Policy
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Officials at the capital city this week approved a one-year moratorium on data center development. The suspension will provide time to review potential impacts and guide responsible development.
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In the two years since the state released guidance for localities interested in speed or red-light cameras, fewer than 10 percent of its municipalities have submitted and won approval of plans.
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An executive order from the governor of the Show Me State calls for the development of a strategic framework to advance AI technology and related infrastructure, addressing workforce development and data centers.
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GovOps is taking its lessons — such as user-centric design and delivering "minimally viable products" upfront — and applying them to other projects, whether they're waterfall or agile.
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Stanford University researchers shared the fruits and frustrations of their efforts to clarify the government's current practices around the encryption of electronic devices during a Crypto Policy Project event Nov. 2.
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States have a role to play, Clinton has said, "but we need a national framework."
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Looking forward, the goal is for practices associated with open data to become simply a part of good government management in the future, rather than being viewed as a separate concept.
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The proposed amendment to the state Constitution appears tantalizingly simple: No bill can receive a final vote in either the state Assembly or Senate until its final language has been posted online for 72 hours.
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Amid a shortage of mental health providers and growing need for their services, technology is making it possible to help more patients.
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About 45 cameras will roll out Nov. 9 in the Western District for a 60-day pilot program. Two different camera systems will be tested for 30 days each.
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Double-digit premium increases are leading to an outcry that the Affordable Care Act is not working, yet parts of it are. Here’s what works, and ideas on how to fix what doesn't.
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The FBI announced it would be reviewing the significance of newly discovered emails in the Hillary Clinton case.
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The proposed guidance asks agencies to develop and implement targeted modernization plans for specific high-risk, high-priority systems, and to do so in four phases.
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Space has barely registered in this year's debate about who should be the next president, but experts will debate on the subject at an upcoming conference.
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As facial recognition systems advance and become more widely used by police agencies, the need for policy and will also grow.
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Open data is only as good as the data analytics platforms and true data transparency policies on which it relies.
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The legislation, if passed, would stop landlords from refusing to allow competitors access to their buildings to install fiber and antennas.
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Current state law is unclear as to what happens to a person’s Facebook, Twitter, DropBox and other accounts upon that person’s death. This legislation aims to fix that.
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The regulation was proposed Sept. 13 and is subject to a 45-day notice and public comment period before its final issuance. As long as it makes it through that process, the proposal will go into effect Sunday, Jan. 1.
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In a report released Wednesday, auditors found that most of the city's traditional taxi companies have failed to report required data that can help measure the level of service they're providing.
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One of the most experienced judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit says that it's well past time to return software to its historical dwelling place in the domain of copyright.
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