change.gov In , the website opened Barack Obama for the transition of power, a section inviting citizens to submit their ideas for the new government. In www.change.org , an advocacy network, people are discussing what action should be first on the agenda of the White House. ' Create a more interactive government' is at the moment, one that has won more votes.
During the long 21 months-long campaign U.S. election, including primary, a citizen army helped the Democratic candidate for votes and money through email, SMS, telephone, virtual support groups and the traditional door to door. So far, the story is far too much of the vision we all have for any election campaign. But if you look at the figures achieved by the network of support for Obama , obvious difference. According to calculations made on the eve of the elections by the American expert in social networking Jeremiah Owyang ( web-strategist.com/blog ), 2,379,102 people watched the candidate through Facebook ; 112,474 did so in Twitter and 833,161 in MySpace . In total, 380% assembled followers over his opponent, Republican John McCain.
But it does not end there: the 1792 Obama-related videos posted on YouTube since November 2006 were viewed 18,413,110 times, a 905% higher than those of McCain.
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