State Election Officials Confront Fears Of Election Day Hacking

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A month after 20,000 private emails from the Democratic National Committee were published online, election officials across the country received a series of warnings from the FBI: Hackers were targeting states’ election websites and, in at least one case, were able to steal voter registration data. The Department of Homeland Security has since created an election cybersecurity action campaign, and US intelligence officials have begun investigating the possibility of a covert Russian intelligence operation that seeks to undermine the integrity of the American election.

But despite the growing concerns over foreign meddling coming from Congress, intelligence experts, and the Clinton campaign, state election officials say American voters have little to fear.

Rand Careaga

“There are over 9,000 jurisdictions that operate elections at a very local level, so that’s both a blessing and a curse,” Denise Merrill, Connecticut’s secretary of state and president of the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS), a nonpartisan organization that represents the country’s top state election officials, told BuzzFeed News. “It really saves us from worrying too much about cybersecurity — we have other concerns, but that’s kind of not one of them.”

Merrill was appointed by NASS to join Homeland Security’s special working group on election cybersecurity. The group&;s goal is to build closer ties between the federal government and local election officials, and alsoto consider designating state voting systems as “critical infrastructure,” akin to dams and power grids, granting election offices additional resources and protections from the federal government.

Merrill, along with the secretaries of state and election officials representing California, Florida, Ohio, Minnesota, Colorado, and Iowa, told BuzzFeed News that pre–Election Day simulations, paper trail audits, and the fact that voting machines are not connected to the web provide strong safeguards to the electoral system.

State election officials emphasized that the recent hack into voter registration databases differs from the risks faced by their offices, because these databases aren’t directly tied to voting on Election Day and because voting machines cannot be accessed remotely through the internet. “That’s the voter registration system, which is not at all connected to the actual voting,” Merrill said, adding that in almost every state, voter registration is completed on paper. “There are backup paper systems for every process in our election, and that means cybersecurity is not the concern that it’s being portrayed to be nationally.”

“The fact that most of these machines aren’t connected to the internet doesn’t make them immune to malicious software,” Ariel Feldman, a computer science professor at the University of Chicago, told BuzzFeed News. “In fact, our initial study, many years ago, demonstrated a voting machine virus that spread from machine to machine — not on the internet, but over memory cards,” he said.

In 2006, Feldman was part of a three-person research team at Princeton University that published an influential study demonstrating startling vulnerabilities in the Diebold AccuVote-TS voting machine, the most widely used voting machine in America at the time (and one viciously parodied in a faux ad campaign called “The Diebold Variations”). “There are various places where malicious software can be injected into the electoral process, and spread very broadly, even beginning with voting machine manufacturers,” he said.

Other experts have pushed back against the argument that our decentralized voting system provides adequate protection against outside interference. “Those 9,000 jurisdictions are still purchasing their election software from the same four or five vendors,” Andrew Appel, a computer science professor at Princeton University, told BuzzFeed News. “So there aren’t 9,000 different kinds of election systems to hack, there’s just a few kinds,” he said. Appel added that some of those jurisdictions might be situated in competitive swing states, where the margins of victory are small and only hundreds or thousands of votes determine the final outcome.

“It really saves us from worrying too much about cybersecurity — we have other concerns, but that’s kind of not one of them.”

This November, about 75% of American voters will cast their ballots on paper or on a machine that produces a paper record, according to Pamela Smith, the president of Verified Voting, a nonpartisan watchdog organization focused on electoral accountability. But five states — Georgia, New Jersey, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Delaware — exclusively use machines that generate no paper audit trail. This, experts say, makes it difficult to determine whether those machines accurately capture the preferences of voters. Several other states, including some of the country’s most populous, like Texas, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, use paperless voting machines in at least some of their districts.

Of course, having a paper record does not in itself make voting machines less vulnerable to hackers who gain physical access to them, nor do paper audit trails prevent software malfunctions. But they can act as a deterrent and fail-safe, according to Lawrence Norden, the deputy director of the democracy program for the Brennan Center for Justice and co-author of a recent study that catalogued the state of US voting machines. Norden told BuzzFeed News that the national trend is moving away from paperless voting machines. But many of the machines still in use are woefully out of date and are serviced by election offices with meager budgets. However, election officials have, he said, come to realize that the idea of Election Day hacking has moved from the theoretical into the real.

