Wednesday, May 16, 2012

At the time of writing this, there are 10,393 bills before the US Congress, and thousands more at the state and local levels. Only a tiny fraction of these bills are covered in television and print news media; meanwhile, the internet allows access to unprecedented amounts of civic data, but is so vast and disjointed it turns-off everyone but the most web-savvy political zealots. The result: most Americans feel overwhelmed by the political process, alienated from their elected representatives, become cynical about the integrity of the US government, and tune-out. EveryVote.org is an open-source, non-profit project in development trying to address these problems by making in-depth civic engagement as easy and fun as using Facebook or online dating sites. We believe EveryVote's ease-of-use and robust functionality can inspire younger generations to participate in elections, and older generations to participate on the internet. The primary functionality of EveryVote is to provide users with an intuitive interface that enables users to vote on bills, officials, candidates, other EV users, and organizations, and then to automatically compare their voting preferences with all other voters' preferences on the site. Other essential functions include: sending registration deadline and election day reminders; helping users run for office themselves; facilitating organized representative-to-constituent and user-to-user dialogue; providing democratic news sharing tools; and much more. EveryVote will debut hosting all the legislative and electoral API data of the US Congress available online, but any user can add their own governing body's information (with its own custom parameters) to the EV platform and make use of the same civic engagement tools. This means K-12 students can use EV to manage the legislative and electoral procedures of their own student council or mock government as part of a civics education curriculum. And if EV can help manage student councils, maybe it can help PTAs, teacher's unions, and any other organization with legislative and electoral procedures. As a user browses the site, EV automatically compares that user's voting record to the records of officials, candidates, other users, and groups, and displays the result as a % correlation next to that person or group's profile picture.* On the bills page, users can learn instantly how the people and groups they support or oppose are voting on that issue. For example, 8 of 10 groups a user supports are voting in favor of a bill, the groups/supports databox would display a green +60%; if the same amount were voting against, it would display a red -60%; and a split of 5 yeas and 5 nays would display a black 0%. Ultimately, since EveryVote is an open-source platform that allows users to add and facilitate their own government or organization's legislative and electoral processes, EveryVote's goal is to promote democratic civic engagement across the world. --- For more information about the EveryVote project, please visit our homepage and signup for the EV mailing list. Our goal is to have a limited-functionality beta of EveryVote finished by Fall 2012. If you have any questions, or would like to help create EveryVote with us, please email the EV team at contactus@everyvote.org. *(Quoted from OpenSource.com interview)
At the time of writing this, there are 10,393 bills before the US Congress, and thousands more at the state and local levels. Only a tiny fraction of these bills are covered in television and print news media; meanwhile, the internet allows access to unprecedented amounts of civic data, but is so vast and disjointed it turns-off everyone but the most web-savvy political zealots. The result: most Americans feel overwhelmed by the political process, alienated from their elected representatives, become cynical about the integrity of the US government, and tune-out. EveryVote.org is an open-source, non-profit project in development trying to address these problems by making in-depth civic engagement as easy and fun as using Facebook or online dating sites. We believe EveryVote's ease-of-use and robust functionality can inspire younger generations to participate in elections, and older generations to participate on the internet. The primary functionality of EveryVote is to provide users with an intuitive interface that enables users to vote on bills, officials, candidates, other EV users, and organizations, and then to automatically compare their voting preferences with all other voters' preferences on the site. Other essential functions include: sending registration deadline and election day reminders; helping users run for office themselves; facilitating organized representative-to-constituent and user-to-user dialogue; providing democratic news sharing tools; and much more. EveryVote will debut hosting all the legislative and electoral API data of the US Congress available online, but any user can add their own governing body's information (with its own custom parameters) to the EV platform and make use of the same civic engagement tools. This means K-12 students can use EV to manage the legislative and electoral procedures of their own student council or mock government as part of a civics education curriculum. And if EV can help manage student councils, maybe it can help PTAs, teacher's unions, and any other organization with legislative and electoral procedures. As a user browses the site, EV automatically compares that user's voting record to the records of officials, candidates, other users, and groups, and displays the result as a % correlation next to that person or group's profile picture.* On the bills page, users can learn instantly how the people and groups they support or oppose are voting on that issue. For example, 8 of 10 groups a user supports are voting in favor of a bill, the groups/supports databox would display a green +60%; if the same amount were voting against, it would display a red -60%; and a split of 5 yeas and 5 nays would display a black 0%. Ultimately, since EveryVote is an open-source platform that allows users to add and facilitate their own government or organization's legislative and electoral processes, EveryVote's goal is to promote democratic civic engagement across the world. --- For more information about the EveryVote project, please visit our homepage and signup for the EV mailing list. Our goal is to have a limited-functionality beta of EveryVote finished by Fall 2012. If you have any questions, or would like to help create EveryVote with us, please email the EV team at contactus@everyvote.org. *(OpenSource.com - http://red.ht/IqyDmU)

