Imagine If Political Campaigns Couldn't Use The Web... Or Just Look At Japan
from the no-communicating-please dept
While there have been plenty of news stories about how the various political campaigns in the US have been using the internet to get out the vote, Newsweek has a fascinating story about how Japanese election law pretty much bans all use of the internet in campaigning. Once a political campaign is announced, that candidate can't update his website or blog. The only loophole is podcasts (the law doesn't cover audio), but that's hardly enough to make much of a dent. As the article notes, this has helped keep younger, more technically savvy politicians from succeeding when they run for office -- and that's part of the reason why older politicians are perfectly happy with the system the way it exists. It sounds like some are pushing for change, while others are actively defying the ban, but it's apparently quite a different online atmosphere during election season in Japan than elsewhere.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: communications, free speech, internet, japan, politics
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What if....
Suppose you had to like, say something meaningful or actually answer a question or propose a plan to resolve an issue based on something more than conjecture. That would be weird.
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Re: What if....
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We could add a lot to that.
Imagine there's no TV ads.... it's easy if you try.
Acutally, I'd be in favor of toning it down on TV and letting them do whatever on the 'net. At least on the web, I'm asking for it.
I haven't watched one second of 'regular' TV in 3 months with the sole purpose of avoiding political ads, On-demand and DVD for the win.
It's working beautifully.
And with a Car Stereo that has USB for a flash drive, I don't even have to listen to it there. Just the random car with 10 political bumper stickers cutting me off from time to time and a few signs in yards, cluttering up the neighborhood.
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Hmmmm.....
In a way, their system is better. There should be a maximum budget allotted to each candidate from a major party. The person who becomes Prime Minister or President should not be dependent on budget. It really should be more fair than it is now.
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Re: "Imagine there's no TV ads"
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Japanese Elections
Every time there's an election due, you invariably get cars roaming all over the place with huge PA speakers on top, blaring out a repeating loop of political spruiking at near-ear-bleeding volumes. I don't understand most of it, being a gaijin, but it's still massively annoying.
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Re: What if....
It's unbelievable what these politicians get for their campaigns and how much of that could be used in solving issues that they're campaigning FOR!!
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