“Fortunately this is something that we’ve been talking about for years,” Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted told BuzzFeed News. Ohio has not seen any attempted hacks into its election-related websites, Husted said. And the IP addresses linked to the Arizona and Illinois breaches, which the FBI shared with election officials, have been flagged by his office and have not been detected.

Ohio, like other states BuzzFeed News spoke with, limits physical access to voting machines, conducts audits before and after Election Day, and has sought help from state and federal law enforcement in detecting cybersecurity threats. “This latest news is just one more moment for us to go back and double-check our work to make sure we have done it the right way,” Husted said.

“You can’t hack a paper ballot. Sometimes old technology is good.”

100% of votes cast in Ohio on Election Day will generate a paper record, Husted said, a practice that several other states pointed to as a robust preventive measure against manipulation. “You can’t hack a paper ballot. Sometimes old technology is good.”

“Ironically, in this high-tech age, good old-fashioned paper provides a lot of security,” Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon told BuzzFeed News. “Unlike other states that have in the last 15 years adopted systems that are completely or mostly electronic, we vote in Minnesota on paper ballots.” In addition to a state-mandated paper audit trail, Simon said, Minnesota has brought in private-sector firms to conduct an outside audit of election systems’ security.

But even the most thoughtful defensive measures can be circumvented by determined and creative adversaries, a fact acknowledged by California Secretary of State Alex Padilla, who said that his state is constantly testing its voting equipment and seeking expertise from federal law enforcement to stay ahead.

And beyond compromising specific vote tallies, other officials have said that merely casting doubt on the electoral results may diminish public confidence in the democratic process. “For me the worst thing about all this is that it’s creating suspicion in the American public that really could be destructive,” said Secretary Merrill of Connecticut.

The Department of Homeland Security has continued to offer its assistance to election officials in the form of security audits, incident response plans, and information sharing, according to the agency’s chief, Jeh Johnson. But even as the feds are eager to help, Johnson characterized the idea of an Election Day hack as a far-fetched scenario. “It would be very difficult, through any sort of cyber intrusion, to alter the ballot count, simply because it is so decentralized and so vast,” Johnson said Thursday during an event hosted by The Atlantic.

Some state election officials have expressed concerns that the fears aroused by vote manipulation may invite a heavy-handed response from the federal government, encroaching on the authority of state and local election offices, according to several secretaries of state who were on a conference call with Johnson last month. But Johnson said Homeland Security is merely offering help to those who ask. “There’s a lot of chatter on the internet about what that could mean — it does not mean a federal takeover of state elections systems,” he said. We don’t have the authority to do that. What we do in Homeland Security, in cybersecurity, is offer some assistance when people ask for it.”

Quelle: <a href="State Election Officials Confront Fears Of Election Day Hacking“>BuzzFeed

Facebook Pulls Its 9/11 Trending Topic After It Promotes A Hoax

After Facebook&;s Trending column highlighted a conspiracy theory on Friday that claimed the Twin Towers were brought down by bombs on 9/11, the company has removed its “September 11th Anniversary” topic entirely.

Facebook acknowledged the hoax and indicated it was working to resolve the issue. But the incident is yet another embarrassing moment for Facebook, whose Trending Topics product seems to create headlines as often as it highlights them.

“We&039;re aware a hoax article showed up there, and as a temporary step to resolving this, we&039;ve removed the topic,” a Facebook spokesperson told BuzzFeed News in an email.

Until last month, the Trending column — which highlights widely discussed topics and news stories within the platform — was run by a handful of human curators, many of whom had news training. But not long after a controversy in May when critics accused the curators of introducing bias to the column, Facebook dismissed them all, elevated the role of its algorithm in selecting topics and, according to Quartz, placed engineers in charge of correcting its mistakes. Today, those engineers sure had their hands full.

