Change.gov launched a Digg-inspired feature yesterday that allows users to submit questions to the Obama transition teams and vote questions submitted by other visitors up or down. Open for Questions has enjoyed a good deal of activity so far (410,000 votes on over 5,000 questions) even though it is not at all clear what the transition team intends to do with the data it collects. The feature is the latest in a series of experiments in “participatory government” launched by the transition team.
Open for Questions is powered by Google Moderator, and while Digg is the most obvious point of reference, there are clearly some key differences. Open for Questions has very limited functionality, which makes me think the transition team is up to something very different from creating a Digg-style system. Here is some key functionality that has been left out:
The net result of all this is that Open for Questions reminds me more of crowdsourcing efforts like Google Image Labeler and Mechanical Turk than of Digg. By leaving out all that functionality, the tool drowns out all the noise and nonsense and tries to focus exclusively on discovering the best questions. What we have here is very focused participatory democracy.
Anyone who has played with these sorts of voting systems knows that they have serious flaws and understands the choices the transition team has made. The two biggest problems with voting systems are the ability of bands of committed advocates to wield disproportionate influence and the tendency of the majority to bury important but unpleasant content.
From my review, so far it doesn’t look like any groups are taking the voting over the way Ron Paul supporters did on Digg (and many other venues) or Rebuild the Party. I’m frankly surprised the Paul folks haven’t shown up yet. However, the majority is actively burying content ton topics they don’t want to discuss. A number of questions about the Rod Blagojevich scandal that were submitted to the site have not only been voted down, but flagged as inappropriate, meaning they are no longer available on the site and can only be found through back channel searches. Not surprising.
Despite the flaws, I really like what the transition team has done and I think the approach they have taken is as good as any for this type of thing. What do you think?
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