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Federal Agreements with Social Media Providers Released

Image representing Facebook as depicted in Cru...
Image via CrunchBase

In response to a Freedom of Information Act request in April by the Electronic Information Privacy Center (EPIC), the GSA has released the “Web 2.0 agreements” that were generated by the agency on behalf of the federal government with many social media providers in March of 2009.  The release includes contracts with Blip.tv, Blist, YouTube, Flickr, and MySpace and the amendments to the Facebook, Slideshare, Vimeo, and AddThis Terms of Service.  It seems that while these agreements may resolve legal concerns associated with many standard terms and conditions that pose problems for agencies, such as liability limits, endorsements and freedom of information, the contracts with the GSA consistently omit statements concerning Web 2.0 service providers’ obligations to protect privacy.

Read More: Privacy and Government Contracts with Social Media Companies

Related Post: Government Social Media Provider Update

Links:

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Government IT Dashboard Debuts

http://it.usaspending.gov/

http://it.usaspending.gov/

Tuesday at the Personal Democracy Forum conference in New York, Federal Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra and White House Director of New Media Macon Phillips announced the launch of the new government IT Dashboard (beta of course) to provide an online window into the details of Federal information technology investments and provides citizens with the ability to track the progress of investments over time.

Filled with news, statistics, and charts, the dashboard reveals IT spending across all the major federal agencies. Select any agency, and you can see its budget and spending pattern. For example, according to the site, the Department of Defense chews up the most tax dollars, with a 2009 IT budget of $33 billion.

An interactive data feed page lets you filter specific types of data by IT project, category, and department to see a spending snapshot and then export the data as a CSV file or RSS feed. While there is a thick smog of government-ease within this feature, the ability to export the data and create even more usable mashups is very promising.

I am very excited about the new Dashboard, however, I think the Whitehouse should take a step back from creating fancy new websites to evaluate and improve (or decommission) similar sites already out there. Late last year, the Visualization to Understand Expenditures in Information Technology (VUE-IT) site was debuted by the Whitehouse which basically gives the same info that the IT Dashboard has suddenly made “more transparent”.

The goal of VUE-IT is to improve the understanding of the annual Federal Government Information Technology investments made through the President’s Budget (sound familiar?). VUE-IT organizes IT investments by agency and bureau, as well as by the Federal Enterprise Architecture’s (FEA) service groupings; Service to Citizens, Support Delivery of Services to Citizens, Management of Government Resources, and Service Types and Components.  While VUE-IT doesn’t have all the pretty pie charts and visualizations as the new Dashboard, it kinda makes more sense.

Hopefully both VUE-IT and the new IT Dashboard will contribute to the accountability that we’ve all been looking for in agencies to create a substantial change to how IT programs are developed and managed before they start spending the money.


Related Articles:

New dashboard shows where federal IT tax dollars go

Whitehouse Preparing Data.gov 2.0

Launching in Beta - A Look at PdF ‘09, Day 2

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Congressman Wants You to Redesign His Website

Congressman Mike Honda, 15th District of California Representative, recently announced the Rep. Mike Honda Websitelaunch of his new initiative to crowdsource the redesign of his website.  His goal of this project is to move America closer to Government 2.0, where Rep. Honda’s constituents can play a role in the creation of a site that will better serve them. This is a unique opportunity for the public to give input into the design of a government website serving hundreds of thousands of people.

Entries will be accepted via Crowdsource.  The final design will be chosen based on votes, design functionality, usability, and other criteria and will be award $1000.  The deadline for entries is June 10th so, there’s about a week to get your entry in.  Interestingly enough, there are no entries as of posting time.

Rep. Honda hopes this initiative will make his website easier to use and more accessible through the use of new online technologies. Since the Congressman is active on Twitter, Facebook, and his blog, he intends to incorporate these technologies to make his new site be an example for other member sites to follow.


USA.gov Adds Three New Web 2.0 Tools to Government’s Arsenal

usadotgov_logo

With a long history of providing electronic access to government information through the Web, USA.gov is delivering on a commitment to use Web 2.0 tools to keep access to official government information on the cutting edge.

GSA announced the availability of three new Web 2.0 tools to better serve the public:
• a government-wide news feed service;
• a gadget gallery of online applications; and
• a word cloud depicting the most popular government online content.

USA.gov, managed by GSA’s Office of Citizen Services, implemented these interactive tools to improve on what has already been declared the most effective federal web site in 2007 and 2008 by the Brookings Institution.

“Using these Web 2.0 tools is a huge opportunity for government to be transparent and save valuable tax dollars, said Beverly Godwin, Director of USA.gov and Web Best Practices.  “Tools such as RSS feeds and gadgets allow the public to directly access content from the original source, no matter which website they’re on.  It reduces duplication across government because an agency creates content once and makes it available for reuse by others.”

The first and most robust tool is the Government News Aggregator, which allows citizens to receive consolidated news and information from across the federal government, delivered via RSS feeds or really simple syndication.  The service (http://news.usa.gov/) lets anyone subscribe to news feeds on USA.gov, and receive fast-breaking news updates in industry standard feed readers. With this tool, the public no longer has to scour a vast array of government websites to follow news that’s relevant to them.  Visitors who don’t use RSS can also bookmark the Breaking Government News page in their web browser.

Citizens can subscribe to news feeds on virtually every topic: agriculture, business, economics, consumer news and recalls, defense, foreign affairs, education, jobs, general government and reference, environment, energy, family, home and community, health and nutrition, public safety and law, science, and technology. To provide the service USA.gov is partnering with NewsGator and using a leading enterprise RSS software tool, behind some of the world’s most popular RSS readers for Windows, Web and the Mac.

