Government Experience
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The state has been trying to revamp a pair of aging IT systems for some time, with one being related to worker's compensation and the other being the state’s financial systems.
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The federal government’s now-defunct United States Digital Service has served as an inspiration for states that are increasingly putting human experience at the center of their tech projects.
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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.
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According to a recent poll, voters in Silicon Valley think the government needs to step in when it comes to how social media companies manage personal and financial data.
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Explaining the tools developed at the Observatory on Social Media.
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The deadline to address questions posed by two top senators has come and gone with no answer from the social media giant on its data sharing practices.
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Users will be able to pay both individual property and business taxes online for the first time.
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The chief operating officer issued an apology for recent data use and elections scandals during the United States Conference of Mayors in Boston June 8.
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Getting agency heads on board with social media can ensure your efforts don't go unnoticed.
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Tech-enabled collaboration and streamlined service delivery are on display in this year's lineup of honorees.
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From deciding which agencies need their own social channel to figuring out when it's time to call it quits, governments are discovering there is more to pulling the plug than they might have originally thought.
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Government can no longer get away with pushing out the occasional press release — constituents demand real-time access. The changing paradigm toward immediate online engagement requires more coordination and thought from organizations to keep pace.
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What are the rules governing who’s watching you online?
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Early figures in the Cambridge Analytica scandal put the number of users affected at roughly 50 million, but now the social media company estimates that at least 87 million users had their data improperly shared.
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Attorney General Josh Hawley is launching an investigation into the social media company’s data sharing practices with political groups.
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Best practices for getting elected officials engaged in social media efforts.
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Thirty-three states have singed onto a letter asking the embattled social media giant to answer questions surrounding the Cambridge Analytica data use scandal.
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Some European citizens are effectively able to scrub themselves from online search engines, but the U.S. has not been so quick to legislate the same option.
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Facebook’s chief, Mark Zuckerberg, has yet to comment on the data harvesting scandal.
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Teachers in West Virginia — and now Arizona and Oklahoma — are using Twitter and Facebook to crowdsource ideas, convene groups and amplify messages about pay grievances after years of education cost cutting.
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The University of Hawaii at Manoa is conducting a survey into public trust around social media and the January false missile alert.
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