November 7, 2008 (IDG News Service) Barack Obama had a lot going for him
already in this year's election, but his creative use of the Internet played
a huge role in making him president elect, former U.S. Vice President Al
Gore said Friday.

"It couldn't have happened without the Web," Gore said.

Gore closed this year's Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco by discussing the
role of the Web in the election, his involvement with an Internet TV company
and the dangers of climate change. The full-capacity crowd at the Palace
Hotel greeted him and sent him off with standing ovations.

Obama's innovative use of the Web during his campaign, for everything from
encouraging supporters to vote to raising funds, marks a turning point in
how politicians use the Internet and in how citizens can participate for
social change, Gore said.

"What happened in the election opens up a whole new range of possibilities,"
he said. "Now's the time to really move swiftly to exploit these new
possibilities."

Gore also talked about how his company Current TV, of which he is chairman
and cofounder, is attempting to use the Internet to break television's
decades-old monopolization of information, which he said has had negative
consequences.

"A reason why the political system hasn't been operating very well until
this election is the deadening influence of the TV medium as it has been
operating," he said.

Asked by conference chair John Battelle if he is worried that this
Web-powered social involvement among citizens will lose steam, Gore said:
"No, I'm not. It's very much in its infancy, barely beginning. We aren't
many years away from TV sinking into the digital world and becoming a part
of it."

"The social activism that's made possible by these new tools is just
beginning to take off," he added.

Gore, who has become a leading voice in recent years for the protection of
the environment, said President-elect Obama should be bold in his goals to
address climate change. For example, he should set a national goal for the
U.S. to get all its electricity from renewable and non-carbon sources within
10 years.

"We can do it," he said, amidst heavy applause from the audience.

He cited various imminent dangers for the environment, including the 75
percent to 80 percent chance that in the next 5 years, the North Pole ice
cap, which has been around for about 3 million years and is almost the size
of the continental U.S., will disappear.

"This is an apocalyptic signal from the planet itself," Gore said.

http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxo
nomyName=servers&articleId=9119618&taxonomyId=68&intsrc=kc_top

Reply via email to