Facebook did not give any concrete explanation detailing how the 9/11 conspiracy story, from the UK-based Daily Star, ended up being the featured article for the “September 11th Anniversary” topic. Asked if engineers made the final call to include it, a Facebook spokesperson did not immediately respond.

Quelle: <a href="Facebook Pulls Its 9/11 Trending Topic After It Promotes A Hoax“>BuzzFeed

An Iconic Photo Was Deleted From Facebook And People Are Not Happy

The photo censored by Facebook.

Nick Ut / AP

Norway&;s Prime Minister Erna Solberg on Friday slammed Facebook in an escalating row between the social media giant and the country&039;s politicians and media over its repeated censoring of an iconic image of the Vietnam War.

The photograph, which shows naked 9-year-old Kim Phúc running away from a napalm attack after being severely burned, appeared on Facebook in a post about the terror of war by Norwegian writer Tom Egeland, The Guardian reported.

Facebook deleted the post, and Egeland was suspended from Facebook for sharing a photo that included “nudity.”

On Friday, a Facebook spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that they would reinstate the image in posts where it had been removed.

“After hearing from our community, we looked again at how our Community Standards were applied in this case. An image of a naked child would normally be presumed to violate our Community Standards, and in some countries might even qualify as child pornography. In this case, we recognize the history and global importance of this image in documenting a particular moment in time,” wrote a Facebook spokesperson in a statement to BuzzFeed News. “Because of its status as an iconic image of historical importance, the value of permitting sharing outweighs the value of protecting the community by removal, so we have decided to reinstate the image on Facebook where we are aware it has been removed. We will also adjust our review mechanisms to permit sharing of the image going forward. It will take some time to adjust these systems but the photo should be available for sharing in the coming days.”

Norway&039;s largest newspaper Aftenposten then published a story on Egeland&039;s Facebook suspension using the same “napalm girl” photo, and received a message telling it to “either remove or pixelize” the photo.

“Any photographs of people displaying fully nude genitalia or buttocks, or fully nude female breast, will be removed,” the notice from Facebook said.

However, Facebook deleted the article and image before the newspaper could respond.

In a front page editorial in response to the notice, Aftenposten Editor-in-Chief Espen Egil Hansen accused Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg of abusing his power. In an open letter, he said:

Listen, Mark, this is serious. First you create rules that don’t distinguish between child pornography and famous war photographs. Then you practice these rules without allowing space for good judgement. Finally you even censor criticism against and a discussion about the decision – and you punish the person who dares to voice criticism.

Dear Mark, you are the world’s most powerful editor. Even for a major player like Aftenposten, Facebook is hard to avoid. In fact we don’t really wish to avoid you, because you are offering us a great channel for distributing our content. We want to reach out with our journalism.

However, even though I am editor-in-chief of Norway’s largest newspaper, I have to realize that you are restricting my room for exercising my editorial responsibility. This is what you and your subordinates are doing in this case.

I think you are abusing your power, and I find it hard to believe that you have thought it through thoroughly.

Read the full open letter here.

The open letter on the front page of Aftenposten.

Aftenposten / Via aftenposten.no

Solberg then weighed into the debate by writing her own post in support of Aftenposten calling for the social media company to “review its editing policy,” only for Facebook to delete that as well.

A censored version of the image is now up in a post on Solberg&039;s profile, in which she said: “While I was on a plane from Oslo to Trondheim, Facebook deleted a post from my Facebook page. What Facebook does by removing images of this kind, good as the intentions may be, is to edit our common history.”

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Facebook: ernasolberg

Quelle: <a href="An Iconic Photo Was Deleted From Facebook And People Are Not Happy“>BuzzFeed

New Social Network Gab.ai Is Growing Fast Thanks To Its Free Speech Policy

Screenshot from Gab&;s popular page.

Upstart social network Gab.ai is just over three weeks old, but it&039;s adding thousands of people to its waitlist every day by promising them almost total freedom of speech.

