Government Experience
-
The blockchain-based token, believed to be the first from a U.S. public entity, is for individual and institutional use. The executive director of the Wyoming Stable Token Commission is planning what comes next.
-
SUNY Oneonta’s Milne Library and Cooperstown Graduate Program were awarded a $50,000 grant to digitize the university’s archive of New York state folklife and oral history recordings.
-
Visitors to the Colorado state Capitol can now access free American Sign Language interpreting services through the Aira ASL app, building on the state’s existing work to expand language access with this tool.
More Stories
-
Legislation allowing New Hampshire's Manchester, Hooksett and Durham counties to use “electronic poll books” during the September primary and November general elections will be decided by the Senate.
-
Some say the site was being used for airing suspicions — generally about people of color — who were committing no crimes.
-
With the increase in identity theft, credit agencies are usually offering a year of free credit monitoring that will alert a user if there is suspicious activity -- but won't prevent it.
-
Recent accusations against the social media giant question whether it has suppressed news from conservative-leaning outlets.
-
Presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders has developed a successful presence on social media, which was evident during a rally in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, May 9.
-
Provoked by legislators, online retailers have filed a lawsuit against South Dakota that could have taxing consequences for the country.
-
A new portal makes the city's technology goals public and invites citizens to comment on NYC's progress.
-
The lack of engagement is one of Clinton’s bigger tactical vulnerabilities, particularly when compared with rivals such as Donald Trump, whose viral social media attacks are legion, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is backed by a passionate army of media-savvy millennials.
-
City officials are exploring other ways to improve telecommunications services for residents; the city manager wants to spend $4.1 million next year on building out its fiber network.
-
Subscribers sued the social media giant, claiming that they never gave permission for their faces to be used as biometric identifiers.
-
The best you can do, some say, is make it tough enough that potential hackers will prod at the defenses of someone else.
-
Haverhill, Mass., hopes to be the next city for Verizon New England's fiber Internet service. Boston recently closed a deal with the New York City-based business to receive $300 million in fiber optics investments.
-
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said David Levin illegally gained internal access to websites of the state Division of Elections exposing several security flaws.
-
The poor-to-failing cybersecurity grades across all federal agencies illustrates that this administration has long ignored the obvious signs that cyberdefense is a priority, not an afterthought.
-
The campaign evolved from a local Gloucester, Va., program to a statewide initiative. The website offers testimonials from people affected by drug addiction, and an interactive map helps visitors find hospitals, treatment centers and support meetings.
-
Breaches of confidential information are inevitable. But we can limit their size and scope, and therefore their damage.
-
Facebook said the data is not intended to be predictive of the election’s outcome but reflective of the conversation Indiana is having on social media.
-
The CIA used a series of tweets on Sunday, using the hashtag #UBLRaid, saying: "To mark the 5th anniversary of the Usama Bin Ladin operation in Abbottabad we will tweet the raid as if it were happening today."