Difference between revisions of "Evaluating deliberation technologies in comparison to the "General Process of Deliberation""
From Deliberative Democracy Institiute Wiki
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | <h3>By comparing different technologies with the [[General process of deliberation|GPD]], we can uncover what are the elements of good technologies in facilitating deliberation.</h3> | + | <h3>''By comparing different technologies with the [[General process of deliberation|GPD]], we can uncover what are the elements of good technologies in facilitating deliberation.''</h3> |
In this section, I will take well proven deliberative technologies like Google, StackOverflow, Wikipedia, and less than good almost-deliberative technologies like twitter, forums, Facebook, and compare all of them to our technologies: [https://delib.tech Delib], [https://consenz.co.il/ Consenz], [https://www.whysaurus.com/ Whysaurus]. By doing so, I hope to find what we are missing and help improve deliberative apps. | In this section, I will take well proven deliberative technologies like Google, StackOverflow, Wikipedia, and less than good almost-deliberative technologies like twitter, forums, Facebook, and compare all of them to our technologies: [https://delib.tech Delib], [https://consenz.co.il/ Consenz], [https://www.whysaurus.com/ Whysaurus]. By doing so, I hope to find what we are missing and help improve deliberative apps. |
Revision as of 06:43, 4 September 2020
Contents
By comparing different technologies with the GPD, we can uncover what are the elements of good technologies in facilitating deliberation.
In this section, I will take well proven deliberative technologies like Google, StackOverflow, Wikipedia, and less than good almost-deliberative technologies like twitter, forums, Facebook, and compare all of them to our technologies: Delib, Consenz, Whysaurus. By doing so, I hope to find what we are missing and help improve deliberative apps.
First-line deliberative technologies
These technologies are very good at harassing the wisdom of the crowds to create high-quality solutions.
Google may not seem like a deliberative technology at first glance, but by understanding how it works, one might accept that it is a deliberative machine.