Gab, founded by Silicon Valley-based Trump supporter Andrew Torba, is promoting itself as an alternative to Facebook and Twitter, which are both trying to find a balance between free speech and the inflammatory discourse such freedom sometimes begets. Facebook, which relies on users to flag objectionable content, has temporarily removed political speech multiple times, later chalking it up to glitch and error. Twitter seems caught between reining in harassment and giving people room to speak freely on its platform.

Gab’s message seems to be resonating, at least with some people. As of this week, the social network has 12,000 users, with another 42,000 on its waitlist. It&039;s registered more than 2.7 million pageviews on 240,000 posts, with people spending an average of 12 minutes on the site each time they log in. The site is built on a follow model, and people can upvote or downvote the posts they see from people they follow in a central feed. Posts with the most upvotes are collected in a popular tab within Gab.

One Gab.ai user&039;s artwork portraying the tiny social network&039;s fight against Twitter.

Brent Kathrens / Via Instagram: @brentkart

As of now, you could put Gab in the category of an Ello or Peach, social networks that grew temporarily popular when they debuted, but faded as alternatives to the big, established platforms. Torba, formerly the CEO of ad-tech company Automate Ads, just resigned from that job in an effort to give Gab a shot to move past that. He’s building the platform, along with 3 other people, with no outside funding.

In an email to BuzzFeed News, Torba wrote that his frustration with existing social networks’ content moderation policies was one catalyst for creating Gab. “What makes the entirely left-leaning Big Social monopoly qualified to tell us what is ‘news’ and what is ‘trending’ and to define what “harassment” means?” he said. “It didn&039;t feel right to me, and I wanted to change it, and give people something that would be fair and just.”

At the moment, Gab feels like a conservative chatroom. Some popular posts from earlier this week include: “Everytime Hillary coughs, the souls of her victims escape her body,” and “I will not attack any Liberals until they say stupid shit.” It also appears that Milo Yiannopoulos, a conservative writer who was permanently suspended from Twitter in July after his attack on actress Leslie Jones, has joined Gab. Yiannopoulos did not respond to a BuzzFeed News email seeking to confirm that the account is indeed his.

But Torba said the platform isn’t meant just for those of one ideology. “Gab is not FOR any particular group of people, political leaning, race, beliefs, or anything,” he wrote. “Anybody is welcome to express themselves on Gab.”

To deal with the inevitable harassment that occurs on the social web, Gab offers a number of features, including keyword filtering and user muting. And Gab plans to verify any user who presents a valid form of ID to confirm their identify. Users will be able to choose whether or not they want to see posts from verified users only. “We’re placing the onus on the user to handle harassment, and we’re giving them the tools to handle harassment themselves, as opposed to us taking an editorial stance,” Torba said. Both Facebook and Twitter have compelled users to remove posts in the past.

Despite its strict freedom of speech policies, Gab has some guidelines: Users can’t make threats of violence, post illegal pornography, or expose personal information without that person’s consent. None of its users have been banned to date, Torba said.

And though far from a surefire hit, Gab may be more than simply a blip. The United States is in the midst of a contentious Presidential election, and some conservatives feel a growing unease on Facebook and Twitter, platforms they see as being biased. If anything, Gab’s early, ideologically-narrow success plays into a larger trend in social media: people are moving towards smaller groups.

Quelle: <a href="New Social Network Gab.ai Is Growing Fast Thanks To Its Free Speech Policy“>BuzzFeed

People Are Freaking Out Because Read Receipts Have Come To Twitter

Twitter announced a bunch of new features overnight, including typing indicators (“…”), web link previews and, most controversially, read receipts.

Read receipts have been unpopular since they were first introduced on Blackberry Messenger, then the iPhone and early Facebook Messenger, where they are turned on by default. When the news spread that Twitter had finally joined the read receipts bandwagon, people were a little bit tense.

Those who don&;t want read receipts all over their DMs needn&039;t worry. You can disable them pretty easily in the settings:

Quelle: <a href="People Are Freaking Out Because Read Receipts Have Come To Twitter“>BuzzFeed

Facebook Co-Founder Commits $20 Million To Help Democrats Win In 2016

Dustin Moskovitz, the billionaire co-founder of Facebook and Asana, announced on Thursday that he intends to give $20 million to a “number of organizations” to help Democrats, and Hillary Clinton, win in 2016.

