Government Experience
-
Mississippi has announced a new AI data center build that promises tax revenue and job creation. Such gains are not always easy to quantify, but policymakers can push developers to deliver.
-
The state’s new Infrastructure Planning and Development Division has adopted cloud technology to help community governments navigate matching requirements, compliance and project delivery.
-
The company supplies digital licensing, lien and other automotive-documentation tools, and works with state agencies and other gov tech providers. CHAMP has raised more than $100 million since 2018.
More Stories
-
Trump was the first major presidential candidate to fully harness the power of social media, where like-minded people can come together and put their muscle behind single issues.
-
One of the wildest, most exhausting election seasons officially ended with the election of Donald Trump.
-
About one in every five election-related tweets was generated by software, not humans – millions of tweets by hundreds of thousands of "social bots."
-
Federal officials are taking a close look at a sales practice that allows advertisers on the social network to include or exclude people who have an “affinity” with specific ethnic groups.
-
The California Secretary of State’s website is giving some Shasta County residents the wrong polling place for Election Day.
-
Voters are skeptical about the information they read on social media, and some political scientists question how effective the flurries of text, photos and videos are at attracting swaying undecided voters.
-
Tech companies from coast to coast are launching a promotional blitz aimed at directing people to their local polling locations and making sure they have what they need to vote.
-
Early experiments in internet voting have gone badly. And there is bipartisan consensus that to do it right would require perhaps decades of planning.
-
The improved, user-friendly platform provides travelers access to reliable, up-to-date information regarding traffic conditions, construction activity, and the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet’s response to weather-related events.
-
The ACLU argued in federal court Wednesday that a 125-year-old California law banning voters from showing their marked ballots to others is in conflict with the right to freedom of expression.
-
The Morton County Sheriff’s office denied on Monday that it was tracking Dakota Access Pipeline protesters’ Facebook “check-ins” after a social-media campaign flooded the network.
-
U.S. District Judge Robert Bryan also confronted Department of Justice (DOJ) prosecutors over their continued insistence that the government’s actions in 2015 were somehow innocent.
-
MNsure users started reported crashes starting around 11:30 a.m. By noon, state IT officials issued a statement saying the MNsure website and nearly 70 other state websites had been experiencing intermittent outages.
-
The White House recently broke down how the reins for social media accounts will be passed on to the next president.
-
Twitter has announced it is shutting down the video-looping app as part of its move to cut 9 percent of its budget.
-
An analysis by Dyn confirms both the magnitude of the attack and the relative ease with which attackers can enslave vulnerable web devices to cause mischief — or worse.
-
At the 10th annual summit, thought-leaders shared their perspectives on the future of infrastructure, civic technology and bridging the digital divide in cities worldwide.
-
Successful transparency portals don’t just provide information; they share it in a way that educates and empowers citizens. One state making headway toward a solution is Texas.