RE: IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL WHO ARE INVESTIGATING PIZZAGATE HERE ON STEEMIT--
OK, with a group effort like this, instead of replicating the steps of others before us, what kind of collaborative tools are in use to draw up a bubble chart to connect the associations between people? I know on some of the videos that someone's done the trouble to illustrate how that's being done, but they've not stated what tool they're using, or if it's accessible by a collaborative team.
I'm proposing something like a mind map.
https://bubbl.us/#!05270005598328276
This is free to use, and we can then allocate specific threads of the mind map to specific individuals.
Obviously, with that being a free tool, and the link I provided is unprotected, the collaborative efforts would be subject to corruption by determined individuals. Maybe someone has a better idea?
It would be great if we had some sort of chalkboard/whiteboard type app/site. One where any in the group could write or post images on the board at a desired location to build a larger picture of the investigation. Do you know of any site that offers this sort of thing? Think of it as a shared space where a large 'wall 'is available for anyone in a group to add things to and move things around. If this does not exist, perhaps we ought to get a coder onto it because it doesn't sound all that difficult to create. Then again, I know nothing about coding but, the concept sounds simple enough.
There was another discussion thread that pointed out a community whiteboard. I'll link it and see if I can upvote it.
It was a voat discussion - and I've seen pasteboards in several Youtube videos now where they've pretty much got a huge wall with criss-crossing lines.
I'm thinking I'm a few weeks too late, haha.
Given the huge disinformation drive by the mainstream media (NYT, Snopes, WaPo), it comes as no surprise that they're trying to discredit the citizen investigators digging into this. I would pretty much expect those managing the pasteboard to restrict access to trustworthy participants.
Mind you, I've used things like Google Draw previously as a collaborative whiteboard. It had really good image pasting, URL linking, commenting and drawing capability.