Moskovitz published a fiercely-worded Medium post arguing that Republican nominee Donald Trump is “running on a zero-sum vision” and that his attempts to woo economically disenfranchised voters “are quite possibly a deliberate con, an attempt to rally energy and support without the ability or intention to deliver.”

He also wrote that while he and his wife, Cari Tuna, have previously voted for Democrats in presidential elections, this is the first time they endorsed a candidate and donated.

The move represents a sharp break with Asana and Facebook board member, Peter Thiel, a Trump delegate who spoke at the Republican National Convention and earlier this week published an op-ed in the Washington Post in support of the Republican nominee.

It&;s not the first time he&039;s broken with his board member, or distanced himself from Trump. In June, in response to a BuzzFeed News inquiry, Moskovitz seemed to distance himself from Thiel, and disavowed Trump&039;s comments on Muslims.

It&039;s also the latest example of Silicon Valley coming out swinging against Trump. In July, a group of 150 Silicon Valley heavyweights published an open letter condemning the candidate.

BuzzFeed News has reached out to a Moskovitz representative for comment.

Quelle: <a href="Facebook Co-Founder Commits Million To Help Democrats Win In 2016“>BuzzFeed

Guy Who Allegedly Hacked CIA Director: I Participated In Government Program To Hack The Pentagon

The Pentagon in Washington, DC on February 13, 2016.

Andrew Caballero-reynolds / AFP / Getty Images

A man arrested by the FBI today for his alleged connection to the 2015 hack of CIA Director John Brennan also may have participated in an official US government program designed to test the cybersecurity of the Pentagon.

Justin Liverman, who goes by the handle “D3F4ULT,” according to a press release by the US Attorneys Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, states on his LinkedIn page that he participated in the HackThePentagon program.

A screenshot from Justin Liverman&;s LinkedIn profile.

HackThePentagon was a so-called “bug bounty,” a program by which hackers are paid, often by a third party, to find cybersecurity flaws in a company or organization. The company HackerOne administered this particular bounty; according to a blog post, the company accepted 1,400 hackers into the program, and they found 138 “valid bugs.”

“No organization is so powerful that it does not need outside help identifying security issues, and this includes the Pentagon,” wrote HackerOne CEO Mårten Mickos at the conclusion of the program, which ran from April to May 2016.

HackerOne would not confirm or deny whether Liverman participated in its HackThePentagon program. However, requirements for gaining clearance to submit to the bounty were lax. To qualify, hackers had to be US persons and couldn’t appear on the US Treasury Department&039;s Specially Designated Nationals list of people and organizations engaged in terrorism, drug trafficking and other crimes, according to a Department of Defense press release.

According to the government statement released today, Liverman is alleged to be part of the so-called “Crackas with Attitude” hacker collective that over the past year “used &039;social engineering&039; hacking techniques, including victim impersonation, to gain unlawful access to the personal online accounts of senior U.S. government officials, their families, and several U.S. government computer systems.”

Among those government officials was CIA Director John Brennan, whose personal email account was hacked. That attack, reported in October 2015, came seven months before Liverman, according to his LinkedIn post, was accepted into the government-authorized program to hack the Department of Defense. That program was conceived by the Defense Digital Service, the Defense wing of the White House&039;s Digital Service.

Quelle: <a href="Guy Who Allegedly Hacked CIA Director: I Participated In Government Program To Hack The Pentagon“>BuzzFeed

Twitter Kills Live Notifications Button Only A Day After Rolling It Out

That new button Twitter rolled out yesterday? The one that lets you subscribe to live video notifications for individual accounts? It didn’t last 24 hours.

Twitter is killing the button, at least for now. The feature was slated to make live video more prominent globally, across its platform.

