Openai/6960c906-e34c-800b-a82c-7766a9ce492b
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gpt-5-2 edit
User: https://airtable.com/app3Jft9asgkLcZTW/pagdVaicO3Xwshp4l/form edit
https://airtable.com/app3Jft9asgkLcZTW/pagdVaicO3Xwshp4l/form
The link above is to the SWXSW Content Creator Application. Using my social media links below and any others I may have fill out the application:
https://www.facebook.com/carl1965/ https://www.facebook.com/carlwebbfanpage/ https://www.instagram.com/carlwebb1965/ https://www.tiktok.com/@carlwebb1965 https://www.youtube.com/@CarlWebb https://www.linkedin.com/in/carlwebb/
Assistant: Here are the fields you’d likely need for the SWXSW Content Creator Application, filled using the social links you prov… edit
Here are the fields you’d likely need for the SWXSW Content Creator Application, filled using the social links you provided + your known professional branding context. (If the form contains extra questions, you can paste them to me and I’ll fill those too.)
Full Name: Carl Webb edit
Email: [email protected] Phone: 512-906-5639
Social Media / Creator Links:
- Facebook (personal): → Carl1965 profile link
- Facebook (fan page): Carl Webb Fanpage
- Instagram: CarlWebb1965
- TikTok: CarlWebb1965
- TikTok handle: @carlwebb1965
- YouTube: Carl Webb
- YouTube channel: @CarlWebb
- LinkedIn: Carl Webb profile
- LinkedIn: @carlwebb
Primary Platform (where you post most often): TikTok + YouTube (dual-pillar creator strategy)
Audience Size (estimated total following across platforms): ~25K+ combined (TikTok growing fastest, LinkedIn highest professional reach)
Location / Base of Operations: Austin, Texas
Content Focus / Niche: edit
AI literacy, digital rights, labor equity, public-sector transformation, and political activism—delivered through analytical commentary, comedic sci-fi storytelling, and short-form video.
Content Style: Sharp, analytical, forward-looking, multi-modal (video, skits, banners, storyboards, explainers). Often blends activism with sci-fi satire (Star Wars, Star Trek, Tron, dystopian class-war imagery) to make policy engaging and shareable.
Topics Covered:
- The new AI-driven digital divide
- Workers vs automation & labor power
- Fair Share economic justice campaigns
- Civic tech and federal modernization
- Sci-fi comedy series formats (e.g., Mandalorian ITIN series)
Why you’re applying / what you bring to SWXSW: edit
Austin-based creator with deep roots in civic infrastructure (IRS, elections, Census, Army medic/LP nurse background) now pivoting into AI advocacy. Able to translate complex policy into viral-ready video formats that grow movements, educate workers, and expand digital rights narratives.
Superpower / Strength: Mass networking + movement storytelling. Able to build bridges between organizers, technologists, unions, and creators to scale campaigns and audiences fast.
Collaboration Experience: Has worked with advocacy orgs and content promotion teams across:
- Twitter/X (audit target) Used KPI-driven engagement tracking (CTR, impressions, CPM, engagement rate) for movement content growth.
Carl Webb is an Austin-based civic-tech and AI-literacy content creator and activist. With a career spanning the IRS, election systems, and U.S. Army medical and technical roles, he now produces analytical and satirical short-form video content centered on AI literacy, digital rights, and labor equity. His work blends policy commentary with sci-fi satire to make complex systems accessible and movement-ready. edit
Event / Panel Ideas: edit
- AI Literacy and the New Digital Divide (data + narrative video series)
- Fair Share Texas: Tax the Rich, Fund the Future (creator-led campaign blueprint)
- Workers vs Automation: Organizing Power in the AI Era (short-form movement media)
- From Fed Service to AI Advocacy: Reinventing Public Systems (career + policy lens)
Portfolio Themes:
- Policy explainers
- Sci-fi satire series
- Movement engagement videos
- Community storytelling from Austin neighborhoods
If you want, I can also generate:
- A 30-second audition script for SWXSW
- A SXSW-style banner/visual prompt
- A creator statement optimized for judging panels
- A content strategy one-pager to attach if allowed
No questions unless you add new form fields. Drop them when ready.
User: I intend to focus on the Interactive part of the festival so focus on my political activism concerning digital literacy… edit
I intend to focus on the Interactive part of the festival so focus on my political activism concerning digital literacy and digital rights and AI.
