Post by warner123 on Feb 27, 2024 5:34:13 GMT
Internet technologies were discussed in the Italian Parliament on Thursday 4 December. “ Obama 1 month later: The victory of the Internet? “, this is the title of the initiative promoted by Codice Internet which wanted to compare experts, bloggers and politicians to understand what the Italian situation is and what lessons we can draw from the recent American case. For a couple of hours, the Sala Delle Colonne of the Chamber of Deputies "ideally connected" with the reality and forms of communication of our times: social networks, blogging, Facebook. Unfortunately only ideally, given that it was not allowed to bring in laptops and use a network connection... for journalists and bloggers all that remained was to adapt to the usual reassuring pen and paper.
Let's get to the facts. The starting point was the analysis of Obama's victory in the Uruguay Mobile Number List USA and how his campaign managed to combine so effectively a series of online tools with traditional offline channels. The debate took place in the form of an open session in which the guests David Orban, Marco Montemagno, Edoardo Colombo, Antonio Palmieri, Paolo Gentiloni, Antonio Sofi, Enrico Menduni and around fifty people in the audience participated, who made the their voice with questions and more or less heated interventions. Let's start with the calm and, as you can imagine, consoling tones of our politicians... Paolo Gentiloni , national head of the Pd Communication Area, after having listed the elements that contributed to Obama's victory, goes on the offensive by recalling a phantom "couscous pact ” done with Antonio Palmieri near Tunis (slyly denied and then confirmed by the latter), where he cautiously mentions the impracticality and absurdity of the Prime Minister's recent proposal to regulate the Internet.
Antonio Palmieri , national head of electoral communication and Internet Forza Italia/PDL, after having skilfully glossed over the "hot potato" of the Internet regulation proposal, instead presented the data from the online survey on the use of Internet technologies and social networks in the Chamber of Deputies. The survey shows that only 36% of deputies have a website while 21.1% have a personal presence on Facebook . However, it is striking that 10% of deputies are only on Facebook , without having a personal website, given that it confirms both the current boom of this social network in our country and its ease of use even for those who are not accustomed to it. to the Internet. Let's at least hope that it continues to be used and that it can become a real tool for interaction with citizens and does not prove to be yet another passing fad like the Second Life boom last year.
Let's get to the facts. The starting point was the analysis of Obama's victory in the Uruguay Mobile Number List USA and how his campaign managed to combine so effectively a series of online tools with traditional offline channels. The debate took place in the form of an open session in which the guests David Orban, Marco Montemagno, Edoardo Colombo, Antonio Palmieri, Paolo Gentiloni, Antonio Sofi, Enrico Menduni and around fifty people in the audience participated, who made the their voice with questions and more or less heated interventions. Let's start with the calm and, as you can imagine, consoling tones of our politicians... Paolo Gentiloni , national head of the Pd Communication Area, after having listed the elements that contributed to Obama's victory, goes on the offensive by recalling a phantom "couscous pact ” done with Antonio Palmieri near Tunis (slyly denied and then confirmed by the latter), where he cautiously mentions the impracticality and absurdity of the Prime Minister's recent proposal to regulate the Internet.
Antonio Palmieri , national head of electoral communication and Internet Forza Italia/PDL, after having skilfully glossed over the "hot potato" of the Internet regulation proposal, instead presented the data from the online survey on the use of Internet technologies and social networks in the Chamber of Deputies. The survey shows that only 36% of deputies have a website while 21.1% have a personal presence on Facebook . However, it is striking that 10% of deputies are only on Facebook , without having a personal website, given that it confirms both the current boom of this social network in our country and its ease of use even for those who are not accustomed to it. to the Internet. Let's at least hope that it continues to be used and that it can become a real tool for interaction with citizens and does not prove to be yet another passing fad like the Second Life boom last year.