We welcome Daniel O’Leary as our guest blogger today. Daniel is the Vice President of Global Solutions for LincWare,... View Article
Continue readingTransparency Is A Two-Way Street
We welcome today’s guest blogger Matt Rosenberg. Matt is the founder of the non profit Public Eye Northwest and the... View Article
Continue readingUtah Legislators’ Secrecy Grab: Transparency Law Under Attack
Today we introduce and welcome Jason Williams as our guest blogger. Jason is a Political activist and blogger on both... View Article
Continue readingMajor movement for more online transparency of Oregon’s spending
We welcome Jon Bartholomew as our guest blogger today. I first came across Jon’s work when I featured his blog... View Article
Continue readingTools for Transparency: Google Refine
Kicking off TFT for 2011 is guest blogger Rebekah Heacock, co-director of the Technology for Transparency Network and a Project... View Article
Continue readingAwareness changes the public discussion of government employee salaries in Nevada
Our outreach to open government activists is spreading nationwide. This time our guest blogger is Eric Davis. Davis is a... View Article
Continue readingTools for Transparency…Are Delicious
This week’s guest blogger is Jed Sundwall. Jed is an Internet marketing consultant who specializes in the usage of social... View Article
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 readingLocal watchdogging starts with one good question
When it comes down to it, beyond the ideal of “transparent governance,” everyone in the open government movement is looking... View Article
Continue readingA Simple Request – A Small Town Experiment in Open Government
Although we at the Sunlight Foundation focus our work on the technical and procedural barriers to transparency in our federal... View Article
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