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SHOW NOTES
We end the year with a look at the use of social media by law enforcement, joined by Lauri Stevens, a former journalist who has been working with police departments for 25 years.
Stevens is the founder of a consultancy called LaWS Communications and creator of the SMILE conference — focused on Social Media, the Internet and Law Endorsement.
Stevens contends that even though "social media is completely counter to police culture," law enforcement can use it to its advantage for both investigations and community policing.
She talks about the loss of privacy officers themselves experience in this world of streaming video, and a start-slow approach to doing simple and smart things on social media that produce goodwill at a time when police departments are under unprecidented public scrutiny.
Also mentioned in this episode:
Florida Woman Live Streams Herself While Drunk Driving
Podcast: Social Media Safety Checks Following Attacks on Paris, the Rise of Hacktivism
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Paul W. Taylor is the Senior Editor of e.Republic Editorial and of its flagship titles - Government Technology and Governing.
Dustin Haisler is the chief innovation officer of Emergency Management’s parent company e.Republic. Previously the finance director and later CIO for Manor, Texas, a small city outside Austin, Haisler quickly built a track record and reputation as an early innovator in civic tech. As chief innovation officer, Haisler has a strategic role to help shape the company’s products, services and future direction. Primarily, he leads e.Republic Labs, a market connector created as an ecosystem to educate, accelerate and ultimately scale technology innovation within the public sector.