Behind the scenes, USA.gov content managers select the best government news articles for distribution. This human element ensures that only the most relevant content is being delivered through the feeds, which ultimately means a better experience for the public.

The second tool is a Government Gadget Gallery with a collection of gadgets or widgets organized by topic and created by subject matter experts across government. The government gadgets or widgets are online tools developed by one agency and shared. Anyone can embed these gadgets in personalized home pages, blogs, and other sites. Examples of gadgets include the drug finder hosted by the Food and Drug Administration which will allow you to search a medication by name and get specific information, the environmental tip of the day or the FBI’s predators and missing persons. Once added, the gadget requires no technical maintenance for the user because the original information source will update the content.

The third tool is a USA.gov Word Cloud that is a visual representation of the top 75 most popular search terms on USA.gov, with the most frequently used words given greater prominence or larger font. The word cloud was an idea inspired by change.gov. This graphic depiction allows a person to see at a glance which key words are searched the most according to site traffic.

Launching these initiatives is part of a larger effort of GSA’s Office of Citizen Services to provide leadership to the government web manager community.  These efforts include sponsoring the Federal Web Managers Council; supporting the Web Managers Forum, a grassroots community of 1,500 federal, state, and local web managers across the country; managing Web Manager University; and sharing web best practices via WebContent.gov.

GSA is changing the relationship citizens have with their government by making official government information accessible to the public through multiple channels, including, telephone, email, television, radio, traditional web content, print publications and now Web 2.0.


CDC.gov Launches Online Metrics Dashboard

CDC.gov launched the first phase of an online metrics dashboard to provide an enterprise view of key performance indicators for CDC’s cdcWeb site, social media and Web 2.0 products. This tool will assist CDC.gov with tracking and evaluating the impact of Web-based health communications. The new metrics dashboard can be found at http://www.cdc.gov/metrics.

In meeting the new Administration’s policies regarding transparency and open government, CDC.gov is one of the first agencies within the Federal Web Managers Council Web Metrics Task Group to announce launch of an online metrics dashboard. 

Metrics and top-line analyses included in this phase of the CDC.gov Metrics Dashboard, covering FY 09, are as follows:

  • CDC.gov Overall Page Views, Page Visits, Time Spent and Web Campaigns
  • CDC.gov Customer Satisfaction Scores
  • eHealth Products: CDC.gov Web 2.0 Tools
  • Top Search Keywords (Internal and External)
  • Top Referrers (Inbound Links) to CDC.gov
  • Most Popular Pages on CDC.gov

The dashboard will be updated quarterly. The next dashboard update will include metrics for: CDC’s eHealth and Emergency Preparedness Twitter sites, CDC MySpace, and CDC-INFO. Plans are underway to include a CDC.gov Dashboard module on NCHPI’s BioPHusion Beta Portal.

Questions? Contact NCHMInteractiveMedia@cdc.gov .


How should we collaborate?

As the Social Media Subcouncil continues working to develop strategic social media recommendations and guidelines, questions regarding practical social collaborative models have emerged.

After considering several options, the Social Media Subcouncil has arrived at four possible collaborative models we can use to deliver recommendations and guidelines to the Federal Web Managers Council:

• Social Media Subcouncil writes recommendations, and then requests collaborative comments from the online community. An example of this model could include Naming Conventions recommendations.

• Social Media Subcouncil offers our thinking by way of formal recommendations, and then includes collaborative comments in writing the final document. An example of this model is Wikipedia.

• Social Media Subcouncil solicits feedback on specific, more structured items and the online community “fills in the boxes.” An example of this is our requests a list of web 2.0 governance policies where you provide the documents via the wiki, online form or survey method.

• Social Media Subcouncil from the beginning works in conjunction with the online community to form a final document.

These are a few options that may work better for some issues or situations than others. What do you think would work best and when?

Do you have any other models to propose?

Let us know and let’s get going!

Dan Hernandez is an IT Specialist for the Bureau of Land Management and member of the Social Media Subcouncil.

This entry was orginally posted by the Social Media Subcouncil on Govloop.  Imported here for wider distribution.  Learn more about the Social Media Subcounce by visiting our wiki and following on Twitter.


Business.gov - Social Networking for Small Business

A new social networking Web site designed for small-business owners is now on the Small Business Administration’s Business.gov site, agency officials announced today.

Business.gov Community was launched about a month ago and has nearly 900 registered users, said Nancy Sternberg, the program manager of SBA’s Business Gateway, the agency’s organization that runs the site.

Registered users on the community site are able to post and respond to questions and dialogues, Sternberg said.

Read more at Federal Computer Week.


Michigan History Goes Online

The Michigan Department of History, Arts and Libraries today announced the launch of the Seeking Michigan Web site, a growing collection of unique historical information that -- through digitized source documents, maps, films, images, oral histories and artifacts -- creatively tells the stories of Michigan's families, homes, businesses, communities and landscapes. Read more on GovTech.com.

Federal Computer Week highlights State Department’s use of Web 2.0

Yesterday Federal Computer Week posted an interesting article on how the State Department is using social media tools in its public diplomacy efforts.
The article highlights some Public Diplomacy 2.0 principles:

* Indirection is generally best for achieving public diplomacy aims.
* Expertise resides in the private sector, and the department’s job is to find it, use it and serve as a partner.
* Some of the best public diplomacy programs have long been based on collaborative approaches.
* Speed is essential, rapid engagement is required, and the department must give diplomats the ability to move quickly.
Read the full article here:
http://tinyurl.com/6n3djv


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