Steve Wozniak: This is Not My America

Steve Wozniak, Apple's co-founder has shared his disappointment in regards to the recent NSA privacy scandal. Spanish language tech site FayerWayer rain into Woz at the airport and asked him how he felt about the NSA. All these things that talk about the Constitution that made us so good as people, they're kind of nothing. They all dissolved with the Patriot Act. There's not even a free open court anymore Read more.

AT&T introduces the iObama you can't turn off

Just in case you want more Obama in your life… AT&T is loading iPhones with emergency alerts from Barack Obama… That you can’t switch off. Read more.

APPLE steps up GOOGLE battle with redesign

The bold redesign, which scraps Apple's iconic style in favour of a more generic Android look, was called 'almost unrecognisable' by Jan Dawson, analyst at IT research firm Ovum, and will 'disorientate' customers in a bid to prove the company can still innovate. - See more at: http://politicalmedia.com/articles/apple-steps-up-google-battle-with-redesign#sthash.0z2cDs23.dpuf Read more.

Spy-Partisans come together to end privacy.

Welcome to the era of Bush-Obama, a 16-year span of U.S. history that will be remembered for an unprecedented erosion of civil liberties and a disregard for transparency. On the war against a tactic—terrorism—and its insidious fallout, the United States could have skipped the 2008 election. Read more.

Straightforward ads in a fragmented media sphere

Traditional media isn’t collapsing, but it sure isn’t growing. Read more.

Tensions rise between press, Obama

“We are outraged to learn today that James Rosen was named a criminal co-conspirator for simply doing his job as a reporter,” Clemente said in a statement. “In fact, it is downright chilling. We will unequivocally defend his right to operate as a member of what up until now has always been a free press.” Read more.

The State of Social Media Advertising and It's Future

The media constellation has become increasingly fractured. The Web produced the initial fissure, but mobile created new cracks in the landscape. Today, no single medium earns more than 45% of our media consumption. Read more.

Six 'Megatrends' Shaping The Future Of Digital Media

The World Economic Forum is perhaps best known for its annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, which brings together heads of state, CEOs of some of the world’s largest companies, and assorted other movers and shakers for a week of speeches, panels, and workshops in the Swiss Alps each January. Read more.

eBay CEO enlists users' aid to defeat online sales tax bill

eBay is trying to marshal its users to change federal sales tax legislation pending in the Senate that could usher in the first national Internet sales tax. Read more.

Technology Enables TV Everywhere, But Holdup Is Money

Convergence — is it here yet, marrying TV with computers, or still in previews? At this week's National Association of Broadcasters conference in Las Vegas, Adobe Systems (ADBE) launched Adobe Primetime after a long trial run — and released stats showing mobile video consumption growing. Read more.

Building a perfectly optimised preference centre for your email marketing campaign

Whilst identifying the “Cost per Influence” of your email marketing campaign is crucial to evaluating its success, you won’t be able to achieve that success if your campaign is not based on customer insight and responsive to behavioural change. Read more.

Report: Twitter Ad Revenue to Hit Nearly $1 Billion Next Year

Twitter's global ad revenue is expected to hit nearly $1 billion in 2014, according to a new estimate from eMarketer. Read more.

Karl Rove Will Find Republicans Can’t Buy Talent In Silicon Valley

One of the Republican Party’s top campaign masterminds, Karl Rove, is reportedly looking to build the epicenter of conservative digital campaign tools right in the heart of Silicon Valley. “We are working within the party to create a big toolbox that can compete in the midterms and be used by all,” private-equity investor Richard Boyce told the Wall Street Journal about the still-forming entity. Read more.

Google Glass Will Get Prescription Lenses

One of the most discussed topics surrounding Google's futuristic smart glasses is whether the specs could have a prescription lenses option in the future. In a note posted to Google+ on Tuesday, the company answered a resounding, "yes!" Read more.

Web-based 'brain' for robots goes live

European scientists have turned on the first part of a web-based database of information to help them cope. Read more.

The Political Media Report


The perpetual vote-splitting pattern
Wednesday, January 30, 2013 | Chris Palko | Campaigns & Elections
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, political scientists formulated what they considered the most basic fact of American politics at the time. To them, Republicans had a “lock” on the White House and Democrats a “lock” on the House of Representatives. There was good evidence to support this interpretation. Republicans won five out of six presidential elections from 1968-1988—usually by large margins. Democrats kept control of the House of Representatives continuously from 1955-1994. Read More...
GOP still seeking to cross the digital divide
Monday, January 28, 2013 | Steve Friess | Politico
Republicans are running a 1.0 digital ground game operation in a 3.0 world — and they know it. At their recent leadership retreat, Chairman Reince Priebus and others sounded the bell for closing the vast technological divide that made all the difference for Democrats in getting out the votelast fall in numbers that stunned the pundit class. Read More...
You cannot escape Google
Wednesday, January 2, 2013 | Amir Efrati | Wall Street Journal
Google Inc. GOOG +0.87% is challenging Facebook Inc. FB -0.15% by using a controversial tactic: requiring people to use the Google+ social network.  Read More...
Was 2012 the worst year in mainstream media malpractice?
Wednesday, January 30, 2013 | Gustav Wynn | OpEdNews
Now that 2013 is here, it's time to recognize how the major media buries the issues most important to Americans. With newsrooms focusing so much right now on the fiscal cliff and gun rights, it's instructive to see nobody looking at the heart of either issue.  Read More...
The email marketing trends to watch in 2013
Wednesday, December 19, 2012 | Mike Hotz | ClickZ
The new year is fewer than three weeks away, but it's not too early to predict the trends that will shape email marketing in 2013 and beyond. Read More...
The biggest social media stories of 2012
Friday, December 28, 2012 | Donna Tam | CNET
Social media hit new heights this year; Facebook reached 1 billion users, many people in developing nations are logging in to social networks as soon as they get Internet access, and the companies behind these digital communities are starting to make money off the sites.  Read More...
Obama shuts down and ignores the 
"Arm the Teachers" White House petition
Friday, December 21, 2012 | Political Media Inc. | Political Media Inc.
Washington, DC - On December 14, in response to the Newtown massacre, Larry Ward, president of Political Media, Inc. created a WhiteHouse.gov petition calling to "Arm the Teachers and Principals" to protect themselves and their students from future attacks. Read More...
Gallup poll shows more Americans favor arming teachers than gun ban
Wednesday, December 19, 2012 | Lee Stranahan | Breitbart
A new poll released today by Gallup shows that Americans favor increased security and proactive mental health treatment over gun control. The national poll of a little over 1,000 adults was conducted in the wake of the tragic murders at a Connecticuit school last Friday. As the introduction to the poll says:  Read More...
Man confronts anti-gun protesters, shouting, 'Arm the teachers!'
Tuesday, December 18, 2012 | Tony Lee | Breitbart
A man interrupted and confronted anti-gun demonstrators gathered near the NRA building in Washington, D.C. on Monday by yelling "Arm the teachers! Arm the principals!"  Read More...
The social market roars, Instagram reverses course
Tuesday, December 18, 2012 | David Silverberg | Digital Journal
Late Tuesday Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom reacted to public outcry over the mobile photo service's proposal to update its legal terms. Systrom promised users Instagram had no plans to sell their photos.  Read More...

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