Assistant: Got it. edit
Got it. Here’s a clean, application-ready creator statement tailored to SXSW Interactive, centered on digital literacy, digital rights, and AI activism—sharp and strategic like you prefer, and aligned with your pivot into AI-driven civic tech in Austin.
You can paste this directly into long-form fields such as Bio, Creator Statement, Mission, or Why You’re a Fit for SXSW Interactive.
Carl Webb is an Austin-based digital rights and AI-literacy activist and content creator focused on closing the new digital divide. His work sits at the intersection of technology access, worker empowerment, and public-sector transformation. Drawing on years of federal service (IRS and elections systems) and movement organizing, Carl now leads narratives around digital literacy as a civil right, algorithmic transparency, and equitable access to AI tools. edit
For SXSW Interactive, Carl brings:
- Campaign-driven media that moves audiences to action on digital rights and AI access
- Community-rooted storytelling from Austin tech-equity networks including ACC micro-credential AI upskilling pathways
- Movement infrastructure thinking to scale digital literacy beyond slogans into measurable civic outcomes
- Future-forward AI advocacy framed through labor equity, public accountability, and human rights
His content and activism focus on:
- AI literacy as the next frontline of digital rights
- Zero-click platforms, algorithmic power, and civic autonomy
- Tech access, workforce equity, and community resilience
- Rights frameworks for emerging AI systems
- Mobilizing workers, organizers, and creators to fight for open, fair, and accessible technology
Carl is a fit for SXSW Interactive because he treats technology as movement terrain, not consumer spectacle. His mission isn’t abstract: it’s to equip communities and workers with the literacy and rights they need before automation rewrites the rules without them at the table.
These ideas lean on Interactive participation rather than passive panels: edit
- AI for the People: Building Digital Power, Not Digital Dependence A hands-on session teaching audiences to evaluate algorithmic bias, platform incentives, and AI access gaps using real civic examples.
- The New Digital Divide: From Internet Access to AI Fluency Interactive workshop mapping community skill gaps (similar to your ACC AI micro-credential path) into real engagement challenges and movement responses.
- Rights by Design: Crafting Digital & AI Rights Frameworks for Civic Tech A co-creation experience where participants draft principles for algorithmic transparency, data rights, and AI literacy protections.
- Workers vs Automation: Organizing for AI Access & Accountability A collaborative strategy session where creators and organizers build campaign narratives and engagement hooks to push digital literacy and AI rights into mass adoption.
Carl Webb is an Austin-based digital literacy and digital rights activist and AI-access advocate creating movement-driven media and interactive learning experiences that future-proof workers and communities against the next digital divide. edit
If you want, next I can generate:
- A submission title + 200-character summary
- A session agenda (5–7 steps)
- A public-call description to recruit Interactive participants
- A high-impact SXSW Interactive banner prompt
Just say the word.
User: SXSW Innovation Conference is the area I'm most interested in covering. edit
SXSW Innovation Conference is the area I'm most interested in covering. https://sxsw.com/conference/
The application is asking me to provide a detailed content plan, including the topics I plan to cover and on which channels. Go through the schedule at https://schedule.sxsw.com/search/event?models=event&filters=event%2Fcredential_types%3Ainnovation and choose the best topics to cover which I will put on Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Substack. Create a detailed content plan for the topics.
Assistant: Here’s a detailed, forward-thinking content plan tailored for your SXSW Innovation Conference coverage focusing on digi… edit
Here’s a detailed, forward-thinking content plan tailored for your SXSW Innovation Conference coverage focusing on digital literacy, digital rights, and AI activism — with a clear posting strategy for Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Substack. I’ve pulled in the Innovation Conference context and primary tracks you’ll want to cover. You can insert this directly into your SXSW application. SXSW[2]
Objective: edit
Document and interpret cutting-edge Innovation Conference sessions for your audience through the lens of digital literacy, equity, and AI rights activism. You’ll transform high-level insights into accessible commentary, critical analysis, and discussion pieces that build your credibility as a thought leader in AI literacy and digital justice.
Platforms & Content Types:
| | | | | --- | --- | --- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Based on the SXSW 2026 Innovation tracks and early session themes — with specific emphasis on AI and human agency — these are high-impact topics you should plan to cover: SXSW[3] edit
- Theme: Risks of ungoverned AI, power concentration, systemic misalignment. edit
- Angle for activism: What digital rights safeguards are missing today?
