Latest Stories
The technology that helped investigators track one of three men accused of opening fire in the French Quarter, killing one and wounding three, has also raised criticism about the actions of an Orleans Parish judge.
More Stories
-
Plus, Results for America releases new case studies about local government successes; Cook County, Ill., approves contract for new election equipment; federal lawmakers pass act to modernize grant reporting with open data; and New York state wins national procurement award.
-
The sophisticated ransomware attack cut off access to many business services, forcing the Harbor Police to switch to alternative systems.
-
The Wednesday ruling was heavily supported by industry and includes provisions that limit the tools cities have to push back against telecommunications companies.
-
Smart city accelerator US Ignite and the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions are facilitating efforts to work through the barriers to smart city data sharing.
-
Joy Bonaguro, who departed local government earlier this month, will be Corelight’s new head of people, operations and data.
-
If the idea takes root, the service could be piggybacked on 5G deployments in the region.
-
A permitting issue and a lack of charging infrastructure are forcing Tesloop, a small-scale mobility service, to temporarily halt operations in Southern California.
-
Sonoma County officials are in the early stages of a plan to bring warning sirens to a region where wildfire killed 24 people and warning protocols failed.
-
The city reports it has moved on from its March ransomware attack, but it may be a harbinger of more sophisticated attacks to come.
-
Garrett Dunwoody, IT systems and technology manager for the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District in the San Francisco Bay Area, on his agency's unique connectivity challenges.
-
A nearly $70,000 federal grant would allow officials to purchase a drone for the department, but the city and state need to approve it first.
-
International experts and other government stakeholders issue 12 calls to action for individuals, legislatures, researchers and technologists.
-
Next year’s budget could see a 25 percent increase as the city pushes to update aging infrastructure and get a handle on worsening congestion.
-
County officials voted unanimously to join the public safety communications network.
-
Retirement and a lack of skilled replacement talent has industry and government scrambling to correct a worsening situation.
Premier Sponsors
Most Read
Each year since 2020, 38-year public employee Bill Mann has focused on an individual theme designed to protect both the public and private sectors, and this year’s features weekly cybersecurity lessons.