The buzz is building…
By Kevin Connor  •  Jan 15, 2009 at 11:23 EST

All done with being cooped up in alpha land, LittleSis has been making appearances all over the internet today. We’ve been thrilled with the response. It all started with Sunlight’s post, followed by OpenCongress’s piece yesterday. Today Craig Newmark gave the site a shout out on his blog (cross-posted at Huffington Post). The Institute for the Future of the Book posted an extended entry yesterday, and today techPresident speculated: what happens when the powers that be find out they’re being followed?

And lo and behold, the microsphere is a-twitter.

The response from the Sunlight community has been impressive, and we’re very happy to see so many new analysts sign up to keep watch on the powers that be. In the next few weeks we’ll be posting tips and tricks for making edits, and pointing out profile pages that are looking good, and others that need some TLC. In the meantime, drop us a line if you’ve got questions or suggestions for the site. We’d love to hear from you.

The citizens’ intelligence community is growing by leaps and bounds. Let’s keep it up!

Why LittleSis Matters
By Matthew Skomarovsky  •  Jan 14, 2009 at 20:44 EST

There are thousands of people in the US, and plenty more around the world, who spend every day investigating the ties between people in the upper circles of government and business. These people have diverse backgrounds: investigative journalists, social scientists, political opposition researchers, social justice activists, public interest attorneys, and business intelligence types. There are thousands more amateur dirt diggers at the fringes, posting their findings to blogs, message boards, email lists, zines, and elsewhere.

These researchers don’t usually think of themselves as a community. They work on their own projects, occasionally encountering each others’ work and building upon it. Their work, if unpublished, is consigned to the purgatory of old filing cabinets and hard drives. As the internet has become by far the most important research and publishing tool available to them and their organizations, more of this research has found its way onto the web, but it remains scattered, hard to find, and even harder to assemble holistically.

But all these people engaged in power structure research share a common piece of wisdom: if you want to understand power, either to shift it or to attain it, you have to scrutinize the underlying relationships between powerful people. Combine this principle with another from the internet age — linked data is far more valuable than lonely data — and LittleSis is born.

LittleSis is an endeavor to take all the great power structure research already being done, organize it, clarify it, and connect it so that grassroots efforts that challenge the powers that be will have a big and detailed map of the terrain they must navigate, and proper tools for adding to it as they move forward.

(You know this already, but I’ll say it anyway:) We really, really need grassroots efforts challenging the powers that be to grow and win.

The crises we all have to reckon with are urgent because if left alone, they will get worse by orders of magnitude very quickly. The economy is contracting very sharply and soon may reach levels of unemployment we’ve never experienced in combination with the weak safety net and deep indebtedness that currently exist. Our government has spent over a trillion dollars transforming an oil dictatorship into a wasteland, and is spending trillions more pumping water out of the financial Titanic. And speaking of rough seas, at some point soon the earth might begin a runaway warming, and everything will drown.

Our official leaders (and the relatively small fraction of the world they draw support, advice, pressure, and guidance from) have not only steered our society in the wrong direction, they’ve completely crashed it in the process. As if this weren’t bad enough, recently it’s become ordinary for them to then to be placed (or remain) in charge of spending 1,000,000,000,000s of dollars on a solution.

A new administration is a step in the right direction, but a step that’s been taken many times before with little progress. New administrations are needed, but not enough, to prevent these crises from entering uncharted territories of bad news. The steering wheels are being held by many of the same hands, which means powerful people aren’t learning from their big mistakes. Our leaders have been given enormous space to fail and fail, usually without even minimal consequences for them. In other words, there is a staggering lack of accountability.

It is precisely in these conditions that grassroots efforts have to step in and turn up the heat on corruption, injustice, waste, and deception. Chronically failing leaders who hide in walls of power need a wakeup call from an outraged citizenry. Good people within the system need extra pressure and encouragement to wield their power in behalf of the changes they want to see but are told to forget.

Building simple tools where once they were lacking can go a long way toward making accountability efforts of all sizes more effective. I think LittleSis can do that. It organizes existing information to help everyone identify the culprits, watch what they’re up to, and effectively plot to challenge them. If people think that’s a good idea, they will participate, and it will do its job well.

Kevin Connor (LittleSis co-founder) and I thought it was a good idea several years ago when we were doing some research with a group called HarvardWatch. One of its focuses was the Harvard Corporation, the secretive university board composed of seven high-flying names from business, government, and academia. This board played a large part in blocking many progressive changes to school policy we worked hard to organize support for while attending Harvard.

As with many university boards, the closer you look at the Harvard Corporation, the worse it looks. In 2002 HarvardWatch brought needed attention to deep ties between the Harvard board and Enron, and energy deregulation in general. Realizing it could use its place within America’s most mythologized elite school to shine a light on some elite abuse of power, HarvardWatch put out another report later that year detailing ways that Harvard had propped up George W Bush’s failing oil company in 1980s, including off-the-books partnerships similar to those employed by Enron. (No joke.) A senior member of Harvard’s board at the time, Robert Stone, is a longtime friend of the Bush family, so go figure.

In 2004 Kevin and I began lamenting the lack of good software for conducting and sharing the research we were collecting about those networks. Text documents and spreadsheets just weren’t doing it for us. Wikis were starting to find use everywhere (SourceWatch is a site that began employing a wiki effectively for corporate research in 2003), but didn’t seem structured appropriately for modeling social networks.

So we thought about writing some software to fill this void. And while we’re at it, why not make it a public website for others like us to also use and add to? And why not populate it automatically with corporate board rosters extracted from SEC filings? And why not pull in bulk databases of political contributions and include that too? And government contracts! And lobbying records!