Live video is becoming increasingly important for Twitter. Not only is the company investing in Periscope, it’s also reeled in a number of premium, live content deals with entities like the NFL, MLB and NHL. Given that context, the rollback of this feature is somewhat puzzling. Asked to explain the move, a Twitter spokesperson offering the following statement: “We&;re experimenting with different ways to discover live video on Twitter.”

Quelle: <a href="Twitter Kills Live Notifications Button Only A Day After Rolling It Out“>BuzzFeed

Inside VotePlz, Silicon Valley’s Attempt to Get Young People to Vote

Via voteplz.org

For first-time voters, the process can be new and unknown — “just like having sex,” said Erika Reinhardt, co-founder of VotePlz, a nonpartisan nonprofit that launched today. “Your parents don’t sit you down and tell you, &;this is how to vote.&039;”

VotePlz aims to make the process easier for young voters, a powerful demographic that now rivals Baby Boomers. VotePlz’s four cofounders all hail from the tech industry and wanted to approach voter registration like a startup: looking for ways to make it digital, frictionless, and game-like.

The organization is funded a lot like a startup too, with money raised through cofounder Sam Altman, whose day job is president of Y Combinator, a marquee startup incubator. Altman told BuzzFeed News that he has raised funding in the “low single digit millions” from other, unnamed tech industry insiders who also want more young voters to have a voice in the presidential election.

Altman and Reinhardt are both directors of VotePlz. Up until three weeks ago, Reinhardt was in product engineering for Planet Labs, a global imaging startup.

“We came together to think about what we could do to bring what we’re good at — which is consumer software — to voting registration and turnout,” said Altman.

“I want this to be the TurboTax of voter registration,” Reinhardt told BuzzFeed News. “You come in, you’re faced with this crazy set of rules that vary by state, you just don’t know what those rules are, and you often don’t know your own information.” Ten percent people surveyed by VotePlz, she said, didn’t even know if they were registered.

According to Altman, “Every year it’s gotten more and more difficult for young people to vote.” Many states require registrants to sign a form and mail it in “and most young people don’t have printers or stamps anymore.” What’s more, he added, with young people owning cars as a lower rate, they may have a hard time driving to the polls.

The nonprofit spent the past three weeks building the software and brushing up on the rules. Using the VotePlz website, young people can check if they’re registered to vote by entering their name and address, then register online in states that allow it, or get registration forms and a stamped envelope mailed to them for free, which costs VotePlz about $1.20 per person. There are also features to check if you’re entitled to time off of work to go to the polls and a way to send an automated message to your boss if you are.

The cofounders spitball with the bravado of a venture-backed startup, rather than a cash-strapped nonprofit, so it’s hard to tell when exactly a feature will be launched, if at all. But Altman mentioned the possibility of open-sourcing or building an API to allow others to white-label its software.

During our interview, Altman and Reinhardt were joined by their other cofounders, including Fouat Matin, who left to join VotePlz after his first week at Sequence, a Y Combinator-backed customer data analytics startup co-founded by Reinhardt’s husband. Matin said he was working on a leaderboard as a way to gamify urging your friends to register to vote. Altman also teased the possibility of “subsidized Uber/Lyft rides” to polling stations to address that ride problem. “We’re still looking into the legality and the budget of this,” he said. “That obviously gets more expensive, so we may raise more money.”

But despite its ambitions, for now VotePlz looks and works much like more established online voter registration portals, such as Vote.org, TurboVote, and Rock the Vote, which already offer their own twist on TurboTax for voters.

In July, Rock the Vote, announced a $4.5 million campaign called that aims to register an additional two million voters in time for the general elections. Jesse Moore, Rock the Vote&039;s vice president of civic engagement, said that the nonprofit, which is now 26-years-old, is working with Twitter and Tinder to grab potential voters on their mobile phones. Meanwhile, TurboVote, which partnered with BuzzFeed for a voter registration campaign this summer and has inked partnerships with 30 corporations and nonprofits and 260 colleges and universities. This week, a link to TurboVote started showing up on Starbucks cup sleeves.

