TechRepublic : A ZDNet Tech Community

IT News Digest

Host: Sonja Thompson
Contact

Googltics deepens: More presidential candidates at Google

The twenty-first century Web leader, Google, invited to its campus an eighteenth century thinker, Republican presidential candidate Dr. Ron Paul (R-TX), with surprising results.

Dr. Paul (an obstetrician, and still practicing medicine as well as serving his Galveston-area Texas congressional district) followed Senators Clinton and McCain to the Google campus, as noted in our June article on Google’s growing influence on politics and public discourse. Dr. Paul was invited, as were the other candidates, to explain his views to employees in the Google standard hour-long discussion. However, no other candidate has resulted in overflow crowds of Googleistas, as did Dr. Paul, and his Web presence, as evidenced by this TechCrunch article with link to YouTube video of the Google discussion, is unique.

There are few opportunities today to focus on a candidate, as modern media compels sound bite thinking; even NPR rarely spends more than three minutes in an interview story these days. By contrast, Google makes these lengthy campus discussions available, just as they have for other public policy discussions (e.g., this excerpt from ‘Should Google Go Nuclear?‘ by Dr. Robert Bussard on aneutronic fusion and the consequences of very cheap power).

Large corporations and IT are finding significant costs in regulation. Just ask Microsoft to tally up all the costs of antitrust litigation, and then look at how Redmond has stopped ignoring politics. It should be no surprise that Google, with its huge demands for electricity, should gain some saavy.

Since politics skews technology, isn’t turnabout fair play?

K7AAY here, a Bowling Green State University journalism graduate and former radio journalist, now a tech writer in the Silicon Forest (Portland, Oregon) after a long stint in telecommunications system administration. Growing up with hurricanes on the Gulf of Mexico led to an amateur radio license and leadership in large national relief organizations, as well as appreciation of better and more resilient communications.

Print/View all Posts Comments on this blog

Since politics skews technology, isn't turnabout fair play? johnbartley | 07/16/07

What do you think?

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Recent Entries

TR on Twitter

Archives

TechRepublic Blogs



Lunch and Learn: Microsoft Office 2007
All new edition, updated and expanded to cover Microsoft's newest productivity suite - Microsoft Office 2007! Expand your office's knowledge of Microsoft Access 2007, Excel 2007, Outlook 2007, Word 2007, and Powerpoint 2007 with TechRepublic's Lunch and Learn: Microsoft Office 2007.
Buy Now
IT Manager's Tool Kit, Third Edition
Proven peer-authored advice and over 30 templates cover a variety of management topics to help you overcome staffing, financial, disaster planning and other technology challenges.
Buy Now

SmartPlanet

Click Here