We had some experience with web development and information design, and a DIY spirit, and so the undertaking began in a highly extracurricular fashion in 2005. We spent years thinking about it, toying with many ideas, and little by little learning the skills we needed to execute it well. We finally began devoting ourselves to it for real in late 2007, assembled an organization to back it, received a grant from the Sunlight Foundation in June 2008, and built the current beta site from “scratch” with the help of another developer — Eddie Tejeda — in the half year since then.

So far I’m very happy with the results, as is the rest of the LittleSis team. I hope you’ll try it out and tell me what you think. I hope you’ll pass it along to all your friends who take down corporate criminals and run for local office and organize people and fight back with pen-swords.

Welcoming the Posse
By Kevin Connor  •  Jan 14, 2009 at 09:19 EST

A big welcome to friends of the Sunlight Foundation! Today’s Sunlight post marks LittleSis’s first real steps out into the wide world of the internet. We’re very happy that transparency’s posse is getting a first peek at the site, because we designed it for people like you: people focused on breaking through the information barriers that hurt our democracy.

From Wall Street to Washington, the need to bring transparency to powerful social networks is urgent. This has become increasingly clear over the past six months, as the economy has sunk to new depths, and leaders in business and government have formulated deeply unpopular responses to the challenges that the country faces.

By tracking the relationships of powerful Americans – everything from campaign contributions to family ties – LittleSis opens up these networks for public inspection. “Big Brother” is commonly used to describe a situation where the electronic eyes of the powers that be are vigilantly watching citizens for misbehavior. LittleSis is a website where the electronic eyes of citizens are vigilantly watching back.

The Sunlight Foundation first began supporting LittleSis.org about six months ago. At the time, the project was still a raggedy prototype. It was, and still is, a project of the Public Accountability Initiative, an emerging nonprofit founded by me, Matthew, and several other veterans of academia, activism, and the world of web 2.0. Sunlight recognized the urgency of the project and its goals and threw their support behind our project. We’re very grateful for their support.

Like all of you, and like Sunlight, LittleSis is part of a movement to bring transparency to government and open up the channels of power in this country. At a time of great crisis and enormous challenges, it’s movements like this one that will turn the page on an era of failed leadership and failed policy, and hit refresh on our democracy.

Design changes
By Kevin Connor  •  Jan 13, 2009 at 17:02 EST

We rolled out some design changes this afternoon, in preparation for our soft launch tomorrow. Folks who got comfortable with the hemmed-in headers and logo might find the blue sky a bit jarring, but we think you’ll come to like it. If you feel the urge, let us know what you think about it all – font and layout tweaks, as well – in the comments.

Peaceful transfer of power
By Matthew Skomarovsky  •  Jan 08, 2009 at 22:39 EST

In preparation for next week’s beta launch, we’re moving our site to a new home over the next few days. There most likely will be a few hours of downtime Friday or Saturday, and it will take a while for the new site location to be updated across the interwebs. Please bear with us!

References and Wikipedia
By Matthew Skomarovsky  •  Jan 07, 2009 at 12:54 EST

A quick but important note about References on Littlesis.

From now on we’re encouraging Littlesis analysts to only use original sources when contributing data. Sites like Wikipedia that aggregate information from elsewhere without requiring documentation, though abundant with largely accurate information, are less useful to Littlesis users looking to verify information.

Wikipedia pages often contain inadequate documentation of the info they contain. When a reference is provided at the bottom, it’s often not directly linked to the relevant text above. Moreover, Wikipedia pages often change, and information that you source one day might be gone the next. And as we all know, Wikipedia is still considered an illegitimate source of information in many circles.

I personally love Wikipedia and use it for learning all the time. I often feel it’s the most useful public website in existence. And Littlesis probably wouldn’t be possible without the crowdsourcing success story of Wikipedia paving the way. But for documenting my work on Littlesis, it’s more helpful to others if I enter sources that will allow other users to quickly confirm my info if they so desire.

Of course, Wikipedia is often the best starting point to look for original sources. And we still encourage you to add Wikipedia pages as references to an entity’s profile directly, just not as the only source for a relationship or other important piece of info. The ‘References’ section on any profile contains a details link at the top that allows you (if you are logged in) to add new references independently of the entity and relationship editing process. For example:

http://littlesis.org/reference/list?model=Entity&id=33346

Soon you’ll see an adviso like “original sources only — not Wikipedia!” below the ‘Source URL’ field in editing forms. Understand we’re not hating on everyone’s favorite ‘pedia, just trying to keep it real.

Excited About 2009
By Matthew Skomarovsky  •  Jan 01, 2009 at 22:35 EST

Last winter Kevin and I were just beginning to look for funding to grow Little Sister — as the project was then named — from a raggedy prototype to a sophisticated, fast, and reliable public resource. I was living at my parents’ house and Kevin was getting by writing about the (amazingly) still-obscure subprime housing meltdown and its relation to Wall Street.

Much has happened since then. The Sunlight Foundation recognized the potential — and the urgency — of our project and moved quickly to support six months of intensive web development. We’re now putting the finishing touches on a beta that we’re proud of and excited to unveil to the watchdogging world.

These finishing touches include:

  • a robust caching system to improve site performance
  • more names, relationships, photos, logos, and links
  • better instructions for adding content
  • design and UI improvements

Once these are complete, which should happen within the next week or so, the beta launch is official. Expect a post about it from us and Sunlight soon.