650,000 people have already signed up
for MeetUps to discuss over 2,029 topics. Currently over 180,000
people worldwide use MeetUp's for politics and activism.

Jim Moore
blogs.law.harvard.edu/jim/
Dr. Jim Moore wrote The Second Superpower Rears its Beautiful Head,
which sums up his central interest: Can citizens worldwide join
through communications technology, engage international institutions,
and become a transnational "second superpower" to counterbalance and
dialogue with the U.S. government in its role as superpower? Since
it's online posting, the articles thesis has been the central tenet
in a slowly build online global movement.

Politika.lv
http://www.politika.lv
This Latvian site is a great example of a "one-stop politics and
policy-shop" in a small country where good resources online are often
scarce. They provide and online environment for debate and critique
amongst the policy community and individuals. Politika.lv has seen
Latvian of all political stripes working together and making
available on-line a wealth of policy studies, political documents,
draft legislation, expert reviews, opinion articles by leading policy
analysts, politicians and NGOs and other resources.

Jim Orr
http://www.whitehouse.org
Orr runs the White House internet operations. That alone warrants his
name on this list but his standing goes beyond his job title. He has
developed online chats, ask the White House and other tools to
promote communication between the Bush Administration and citizens.
Orr and his staff at the White House are changing the way citizens
can learn of White House policy directly from the source unfiltered
by any media.

Dr. Rubens Medina
http://www.loc.gov/law/glin/GLINv1
Melinda has created and built the Global Legal Information Network
(GLIN) - a visionary electronic cooperative network of national
governments that maintains a database of laws, regulations and other
complementary legal sources of member nations around the world. The
repository is currently at the U.S. Library of Congress GLIN will
provide real-time, transparent access of a member nation's law via
the Internet to its citizens as well as other nations and the global
public. GLIN is the embodiment of "Democracy Online", and typifies
this year's conference theme of freedom in the digital age!

Roh Moo-hyun
http://www.president.go.kr
A self-educated human rights attorney from a poor family in South
Korea, seized the power of the Internet and made history by winning
the presidency in December 2002. Before the 2002 election, Roh was
best known for his failed attempts at being elected to the South
Korean parliament, but an online group interrupted the pattern. The
70,000 members strong group coined themselves "Nosamo," literally,
supporters of Roh, and led a public relations campaign to promote
their favorite candidate. Roh has since led South Korea towards
greater e-democracy and set a precedent for online campaigning.

MoveOn
http://www.moveon.org
The first online PAC, MoveOn.Org, gave us the earliest glimpse of the
grassroots potential of the Net to raise money and mobilize citizens
to a cause. The International network now has more than 2,000,000
online activists and is one of the most effective and responsive
outlets for democratic participation available today. In June, 2003,
MoveOn's held the first ever U.S. online primary to endorse a
democratic candidate. Over 317,000 voters participated. 54,370
pledged to volunteer for their preferred Democratic contender and
49,132 pledged to contribute money to their candidate, for a total
estimated at more than $1.75 million.

George Papandreou
http://www.iap.gr
Papandreou is the net savvy Foreign Minister of Greece and has been
one of the strongest advocates of multi-national e-democracy having
pushed e-democracy at the UN, EU and in other international
governmental organizations. He and his Foundations have sponsored the
Online Global Poll for the UN Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg and the e-Vote project of the Greek Presidency of the
EU.

The Pew Charitable Trusts and
Institute for Politics, Democracy & the Internet
http://www.democracyonline.org
In the Spring of 2002, the Democracy Online Project achieved
Institute status, and became the Institute for Politics, Democracy &
the Internet. Funded by a grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts, the
mission of the Institute for Politics, Democracy & the Internet is to
promote the development of U.S. online politics in a manner which
upholds democratic values. The institute has conducted unprecedented
research on the study of online politics, especially with respect to
American campaigns and elections.

Politik-Digital
http://www.politik-digital.de
The website is run by the association pol-di.net. The association
with offices in Berlin, Germany, continues to work journalistically
and scientifically on issues as e-Government, e-Democracy and e-
Consuming. Since 2001, the idea and concept of politik-digital.de
spread in Europe with partners established similar websites in
Switzerland (http://www.politik-digital.ch), France
(http://www.politique-digitale.fr) and the Netherlands
(http://www.politiek-digitaal.nl). This year they also established
http://www.gipfelthemen.de, a site concerned with the issues of the
only big UN-summit this year, the "World Summit on the Information
Society."

Salem Pax
http://www.dear_raed.blogspot.com/
The famouse Bagdhad blogger, Salem started a movement that brought
blogging mainstream and the war with Iraq up close and personal. He
gave the world a view of the war that was unique and important to the
global community. Citizen / personal journalism at its best�what
blogs are all about.

Stemwijzer.nl
http://www.wahl-o-mat.de
StemWijzer in Holland and the Wahl-O-Mat in Germany, license of
StemWijzer, are both political preference tests. By answering on 25-
30 questions taken from the election programs of parties contesting
the elections users get an advice which party suits best. On election
day 23rd of January 2003 the StemWijzer generated more than 200.000
recommendations. At the parliamentary elections both in 2002 and 2003
the overall results exceeded more than 2 million recommendations. At
the Bundestag-elections in Germany 2002 the Wahl-O-Mat did provide
more than 3,6 million recommendations in four weeks time.

Sheffield City Council
http://www.sheffield.gov.uk
Sheffield is currently engaged in a three-year election modernization
program which uses state-of-the-art technology to make it easier and
more convenient for citizens to engage with government. In the May
2002 and 2003 local elections, voters were able to choose from a
broad range of 21st century voting options: Internet, free-phone
telephone, SMS text messaging, public access kiosk with Smart Cards
and the traditional polling station. Close to 40%of Sheffield voters
e-voted, and 95%-98% of voters said that they would e-vote again.



The Five to Watch
Bridges.org - not really about politics
http://www.Bridges.org
Bridges.org is an international non-profit organization with a
mission to help people in developing countries use information and
communications technology (ICT) to improve their lives. It does not
provide infrastructure or hardware, but rather works with access
initiatives to focus on getting technology used. The working in
bridging the digital divide has been significant in developing
countries in Africa and around the world.

James Crabtree
http://www.voxpolitics.com
James Crabtree is a key player in the superb e-gov website
Voxpolitics, and runs the Industrial Society's iSociety ICT research
project. He also helped to develop the Digital Futures project at the
Institute of Public Policy Research. A former political consultant,
he worked as a webmaster and press secretary for a congressional
candidate during US Election 2000.

Opendemocracy
http://www.Opendemocracy.net
UK's OpenDemocracy is a channel for knowledge, learning,
participation and understanding that is not owned by a media
corporation, does not serve a special interest and does not adhere to
a single ideological position. It's new website covers issues ranging
from American Power in the World, Globalization and The Environment.
The contributor's list reads like a Who's Who of World Affairs.

PoliticsWatch
http://www.PoliticsWatch.com
PoliticsWatch.com was launched in Canada in 2000. Since its launch,
the site has redefined the political internet in Canada and has had
impact around the world wide web. It is an important national site in
a country that has pioneered many used of the net in politics,
academia, journalism and e-government.

Howard Rheingold
http://www.rheingold.com
In his books Virtual Community and Smart Mobs has written about many
of the ideas that have inspired the current changes in politics.
Rhinegold has been thinking and writing about the digital future for
over 20 years and his involvement dated to The Well and he was the
first Executive Editor of Hotwired.



--
Randy Schenkat   1358 Skyline Dr. Winona, Mn 55987     507-452-7168
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