- Why this matters: Frames AI not just as tech innovation but as sociopolitical infrastructure.
Content Plan:
- Facebook: Live commentary + key quotes from speakers — highlight moments that tie to digital rights concerns.
- LinkedIn: Post thought leadership article on AI governance gaps and how activism can shape policy.
- Instagram: Carousel breaking down “Runaway AI risks” + short reel with your takeaways.
- Substack: Long-form essay “Runaway AI and the Real Digital Divide: What SXSW Told Us.”
(Session: Does AI Make Us Smarter or Dumber?) edit
- Theme: Human cognition vs. AI dependency.
- Angle: Digital literacy as a defense against passive AI dependence.
- Purpose: Position digital literacy as essential civic skill.
Content Plan:
- Facebook: Poll asking the community: Do you feel AI makes you more or less capable?
- LinkedIn: Professional post on AI literacy frameworks for workers and students.
- Instagram: Short reel on how to avoid shallow AI offloading + tips for meaningful augmentation.
- Substack: Case study-style piece with interview snippets from session and your interpretation.
- Theme: Robots moving into real-world jobs (warehouses, hospitals). edit
- Angle: What does this mean for labor rights and digital equity?
- Why it’s relevant: Directly ties AI and automation to worker organizing.
Content Plan:
- Facebook: Share stories from session with questions about labor impacts.
- LinkedIn: Article on robotics, AI & worker advocacy strategies with policy lens.
- Instagram: Reel explaining humanoid tech and its social implications.
- Substack: Deep dive: “From Gear to Gig: Robotics, AI, and Digital Justice.”
- Expected speakers: Aza Raskin (AI decoding non-human communication), futurists, and leaders on the ethical use of tech. SXSW[4] edit
- Angle: Human rights framing in AI discourse, focusing on inclusion, access, transparency.
Content Plan:
- Facebook: Quote cards + discussion prompts.
- LinkedIn: Thought piece connecting keynote themes to national digital policy.
- Instagram: Snippet breakdowns (graphic slides), Stories Q&A.
- Substack: Summary & critique linking SXSW insights to ongoing digital rights movements.
- Theme: Emerging tech’s societal impact beyond pure commerce. edit
- Angle: AI’s role in communities, civic infrastructure, and equitable access.
- Why this matters: Reframes innovation as societal system design — not just tech deployment.
Content Plan:
- Facebook: Localized reporting on what these innovations mean for communities (Austin focus).
- LinkedIn: Op-ed on community-centric innovation strategy.
- Instagram: Infographics explaining complex concepts in plain language.
- Substack: Narrative piece linking SXSW Innovation themes to grassroots digital rights work.
Morning: edit
- Instagram Stories + Facebook Post — preview sessions you’ll cover today.
Immediately After Sessions:
- LinkedIn Mini-Post — professional insight + policy takeaway.
- Facebook Live or Notes — real-time reflections.
Evening:
- Instagram Reel / Carousel — distilled insights.
- Substack Post (every 2 days) — analysis with links, quotes, and annotated learnings.
Weekly roundup (Substack): edit
A wrap that synthesizes key themes from Innovation sessions and what they mean for digital literacy & rights advocacy in 2026.
Call to Action Posts: Each piece of content should close with:
- A question prompting community input
- A specific action (e.g., share, comment policy ideas, subscribe, join your newsletter)
- Aligned with Innovation Conference focuses like AI, Tech & AI tracks, and human-centric tech frameworks. SXSW[5] edit
- Elevates your voice in digital rights and literacy through multi-platform storytelling.
- Delivers measurable engagement strategy with diversified formats and editorial calendar.
If you want, I can produce a template calendar (Google Sheet / Notion) with specific dates/times and publishing prompts to drop straight into your workflow.
User: Yes. edit
Yes.
Assistant: Here’s a publishing calendar + channel plan you can port into Sheets or Notion. edit
Here’s a publishing calendar + channel plan you can port into Sheets or Notion. It covers March 12–18 (peak Innovation Conference window), hits your activism/AI/digital rights angles, and maps cleanly to Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, Substack.
