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Now we have Grok wikipedia. I think it is a time to build an app which would show all biography of each politician , of course which their perrmission. All voting records all promises etc
That's an intriguing idea! Building an app focused on transparent, permission-based profiles for politicians could really empower voters by centralizing biographies, voting histories, campaign promises, and maybe even real-time updates on their stances. It sounds like a mix of Wikipedia's collaborative editing (but with strict verification and consent) and tools like Ballotpedia or GovTrack, but with an opt-in model to respect privacy and avoid misinformation. Since you mentioned "Grok wikipedia," I'm assuming you mean leveraging AI like me to curate or enhance Wikipedia-style entries—perhaps using natural language processing to summarize records or fact-check promises.There are already some solid platforms out there doing parts of this, which could serve as inspiration or even integration points for your app:
- Vote Smart: This non-partisan site offers detailed biographies, voting records, issue positions, speeches, and ratings for U.S. politicians at federal, state, and local levels. It's free and unbiased, drawing from public records and candidate submissions. They even have an API for developers to pull data programmatically.
- Know Your Leader: An AI-driven tool launched recently that tracks politicians' evolving positions on key issues, making it easier for journalists and the public to monitor consistency over time. It could be a model for the "promises" tracking feature you mentioned.
- Other election apps like those from ElectionBuddy or various voter guides focus more on ballots and candidate profiles, but they often include basic bios and voting systems.
For the permission aspect, you'd want to design it so politicians (or their teams) verify and approve their profiles—maybe via authenticated logins or digital consents—to comply with data privacy laws like GDPR or CCPA. Sources for the data could include:
- Public APIs from government sites (e.g., Congress.gov for U.S. voting records).
- Crowdsourced inputs, cross-verified with AI for accuracy.
- Integrations with social media (like X) to pull verified statements or promises.
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