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ElNono
10-10-2011, 11:57 AM
The Data Crunching Prowess of Barack Obama

"Micah Sifry, co-founder of the Personal Democracy Forum, writes that Barack Obama may be struggling in the polls and even losing support among his core boosters, but when it comes to the modern mechanics of identifying, connecting with and mobilizing voters, as well as the challenge of integrating voter information with the complex internal workings of a national campaign, Obama's data analysis team is way ahead of the Republican pack (http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/09/tech/innovation/obama-data-crunching-election/). Alone among the major candidates running for president, the Obama campaign not only has a Facebook page with 23 million 'likes' (roughly 10 times the total of all the Republicans running), it has a Facebook app that is scooping up all kinds of juicy facts about his supporters and inside the Obama operation, his staff members are using a powerful social networking tool called NationalField (https://www.nationalfield.com/about/), which enables everyone to share what they are working on. 'The holy grail of data analysis is data harmonization, or master data management,' says Alex Lundry, a Republican data-mining expert at TargetPoint Consulting. 'To have political talking to finance and finance talking to field, and data is flowing back and forth and informing the actions of each other — it sounds easy, but it's incredibly hard to implement.' Sifry writes that if the 2012 election comes down to a battle of inches, where a few percentage points change in turnout in a few key states making all the difference, we may come to see Obama's investment in predictive modelers and data scientists as the key to victory."

ElNono
10-10-2011, 11:57 AM
Please, no elections by Facebook. :vomit:

Crookshanks
10-10-2011, 12:49 PM
The Data Crunching Prowess of Barack Obama

"Micah Sifry, co-founder of the Personal Democracy Forum, writes that Barack Obama may be struggling in the polls and even losing support among his core boosters, but when it comes to the modern mechanics of identifying, connecting with and mobilizing voters, as well as the challenge of integrating voter information with the complex internal workings of a national campaign, Obama's data analysis team is way ahead of the Republican pack (http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/09/tech/innovation/obama-data-crunching-election/). Alone among the major candidates running for president, the Obama campaign not only has a Facebook page with 23 million 'likes' (roughly 10 times the total of all the Republicans running), it has a Facebook app that is scooping up all kinds of juicy facts about his supporters and inside the Obama operation, his staff members are using a powerful social networking tool called NationalField (https://www.nationalfield.com/about/), which enables everyone to share what they are working on. 'The holy grail of data analysis is data harmonization, or master data management,' says Alex Lundry, a Republican data-mining expert at TargetPoint Consulting. 'To have political talking to finance and finance talking to field, and data is flowing back and forth and informing the actions of each other — it sounds easy, but it's incredibly hard to implement.' Sifry writes that if the 2012 election comes down to a battle of inches, where a few percentage points change in turnout in a few key states making all the difference, we may come to see Obama's investment in predictive modelers and data scientists as the key to victory."

Lord - these people are sure clutching at any little thing to give Obama the advantage. Please - we're in really bad shape if we're going to base elections on how many "likes" a candidate has on facebook.

greyforest
10-10-2011, 12:50 PM
we may come to see Obama's investment in predictive modelers and data scientists as the key to victory.

The obvious flaw in the US political system. Victors are determined largely by capital investment, instead of the populous as intended.

ElNono
10-10-2011, 01:12 PM
The obvious flaw in the US political system. Victors are determined largely by capital investment, instead of the populous as intended.

Of course. And SCOTUS decisions like the campaign financing one a year or two ago only makes it worse. Then you have people blindly following "the cause" instead of using their neurons, and you have a recipe for disaster.

Yonivore
10-10-2011, 01:15 PM
The obvious flaw in the US political system. Victors are determined largely by capital investment, instead of the populous as intended.
Well, since you bring it up; the election of the executive was never meant to be a populous selection; that's why the framers created the Electoral College and left to the states, the method by which those electors would be chosen.

ElNono
10-10-2011, 01:17 PM
The Electoral College representatives do get elected by popular vote though. It is populous one way or the other.

Cry Havoc
10-10-2011, 01:24 PM
Lord - these people are sure clutching at any little thing to give Obama the advantage.


This is a little blurb from an article on Investor's Business Daily:

A majority of Americans now oppose giving President Obama a second term, reflecting the country's continued weak economic performance, according to the latest IBD/TIPP survey released Monday.

By 51%-41%, respondents in October picked "someone new deserves a chance" over Obama "deserves to be re-elected." Among independents, it was 54%-36%.

======================
It would seem the independents have already rejected Obama to a large extent.


:lmao

Yonivore
10-10-2011, 01:28 PM
The Electoral College representatives do get elected by popular vote though. It is populous one way or the other.
But, it wasn't the intention, as greyforest implied.

ElNono
10-10-2011, 01:31 PM
But, it wasn't the intention, as greyforest implied.

I'm pretty sure greyforest implied he would rather see a populous election, not a race between the largest wallets.

But he can clarify.