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Facebook Gives Politico Deep Access to Users’ Political Sentiments (both BHO cronies)
All Things D ^ | 1-12-12 | Liz Gannes

Posted on 01/31/2012 4:40:45 PM PST by STARWISE

Counting Twitter mentions would have you believe that Ron Paul is the most popular Republican candidate in the ongoing U.S. primaries. Umm, right.

But some social media analysis of politics is going beyond that. A partnership between Facebook and Politico announced today is one of the more far-reaching efforts. It will consist of sentiment analysis reports and voting-age user surveys, accompanied by stories by Politico reporters.

Most notably, the Facebook-Politico data set will include Facebook users’ private status messages and comments. While that may alarm some people, Facebook and Politico say the entire process is automated and no Facebook employees read the posts.

Rather, every post and comment — both public and private — by a U.S. user that mentions a presidential candidate’s name will be fed through a sentiment analysis tool that spits out anonymized measures of the general U.S. Facebook population.

This is similar to the way Google offers reports on search trends based on its users’ aggregate search activities.

Please see the disclosure about Facebook in my ethics statement.



TOPICS: Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: facebook; intrusionofprivacy; obama; politico
Atlas Shrugs - Facebook Gives Leftwing Politico Deep Access to Users’ Political Sentiments

~~~~~~~~~~~

Lib partisan, former Politico alleged journalist, Ben Smith, is now Editor-In-Chief at BuzzFeed ..

The Buzz About BuzzFeed

The online meme aggregator gets serious about developing original content.

Tues., January 24, 2012-By Carl Straumsheim

###

Carl Straumsheim (cstraumsheim@ajr.umd.edu) is an AJR editorial assistant.

When Ben Smith announced last month that he was leaving Politico to become editor-in-chief of BuzzFeed, the media industry responded with a collective, "Huh?"

Pundits wasted no time dismissing BuzzFeed as an aggregator of memes and pop culture. Smith himself even said during an appearance on CNN's "Reliable Sources" that Politico is the best place in the galaxy to be a political reporter.

"I expected people to be totally confused," says Smith, who had been a high-profile political blogger at Politico.

Tired of rehashing stories reported through social media, Smith decided to strike out on his own. Instead of playing catch-up, he would be breaking news. In his farewell blog entry for Politico, Smith laid out his intentions: to build the first true social news organization.

So he retired his Twitter handle, @Benpolitico, and became @BuzzFeedBen.

"I'm a consumer," Smith says. "Twitter is my primary way of getting my news. It just made sense to me to organize a news organization around that."

The announcement of Smith's hire — combined with a $15.5 million influx of cash from investors — created a surge of momentum for BuzzFeed. Since taking the position, Smith says he has been bombarded with feedback.

Said Twitter user @Deal_Junkie: "My twitter feed these days, buzzfeed, buzzfeed, buzzfeed, thanks to @BuzzFeedBen. I thought buzzfeed only showed pictures of cute cats?"

The overwhelming consensus: BuzzFeed is everywhere.

"I think we're off to an amazing start," Smith says. "It made sense to consumers — maybe not to insiders."

One of Smith's first orders of business as editor-in-chief was to shift BuzzFeed's focus more toward original content. To that end, he has hired a dozen or so reporters to enable the Web site to break news.

"I think scoops give you credibility," he says.

BuzzFeed's new journalists are already popping up on the campaign trail. On Thursday, for example, reporter Rosie Gray broke the news about Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum's response to a political flyer passed out in South Carolina that attacked his wife.

"They're people who want to do original reporting — not aggregation or commentary," Smith says of his reporters.

BuzzFeed is bolstering more than its political coverage. On Friday, Smith tweeted that the company had picked up Rolling Stone senior editor Doree Shafrir, who will head the Web site's pop culture section.

But while BuzzFeed is vying to become a trusted voice among those who get their news online, Smith is not downplaying the Web site's quirkiness. On Thursday, BuzzFeed scored the four participants in CNN's South Carolina GOP debate not with letter grades but with BuzzFeed's reaction buttons, or "Badges," tags usually awarded to images and videos that have gone viral. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich scored a "win" for denouncing CNN's John King for opening the debate with a question about allegations made by his ex-wife Marianne Gingrich. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was branded with a "fail" after an uneven performance. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Santorum and Texas Rep. Ron Paul earned an "omg" and "cute," respectively. (The candidates avoided "wtf?" and "trashy," at least.)

Smith says he thought the badges seemed "sort of legitimate" to the debate.

"We shouldn't take people more seriously than they take themselves," he says. That mentality is also the reason why Smith doesn't see a problem with combining hard news and humor―when scrolling through their Twitter feeds, followers are free to pick and choose between BuzzFeed's original content and viral posts.

Perhaps surprisingly, Smith's presence (or lack thereof) on BuzzFeed suggests most of his work has taken place behind the scenes — his name is nowhere to be found on the "Team" page, for example. But on Wednesday, Smith wrote an editorial opposing the Stop Online Piracy Act, blacking out BuzzFeed's banner and joining Web players such as Google, Reddit and Wikipedia in raising awareness about the issue.

"The impulse [SOPA] acts on basically rejects the startling, wonderful media developments of the last decade, during which journalism — allegedly dead — has been vibrantly reborn," he wrote. The legislation stalled in the wake of powerful online opposition.

Smith says BuzzFeed will rarely take editorial positions but did so in this case because SOPA represented a clear threat to online innovation. "It seems to me like the impulse behind SOPA represents a real attack on the way people in fact consume or like to consume their information," says Smith, describing his opposition as an obvious position.

At first glance, BuzzFeed may appear to have more in common with its fellow SOPA protesters than with more traditional news organizations. Like Reddit, BuzzFeed organizes its content based on user feedback. Still, Smith says he is more focused on building a news source than an online community.

"I think that we are more like the New York Times than we are like Reddit," he says. "We're a news organization, basically. Every day, we ask ourselves, 'How are we going to outdo what we did yesterday?' "

While Smith may be staking out new ground with BuzzFeed, he says social media have blurred the lines between print and online journalism.

"I just don't think [online journalism] is a separate category," he says. "I just think great journalists are most concerned with how their stuff is received online."

And for a Web site that used to run exclusively on capturing online trends, generating feedback may be BuzzFeed's key to success.