VotePlz co-founders Ari Weinstein, Fouat Matin, Erika Reinhart, and Sam Altman (left to right)

Nitasha Tiku / BuzzFeed News

Evan Engstrom executive director of Engine, a political advocacy group for startups, said that the slow pace of government compared to Silicon Valley’s innovation cycle is the “most obvious impediment” keeping the tech industry out of politics. “There&039;s also a big disconnect between how tech issues are resolved and how policy is made,” he wrote in an email to BuzzFeed News. “[I]n tech, it&039;s almost always best to implement a quick, precise, narrow fix to any engineering problem, whereas policy these days tends to get made through massive omnibus bills that can make easy fixes difficult.”

It sounds like a classic case of Silicon Valley solutionism, but Brandon Naylor, communications director of Democracy Works, which runs TurboVote, said that when it comes to voter registration, a technological fix is absolutely necessary. Data collected by TurboVote indicates that 60 percent of people who did not vote in the last presidential election did so because of “process issues, rather than some level of apathy.”

That said, using consumer software tactics has its limits. “Imagine if you could register to vote by Snapchat, just by like snapping a picture of your driver’s license and we’d take care of it,” said Ari Weinstein, a software engineer and the fourth cofounder. (Weinstein are Matin were both recipients of the Thiel fellowship.) I asked Altman if he had contacted Snapchat. “We’re only three weeks old,” said Altman, so VotePlz’s staff of about six full time employees and handful of part-timers has been focused on the base products. “Now that we have that done, I think we’ll play around with things,” like snapping a photo of your driver’s license or even just texting in a picture of your license.

“Imagine if you could register to vote by Snapchat”

Naylor isn’t familiar with VotePlz, because it just launched, but he sounded skeptical about automating that part of the process. “There haven’t been a lot of secretaries of state who have opened up to taking pictures of driver licenses,” he said.

In this way, VotePlz seems constricted by the same naivete as other recent acts of Silicon Valley interventionism, such as investor Shervin Pishevar’s plans for an app that would reduce police violence or even Altman’s research on building a new city from scratch. Tech moguls are flexing their muscle in the civic arena more often these days, but passion projects tend to come with a lot of promises and little accountability.

But Altman and Reinhardt had a reasonable, albeit jargon-y retort. Voter registration is not a zero-sum game. In other words, picture Google vs. Uber vs. Tesla vs. GM etc in self-driving cars, except if everyone was actually in it for the environment.

Altman is optimistic about the social pressure created by a leaderboard that encourages users to register more users. “We’ll do the traditional stuff like advertising and direct messaging that you would expect that everybody else does,” said Altman, but perhaps the startup tricks could catch on faster.

“The chances are slim, these things are always hard — but if we could really get the social thing to do well….,” he said, trailing off.

Via voteplz.org

Quelle: <a href="Inside VotePlz, Silicon Valley’s Attempt to Get Young People to Vote“>BuzzFeed

Twitter Adds Button That Lets You Subscribe To Live Video Notifications

Twitter is tweaking its platform to make live video more prominent.

On Wednesday, the company added a new button that lets users subscribe to live video notifications from individual accounts, alerting them when the accounts go live on Periscope and share the link on Twitter. The button appears on each user&;s profile page and is available globally.

“With live notifications, you won&039;t miss a moment of live video on Twitter,” a Twitter spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

Twitter has been investing in live video lately, not only continuing to push Periscope, but cutting premium, live video deals with sports leagues like the NFL, MLB, and NHL.

In July, Twitter also streamed both the Republican and Democratic conventions in the United States. And the company&039;s chief financial officer, Anthony Noto, has essentially turned his Twitter feed into a running list of events you should “Watch Live&;”

Eventually, Twitter might use these notification subscriptions to alert users to premium, live video they may be interested in.

Periscope is in the midst of a fight for market share with Facebook&039;s Live streaming product (BuzzFeed is one of Facebook&039;s paid media partners), so every bit of promotion it can get from Twitter proper makes a difference.

Quelle: <a href="Twitter Adds Button That Lets You Subscribe To Live Video Notifications“>BuzzFeed