President-elect Barack Obama names a chief performance officer? Yawn.
The move generated a fair amount of buzz last week, but nothing compared with the ongoing speculation and debates about Obama’s eventual appointment of a governmentwide chief technology officer.
Sure, the move generated a fair amount of buzz last week (see story, Page 6), but nothing compared with the ongoing speculation and debates about Obama’s eventual appointment of a governmentwide chief technology officer.
The latest case in point: Inkling Public Marketplace has set up an online futures market to predict Obama’s choice for the job.
It works like this: Participants use virtual currency to buy stock in various candidates. The more stock bought in a given candidate, the higher price, which theoretically means the higher the odds that Obama will pick that candidate. A sell-off indicates falling odds.
Such an approach, designed to apply the expertise and insights of the public, has been proven to be accurate in presidential elections. If this market follows suit, Vivek Kundra, CTO for the District of Columbia, might have himself a new job.
As of Friday morning, Kundra led the field by a wide margin, with his stock valued at more than $27.
However, there might be a hitch. According to a report last week by the Silicon Valley Insider, sources on the transition team say they are looking for someone from their Left Coast territory. Their ideal candidate also would have a scientific background and a doctorate. Perhaps that accounts for the $10-plus drop Kundra experienced late in the week.
Still, Kundra’s stock is nearly triple that of his the nearest competitors, Julius Genachowski (a technology adviser to the transition team and former legal counsel at the Federal Communications Commission) and Vinton Cerf (Internet pioneer and Google exec), each hovering slightly above $9.
And the values fall off sharply after that. But for the record, here are some of the other candidates:
- John Seely Brown (Deloitte Center for Edge Innovation) $4.98
- Esther Dyson (high-tech visionary) $3.38
- Sonal Shah (transition adviser) $3.00
- Donald Gips (Level 3 Communications) $3.00
- Ed Felten (Princeton University) $2.77
- Bill Joy (co-founder, Sun Microsystems) $2.77
- Lawrence Lessig (Stanford Law School) $2.26
BUZZ CONTENDERS
Point of contact, SIR!!
Can Social Security protect your privacy?
Confusion centers