Monday, April 23, 2012

article for opensource.com

1) Tell our readers what EveryVote.org is.

EveryVote.org is a web platform beginning development that will help people take a more active and informed role in their government or organization. It will be an open-source, non-profit, civic engagement social network platform. EV strives to be a comprehensive yet easy to use hub of the internet's best civic engagement tools and resources.

It will debut containing all the legislative and electoral data of the US Congress available online, but any user can add their own governing body with its own rules, procedures, and data to EV and make use of the platform's utilities.

After users signup for their own EveryVote profile, it enables them to state their support or opposition to not only bills, officials, and candidates, but also other users and groups. As a user browses the site, EV automatically compares that user's voting record to the records of officials, candidates, other users, and groups, and displays the result as a % correlation next to that person or group's profile picture.

On the bills page, users can learn instantly how the people and groups they support or oppose are voting on that issue. For example, if 8 of 10 groups a user supports are voting in favor of a bill, the groups/supports databox would display a green +80%; if the same amount were voting against, it would display a red -80%.

EveryVote helps users participate in elections by providing them with an easy to scan candidate display, helping users register to vote, and sending reminders of registration deadlines and election days.

It even assists users if they would like to run for office themselves, explaining the requirements and procedures required to run for that office, adding their profile to their district's election page, helping them coordinate with volunteers, and linking users to make campaign donations on their EV profile.


EveryVote will have full social network functionality (friend requests, event invitations, messaging, etc.), optional cross-functionality with Facebook wherever possible, and free app versions for mobile devices.

It will also have a democratically driven social news aggregation platform, similar to a platform like reddit. But unlike reddit, EV will give users the ability to view only votes from supporters, opposers, or undecideds of that bill, person, or group.

Lastly, since EveryVote is open-source and encourages users to design and share their own apps for others to customize their browsing experience, we like to think there's no limit to how a platform like EveryVote can help people.

2) This open source project is currently in development and you're looking for volunteers. What sort of help are you looking for?

Right now we're looking for developers, web designers, and graphic designers, especially those with previous experience working on civic engagement and social network platforms. As development progresses, we'd also appreciate help from political scientists, statisticians, public relations specialists, and really anyone who'd like to contribute to EV's development.

If we are fortunate enough to receive sufficient grant funding or donations, we would like to expedite the site's completion by hiring a professional development team.

3) What are the civic benefits that you see EveryVote.org providing?

We see EveryVote encouraging civic engagement in a variety of forms. It will help users participate in elections, encourage civil discourse, and facilitate democratic processes. Since users can add their own governing body and manage its legislative and electoral processes through EveryVote, the site can promote democratic collaboration for organizations of all kinds.

We also believe it has educational value, as students could use the EV platform to manage their school's student council or mock government for a class activity.

4) What other open source and open government organizations are you working with to collaborate on this project?

EveryVote isn't formally collaborating with any open source or open government organizations at this time, but we'd love to collaborate with any organization that has experience facilitating civic engagement on the internet. We are definitely dependent on other organizations however, as for the US version of EveryVote we are planning on using the great API resources freely available from the Sunlight Foundation, GovTrack, Maplight, and other sites.

In the past couple weeks, we have submitted introductions to the EveryVote project to Stanford's Liberation Technologies listserv, Sunlight Labs message board, and Steven Clift kindly a posted an introduction on his Newswire listserv. The response EV has received has been very encouraging, but we have no formal collaborations at this time.

5) We understand you'll be at Transparency Camp in Washington, DC on April 28th. What are you looking to accomplish at the camp?

Our plan for attending TC is to: learn as much as we can about open government initiatives; introduce people to the EveryVote project; give a presentation; talk with prospective volunteers; find information on grant funding opportunities; meet interesting people; have fun :D