Google’s nonprofit program offers a variety of services your organization can leverage to the benefit of your community. If you... View Article
Continue readingTools for Transparency: Social media alerts
Over a year ago we got the idea to internally send social media alerts for important Sunlight news and project... View Article
Continue readingTools for Transparency: Tell Your Story with Storify
[View the story “Tell Your Story with Storify” on Storify]
Continue readingTools for Transparency: GovSM
For the next month, we’ll be hosting special guest bloggers for our Tools for Transparency series. Today we introduce Josh Shpayher, founder of GovSM.com, a wiki website that keeps track of all the social media accounts of government, from congressional representatives to the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. GovSM believes that having a comprehensive catalogue of all the governmental use of social media will help government and the open gov community learn more about and improve their own social media practices to benefit their constituencies. By now, we’ve all heard about the social media wave and most of us have heard about Gov2.0 and governmental use (or their feeble attempts to use) social media. Though there have been many discussions amongst “good gov” people about government officials’ best practices for using social media, what has been lacking is a clearly defined method of determining how a government office or official can use social media to benefit their constituents. If a system of rating social media use can be widely circulated (similar to Golden Mouse rankings of congressional websites), I believe that the quality of government use of social media will rise dramatically.
Continue readingTools for Transparency: 12 Resources You Might Have Missed
Since I started the Tools for Transparency post back in July, I’ve written about quite a few social media resources... View Article
Continue readingTools for Transparency: YouTube Direct
Online video has made quite a bit of progress since the early days of Quicktime and RealMedia, technologies so slugish... View Article
Continue readingThe Online Election
This past fall’s national election was historic and groundbreaking in so many ways. Add the public’s unprecedented use of the... View Article
Continue readingTransparency 2.0
Nick Troiano at SocialGovernment.com has an interesting and important post about government transparency, the 2.0 version. Nick was reflecting from... View Article
Continue readingStorytelling 2.0
My good friend Allison Fine has an interesting post about the “power and limits of storytelling” via social media on... View Article
Continue readingThe Feds and Social Media II
Here’s an exciting development! Last week, I blogged about an encouraging report by Doug Belzer at Federal Computer Week, where... View Article
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