~~~~~~~

"Facebook and Politico say the entire process is automated and no Facebook employees read the posts. SURE!

So, if you use Google (BHO buddies and THE worst for tracking your web surfing), Facebook (now joining the privacy intruder ranks even more), click on Politico and now BuzzFeed .. BigBrother O's got you tagged and tracked! And, authentic journalism is long dead. What there is now are: scoops, gossip, oppo research for 1600 Penn., pandering to 1600 Penn., lies and gotchas.

1 posted on 01/31/2012 4:40:56 PM PST by STARWISE
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To: onyx; penelopesire; maggief; hoosiermama; SE Mom; Liz; rodguy911; Fred Nerks; Red Steel; ...

.. Ding!


2 posted on 01/31/2012 4:43:53 PM PST by STARWISE (The overlords are in place .. we are a nation under siege .. pray, go Galt & hunker down)
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To: STARWISE

I stay as far away from Facebook as possible.


3 posted on 01/31/2012 4:44:31 PM PST by rdl6989 (January 20, 2013 The end of an error.)
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To: STARWISE; Sidebar Moderator

And this is Breaking News because ______ ?


4 posted on 01/31/2012 4:46:37 PM PST by tomkat (Romney _ A Whiter Shade of FAIL)
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To: rdl6989
I stay as far away from Facebook as possible.

I have an alias account with a throwaway email addy to receive communiques from the VRWC domos like Palin and Cain.

5 posted on 01/31/2012 4:48:06 PM PST by nascarnation (DEFEAT BARAQ 2012 DEPORT BARAQ 2013)
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To: STARWISE

I guess BHO knows about me.