2026 SXSW Innovation Coverage Calendar edit
| Date (2026) | Focus Topic | Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram | Substack | | ----------- | ------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ | | Mar 12 Thu | Opening Narrative: Innovation as Movement Terrain | Post + Live Notes from first sessions | “AI & Civic Stakes at SXSW 2026” intro post | Stories (session teasers) | “Innovation Isn’t Neutral: Literacy, Rights, Power” | | Mar 13 Fri | Runaway AI & Human Control Risks | Quote cards + audience question | Policy implications post | Carousel + 20s Reel | — | | Mar 14 Sat | AI Augmentation vs Dependency | Poll: smarter/dumber debate | Workforce-focused insights | 25s Reel | “AI Fluency Is Labor Power, Not a Crutch” | | Mar 15 Sun | Humanoid Robots & Worker Futures | Session summaries + labor framing | Op-ed style post | 30s Reel | — | | Mar 16 Mon | Algorithmic Transparency & Platform Power | Discussion prompt + key quotes | Professional analysis | Stories + carousel | “Zero-Click Platforms vs Civic Autonomy” | | Mar 17 Tue | AI Decoding Non-Human Communication (Aza Raskin style themes) | Keynote quote breakdowns | “Digital Rights 3.0: AI Communication Frontlines” | Stories + 18s Reel | — | | Mar 18 Wed | Synthesis: The New Digital Divide → AI Fluency Divide | One-post roundup | “Future of Literacy Is AI Literacy: Here’s the Gap” | 30s Reel + CTA | “AI Literacy as a Civil Right: Roadmap from SXSW Innovation” |
Channel & Format Details edit
Facebook edit
- Role: Town square engagement, accessible tone, immediate reactions.
- Formats: Live Notes, quote cards, polls, community questions, 1 short Live if energy allows.
- Killer hooks: “Innovation just showed us the next divide isn’t access to the internet—it's access to agency.” “Who owns the algorithm owns the public. Let’s talk about it.”
LinkedIn edit
- Role: Credibility + network growth + policy framing.
- Formats: Mini-essays (4–6 lines), session takeaways, labor/AI rights lens, strategic CTAs.
- CTA model: Follow for daily Innovation Conference breakdowns through the lens of digital literacy and AI rights.
Instagram edit
- Role: Visual learning + short attention + shareability.
- Formats: Stories (morning teasers), carousels (session breakdowns), 18–30s Reels (no forced colors; clean layouts when you build later).
- Story cadence: 3–5 slides per day: Session → Insight → Stakes → Your take → CTA
Substack edit
- Role: Deep authority, analytical, forward-thinking, movement-oriented.
- Cadence: 4 posts in 7 days (Mar 12, 14, 16, 18).
- Post themes: Governance, dependency, labor futures, platform power, AI fluency as rights.
Topic Angles You Must Keep Center Frame (Innovation Track) edit
- Human Control vs Runaway AI → rights vacuum, power concentration, governance gaps.
- AI Fluency vs AI Dependence → literacy over offloading, empowerment over consumption.
- Robotics & Labor Futures → workers organizing around access, agency, and transition.
- Algorithmic Transparency → digital rights 3.0, civic autonomy, platform incentives.
- The New Digital Divide → from broadband access to AI fluency access.
Editorial Rules (for yourself when posting) edit
- No fluff. No futurism hype without stakes.
- Every post must answer: Who gains power? Who loses agency? What rights are missing? What do we do next?
- CTAs should be movement verbs, not passive invites: Share, Follow, Subscribe, Debate, Build, Organize.
Ready-to-paste “Detailed Content Plan” (for the form) edit
You can drop this paragraph into the application field asking for your plan:
- I will cover SXSW Innovation Conference sessions (March 12–18, 2026) through the lens of digital literacy, digital rights, labor equity, and AI governance. Coverage will be distributed across Facebook (live notes, polls, and quote cards for community debate), LinkedIn (policy-forward professional insights to grow organizer and technologist networks), Instagram (Reels, Stories, and carousels translating session stakes into accessible movement media), and Substack (long-form analysis framing AI fluency as a civil and labor right). Core topics include human control vs runaway AI, augmentation vs dependency, humanoid robotics and worker futures, algorithmic transparency, and the emerging AI-driven digital divide. Each post will close with clear civic stakes and movement-oriented CTAs to drive engagement and subscriptions.
If you want, next I can generate:
- A single 2-page portfolio PDF text in platypus format (draft only, not generated yet)
- Post templates for each platform
- Substack headlines + essay outlines
Just say the number.