Sunday, November 9, 2014

Democracy's Future

Upside down in a ditch, gas tank about to explode:

W/in two yrs., sez Buzzfeed Ben:
The nightly tracking polls are showing a dramatic swing in the opinions of the electorate, but neither of two typical factors — huge news or a major advertising buy — can explain it. They will, eventually, realize that the viral, mass conversation about politics on Facebook and other platforms has finally emerged as a third force in the core business of politics, mass persuasion.

[Blah Facebook blah yada social media blaaaaa ... then:]

And so we at BuzzFeed News are deeply excited to have nearly exclusive access (it’s shared with a broadcast partner, ABC News) to a powerful new window into the largest political conversation in America. This data will be drawn from a Facebook project working in the tricky field of “sentiment analysis,” the attempt to analyze people’s feelings based on what they write, which we think may be the most important new source of political data in the 2016 elections. This project will allow BuzzFeed News reporters to ask Facebook for data on, for instance, how Iowans feel about Hillary Clinton, or which Republican candidate appears to be best liked by women.

Thar She Blows!

Way to Go, Americans:
We’re Almost as Ignorant as Italians

That’s one of the findings of a survey released this week by U.K. pollster Ipsos Mori, which interviewed 11,527 people. In the 14-country Index of Ignorance (Ipsos Mori's name, but we approve), Americans are second only to Italians in how little we understand some of the stats that track the most basic contours of our society.
EXPERIMENT CONCLUDED

2 comments:

ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© said...

.....
~

Weird Dave said...

I was going to write a comment but then I watched Thunder's video link.

Nothing more needs to be added.