Now the UK General Election is finally underway, we're reminding you the Election Tech Handbook is up and running

UPDATE: We published this post about the Election Tech Handbook in September of this year, not quite knowing when or if there would be UK General Election in which it might be useful. Well, we know now…

We’ve left the editorial below as before - but we’re assured that the Handbook is being updated everyday. If you want to go to the physical epicentre of all this activities, please visit Newspeak House.

[More stuff comes in all the time, on this front… we’ve just discovered Election Leaflets - where you help journalists and media by photographing and uploading the election leaflets coming through your door, to check the more egregious local claims and blames.]

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In the 2017 snap General Election in the UK, the “London College of Political Technologists” at Newspeak House created something called an Election Tech Handbook (2017 version). This was a list of digital projects, information resources, and social groups.

ts aim was to help techies (and citizens) wrest some control of the battle of ideas back from well-funded and established political players (whether they be traditional representative parties, their backers, and perhaps shadier foreign operators).

The Election Tech Handbook is back, in its 2019 version, now that we’re underway with the next UK General Election. It has four main sections

  • a page of Projects, software initiatives either up and running or looking for help;

  • a very useful page of Political Data, including everything from political donations to the exact Cyan number for political party colours

  • an “Events and community” page, which has both links to supportive networks and a calendar of events

  • and finally a de rigour WhatsApp forum for discussions and call-outs about the foregoing

Some of the projects this year are really worth profiling - for example:

whotargets.me “We’re working out which demographics political campaigns online are targeting with ads, and what messages they’re using in their communication. We’ve developed a browser extension that detects campaign ads shown to you on Facebook and keeps a tally of who’s advertising the most. We’re aggregating the data to build maps of where specific campaigns are targeting. Also working on electoral/transparency reform. Opportunity to expand to YT/Twitter/Email campaigns. Please get in touch you want to work on the project (tech/communications/law experience very welcome: https://whotargets.me/en/get-in-touch/

Advote.org - “voter-run billboard adverts. This is a trial of a new service to combat mechanised profile-targeted digital advertising. For every 1000 registered voters who vote for a particular message in a constituency - we will post it on a high traffic billboard. We have some budget and can help crowd fund, so to launch the service we're looking for campaigns with strong communities behind them but with scant funds for advertising. If you have a campaign that needs an innovative way to cut through get in touch!

whosin.io - “Like kickstarter but for people. You set up an event and how many people it will take for you to run it. If that many people say they’ll come, you do the event.” This is great for organising strikes/protests. Check out their list of existing projects to get a feel for it.”

Get Bad News - “A game that puts you in the mindset of propagandists and agents promoting fake news, propaganda and hate-speech to help the user understand how fake news is made and promoted… In Bad News, you take on the role of fake news-monger. Drop all pretense of ethics and choose a path that builds your persona as an unscrupulous media magnate. But keep an eye on your ‘followers’ and ‘credibility’ meters. Your task is to get as many followers as you can while slowly building up fake credibility as a news site. But watch out: you lose if you tell obvious lies or disappoint your supporters!”

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There’s not only much more here, but the Election Tech Handbook invites you to add your own project, whether half-completed or seeking assistance. Newspeak House itself is always worth keeping in touch with, as it became something of a digital nerve-centre for political activism around the 2017 General Election.

People get ready...