Sure, I think it might work. But there is a more basic role for
Deanster, and the reason for its urgency (w/the idea of experimenting
w/this functionality on top of it). 

People can't find eachother.

Dean supporters in the same area can't find eachother. 

Dean supporters w/the same interests can't find eachother. 

We have, incredibly, a nationwide movement of people who happen to run
into eachother if they use the get local tools -- or show up wearing
buttons -- or are on a listserv. Imagine what it could be if I could
search for local people to ask them to join me?

The second-and third-level functions are those Josh talked about -- and
ultimately very important --


Z

Zephyr Teachout
Internet Organizing & Outreach
Dean for America
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Meetup at http://www.deanforamerica.com/meetup
Get local at http://action.deanforamerica.com
Contribute at http://www.deanforamerica.com/contribute
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Joshua Koenig [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 12:13 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Zephyr Teachout
Subject: More on Deanster Participant Content


After Zephyr's previous posting about content for Deanster, I just 
wanted to give y'all a little more of my vision for the whole Deanster 
"user expression" piece. You're indubitably "the boss" on this one, so 
the call is yours, but I wanted to give you the whole nine yards.

The notion for this sprung from the fact that there's a wealth of ideas 
and content being created by the devotees of the Official Campaign 
Blog. Originally, I had thought of hacking Movable Type so that there 
would be a way for users to "concur" with other users' comments; to 
mark them as an idea, a phrase, a story worth saving. This way at the 
end of the day, you can  have someone from your team browse through the 
25 most "highlighted" posts.

Creating a way for the Official Site to grant recognition to stellar 
user participation will spur greater participation as well as greater 
quality.

 From that came a discussion with Britt about how deanforamerica.com 
might be re-designed. I've attached an image of what he's come up with. 
It shows the idea pretty well: a quote from a participant for every 
section. This would be easy enough to set up if it were static, but my 
immediate thought was that it should be dynamic. It should be a 
rotation of many quotes, which will further drive participation as it 
shows that everyone has a chance of having their voice heard.

But for you to try and do this -- incorporate participant content -- 
requires some structure be built around it. So I thought of a facility 
on Deanster which would let you elicit on-topic quotes from your 
userbase; there would be some administrative overhead in terms of 
flagging content either as "worth highlighting" (good) or 
"administrative review" (bad), but this won't take much time at all. 
90% of it can be done by users. Here's how:

1) Most of the content will be neither worth posting on DFA or worth 
badgering anyone about in terms of taking it down. The process I 
describe here will happen less than 10% of the time.

2) Objectionable content (e.g. explicit photos, objectionable 
statements) can be flagged by any user and quickly addressed by the 
moderation staff. If you create an environment that doesn't provide an 
opportunity to create entropy, then it won't happen. In other words, if 
people don't see bogus profiles, they're far less likely to try it 
themselves.

3) High-quality content can also be flagged by any user (though not for 
themselves), and dealt with in the same fashion.

4) Volunteer moderators (trusted participants) can further vet flagged 
content. People will kill to have this job. They can send warning 
letters to objectionable content posters and give a more seasoned 
"thumbs up" to high-quality profiles.

5) Finally, one staff member can invest an hour a day selecting the 
best of the best and flagging them as worthy of the DFA homepage. 
Likewise they can take the official action of booting people who don't 
respond to a warning letter. At this point were talking about 1% of 
total posts, so it's not really a lot of overhead.

Do we think this will cure a potential troll problem? IMHO, rigorous 
moderation is sufficient for stopping harmful BS. By giving users a 
"flag for review" button, you give them a means of doing something 
about trolls without feeding them.

cheers
-josh

------------------------
Politics is the art of controlling your environment. Participate!
Elect Howard Dean President in 2004!
http://www.outlandishjosh.com/politics/dean/

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