Techno-democracy is a movement that seeks to leverage use of technology (including computers and the Internet) to help eliminate the logistical obstacles of direct democracy, in the belief that by doing so, it will allow DemocraticRepublics? to more accurately represent the preferences of their citizens. Ross Perot was for a time the most prominent advocate of this concept when he advocated "electronic town halls" during his 1992 and 1996 presidential campaigns in the US.
The traditional objection to democracy, however, also applies to Techno-democracy: both systems of government are open to demagoguery?. More generally, the potential lack of deliberation is a serious problem.