Budget & Finance
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The company collects intelligence from disparate public agencies that could help suppliers craft better proposals and pitches. The funding reflects the growing role of AI in government procurement.
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Amid an overall growth projection for the market of more than $160 billion, government IT leaders at the Beyond the Beltway conference confront a tough budget picture, with some seeing AI as part of the solution.
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Paper-based procurement has long been the way governments operate, and it does help ensure security and compliance. But it also brings a cost, which digital solutions and AI tools can improve.
More Stories
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In part one of this three-part series, we look at why we can't always point to the private sector as the model for best practices in government.
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A study finds that more corrupt states spend more money on construction, highways and police protections and less on health, education and other public services.
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After losing hundreds of millions of dollars, the city is starting to clamp down on IT contractors to make sure taxpayer dollars are being spent wisely.
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The creation of the 3,200-square-foot Modeling and Simulation Center of Expertise means that the U.S. Coast Guard will be able to rely more heavily on in-house staff instead of costly private contractors.
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After the Silicon Valley city that Facebook calls home slashed its police services, Facebook put funding down for a new police officer.
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Connecticut law has long required the government to give access to documents when asked, but technology now makes it possible to give the public documents before they even know they exist.
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The tiny plastic chips embedded in passports and credit cards are making consumers and travelers uneasy about the potential for someone with prying eyes trying to steal their personal data.
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While the political battle lines on same-sex marriage are stark, they couldn't be murkier for cryptocurrencies.
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U.S. Department of Energy officials were recently spotted in Austin looking to make new loans for technology that is too innovative to be backed totally by bankers.
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The idea was that fees paid to CGI for the monitoring would repay an advance the state made to start work on the software and related systems, but a recent audit shows the partnership fell flat.
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U.S. Rep. Jared Polis said his office worked for weeks on his Bitcoin website in anticipation of the FEC ruling to allow political contributions in the digital currency.
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Rancho Cordova's move to tablet devices has been a rousing success in its first year of implementation.
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Mayor Ed Lee's third online budget discussion, held on YouTube, focused on the city's budget and projected deficits, among other topics.
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The bill was meant to amend and clarify — but not significantly add to — a 2013 bill that exempted goods, services and applications downloaded to devices from the state’s 6 percent sales tax.
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The state Department of Transportation's Website Advertising Pilot Project has evolved from manually posted images to a sophisticated system that allows government agencies to target various factors, generate more revenue and adapt to more modern civic strategies.
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Parker shares his ideas about how Oakland can capitalize on its proximity to Silicon Valley and use technology to innovate.
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At martial arts gym Atlanta Kick, they accept credit cards, debit cards and… bitcoin.
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Idaho earned an F for government transparency after the launch of the new Transparent Idaho website.