Government Experience
-
Federal agencies are requesting access to state and local government data for immigration enforcement purposes. Some experts argue this could impact public trust, but protections can be implemented.
-
As parents race to get their children into summer camp, a park district in Colorado is using tools from Rec to bring more mobile stability to the process. A park executive and Rec CEO discuss what’s happening.
-
Senate Bill 707 mandates that larger cities and counties provide options for remote participation in public meetings by July 1, among other requirements related to translation and teleconferencing for elected officials.
More Stories
-
The borough included the position in its 2017 proposed budget.
-
CincyInsights, a new Cincinnati Web portal with 15 dashboards, uses city data in different ways to make city services more interactive and easy to understand.
-
Whenever one of the four companies deletes a terrorism-related image or video, it will have the option of submitting the file’s unique identifier to a shared database.
-
Both Google and Facebook have promised to take measures to address the concerns of fake news masquerading as real news, but that's not enough to address fake news.
-
Microsoft's newest chatbot attempt appears to avoid discussion of politics, religion and race entirely, and has a narrower release than the first chatbot, Tay.
-
Boston.gov will now be home to the official record for the city's public meetings, hearings and notices.
-
The NYPD has been making a concerted effort over the last few years to utilize the social media platform for everything from sharing fun photos to disseminating up-to-the-minute information.
-
From fireside chats to abrasive tweets, American leaders have a history of using the most current technology to connect with the public.
-
If the site is increasingly where people are getting their news, what could the company do without taking up the mantle of being a final arbiter of truth?
-
The dashboard was released on Oct. 31, which also was the deadline for state agencies to submit their open data plans.
-
A detailed map shows that agencies across the United States are paying substantial fees to third-party applications to learn more about the populations they are sworn to protect.
-
Ordinarily it wouldn’t matter, except that Trump, who hasn’t held a news conference since July, uses the social media platform as his primary tool for communicating with the American public.
-
The tool can help agencies and businesses build privacy into initiatives with a modeling platform that allows them to "look before they leap." And it could catch on across the country.
-
The authority says it hopes it will provide the public with the latest information, all in an easily navigable site.
-
City councilors want specifics from Boston police on how they plan to use $1.4 million in software to track Facebook and Twitter feeds.
-
Legal experts say various types of speech are protected, but that right is limited once you issue a “true threat” against any person.
-
Authorities aren’t really interested in what LinkedIn actually does. They’re more interested in the message they can send by blocking the website.
-
When hoaxes, rumors, conspiracy theories and misleading news are all mixed in with reliable information from honest sources, the truth can be very hard to discern.
Most Read
- What Is Physical AI, and What Does It Mean for Government?
- California’s State CIO Liana Bailey-Crimmins Will Retire
- AI for Teacher Evaluations: Major Time-Saver, or Premature?
- Too Much Renewable Power? Data Centers, Industry Could Use It
- AI-Powered Simulations Offer Practice for Teachers in Training