6 posted on 01/31/2012 4:53:27 PM PST by onyx
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To: STARWISE

Ho-kay... so everybody who talks about “Hillary” will get aggregated to Politico? Regardless of whether the illustrious secretary of state or somebody else was meant? Fortunately a “Barack” is usually intended to refer to the purported president, as is “Obama,” but how about “Bummer” and other such nicknames?

The result, I anticipate, will be rather comical, and about as reliable as a three dollar bill.


7 posted on 01/31/2012 4:54:29 PM PST by HiTech RedNeck (Sometimes progressives find their scripture in the penumbra of sacred bathroom stall writings (Tzar))
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To: All
Is Mark Zuckerberg Teaming Up with Politico to Give Obama an Edge?

Excerpt:

Facebook may give Barack Obama a slight edge this coming presidential election while creating a wide misperception about who’s actually pulling ahead in the Republican Party.

*snip*

But here’s the thing.

Whether or not the quotes are actually being hand picked or being “fed through a sentiment analysis tool” (whatever that means) isn’t really that relevant because we all know that more young people than old use Facebook. That means that in all likelihood those candidates that appeal to younger voters (namely Barack Obama–surprise, surprise, Mark Zuckerberg’s apparent favorite) will be getting lots of play on the pages of Politico as the national favorite.

~~~~~~~~

BHO AND Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook

5-9-11:Obama Participates In An Interview At Facebook




8 posted on 01/31/2012 5:00:41 PM PST by STARWISE (The overlords are in place .. we are a nation under siege .. pray, go Galt & hunker down)
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To: nascarnation

>I have an alias account with a throwaway email addy to receive communiques from the VRWC domos like Palin and Cain.<

That maybe not enough. I have an IP changer because regardless of the e-mail, the site has a record of your IP address whether you log on or not.


9 posted on 01/31/2012 5:29:49 PM PST by max americana (Buttcrack Obama is an idiot)
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To: STARWISE

I think the youth like Ron Paul these days. I’ve read they are not cool with BO anymore. Anyway, they don’t vote, WE do.


10 posted on 01/31/2012 5:38:21 PM PST by dandiegirl
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To: STARWISE

On another forum I read, someone posted:

“Facebook is kinda like jail; you sit around, waste time, have a profile picture, write on walls and get poked by people you don’t really know.”


11 posted on 01/31/2012 5:53:51 PM PST by Petruchio (I Think . . . Therefor I FReep.)
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To: STARWISE

doubleplusgood


12 posted on 01/31/2012 7:02:53 PM PST by seton89 (Starve the Beast)
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To: dandiegirl

I think Baraq cooked his goose with the massive unemployment / underemployment of recent grads.

The “occupy” crowd is astroturfing from the leftists.

In the real world, young people are very disillusioned with Obama.


13 posted on 01/31/2012 7:07:40 PM PST by nascarnation (DEFEAT BARAQ 2012 DEPORT BARAQ 2013)
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To: STARWISE

Facebook, Politico and nobama deserve each other. Slimy, filthy, dirty, nasty things. Down in the sewer where they belong.


14 posted on 01/31/2012 7:07:47 PM PST by upchuck (Let's have the Revolution NOW before we get dumbed down to the point that we can't.)
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To: STARWISE

F*** Facebook, F*** Mitt Romney, and finally, F*** Baraq Obama.


15 posted on 01/31/2012 7:08:04 PM PST by GnL
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To: call meVeronica

Bump


16 posted on 01/31/2012 8:09:09 PM PST by call meVeronica
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To: STARWISE
(Art., quoting Ben Smith) "We shouldn't take people more seriously than they take themselves," he says.

Yeah, that occurs to me, too, every time I think about people like Adnan Shukrijumah, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Osama Bin Laden, and Kim Jong Il.

Just a bunch of fun guys, nothing to get torqued about with these guys. Right?

17 posted on 01/31/2012 9:57:41 PM PST by lentulusgracchus
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