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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.
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The website, called MyVoiceLA, went live in the beta phase Monday and streamlines the process for city employees and business partners to report sexual harassment and discrimination.
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State elections officials announced a directive in April requiring counties to adopt voting machines that create a paper record. Now, counties risk decertification if new machines are not in place in 2019.
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A proposal to run high-speed, fiber-optic broadband cable along the right-of-way could cost as much as $300 million, but officials believe selling access to ISPs will make it all worth it.
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The 27-year-old hacker accessed the personal information of more than 1,600 former and current employees and changed the release date for a county jail inmate. In all, the cyberattack cost the county more than $235,000.
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The Union Square Business Improvement District started its small six-camera program in 2012 but have since expanded to more than 350 with the help of grant funding.
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A kiosk that allowed Sarasota, Fla., residents to view city emails was removed in February 2017 and not replaced. Some see the move as an end run around transparency and accountability.
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The $47,000 move will make the department the first in Franklin County to deploy the cameras.
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The new biometric program uses facial recognition to identify all inbound and outbound passengers, making the airport the first in the country to fully deploy the technology.
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A fix for the aging transportation infrastructure could cost the city at least $30 million.
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Towns across the New York island are going as far as mandating the residential installation of advanced nitrogen-reducing septic systems to improve the pollution that leads to algal blooms and other environmental impacts.
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From locating health and human services to finding a job, assistance organizations in one Ohio community are trying to streamline access for those in need.
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Cities and towns are becoming more technologically sophisticated – but remain vulnerable to attack.
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To better prepare their IT workforce, officials in Summit County and the city of Akron are partnering with an experiential learning program with a familiar membership model.
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With some educated guessing, one can pull a lot of information out of a cellphone's location data.
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The already delayed project is at risk of losing more time and money if changes are not made to how the county-wide project is being managed, a newly appointed consultant warned.
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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.