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Media Mention
Oct 23, 2009USA Today
The Census Bureau is well-known for asking questions. Now it will answer them, too.
The agency's new 2010census.gov website went up this week and, when it is officially launched Monday will give people a chance to do the questioning.
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More in: Government, Social Networking, Web 2.0
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Media Mention
Sep 14, 2009Ars Technica
So is there a case for seeing two-way gaming as central to a definition of broadband? The cooperation/leadership argument may not be the strongest point, at least not if the implication is that games make gamers more helpful to society. A Pew Inte...
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More in: Teens, Social Networking, Politics
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Media Mention
Sep 3, 2009PBS MediaShift
The Pew Internet and American Life Project found that for the first time a majority (55 percent) of voting-age adults engaged with politics online during the 2008 presi...
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More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics, Social Networking
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Media Mention
Sep 2, 2009BBC News
US civic engagement remains in the hands of the middle-class despite hopes that the internet would democratise political involvement.
Those are the findings of a report from the Pew Internet Project.
Online p...
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More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics, Social Networking
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Media Mention
Sep 1, 2009Associated Press
The Pew Internet and American Life Project says in a report Tuesday that people who participate in civic life online tend to be richer and better educated. That's not much different from the makeup in offline politics. Pew counts activities such a...
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More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics
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Media Mention
Sep 1, 2009The Hill
The Internet has prompted young adults to become much more politically active, but the technology has not succeeded in getting other historically inactive groups involved in civic activism, according to a report released Tuesday by the Pew Interne...
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More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics
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Media Mention
Sep 1, 2009Ars Technica
Partisans on these issues may experience the Pew Internet and American Life Projects' latest study as a bit of a downer. It says that cyberspace hasn't really affected activism all that much in at least one fundamental sense. "Just as in offline c...
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More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics
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Media Mention
Sep 1, 2009The Atlantic
In 2004, Joe Trippi, Howard Dean’s techie campaign manager, declared that “the Internet is the most democratizing innovation we’ve ever seen—more so even than the printing press.” Five years later, after Read More
More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics, Social Networking
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Media Mention
Sep 1, 2009NextGov.com
Wealthy and well-educated Americans dominate online civic activities, just as they have long dominated traditional civic involvement, according to a study released on Tuesday by Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project. [...]
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More in: Government, Digital Divide, Politics, Social Networking