A new generation of civically engaged technologists are using their skills to tackle longstanding problems in government,”? says Andrew Rasiej, founder of Personal Democracy Media and chairman of NY TechMeetup.
SeeClickFix, a location-based web platform based in New Haven, Connecticut, allows residents to document neighborhood concerns and suggest improvements.
With SeeClickFix, users can report quality-of-life concerns — garbage collection, graffiti, potholes — through service requests, timestamped with photos and location. Other residents and relevant city officials will then receive an alert. The city can then acknowledge the service request, transfer it to the proper department, and update residents once it’s been resolved.
Open311 is a similar partnership between several municipalities and coders that lets people lodge, publicize and track non-emergency complaints.
New York’s Big Apps offers cash and other prizes to software developers for the best new apps that use city-published data. For example, the ThinkUp web app was designed for agencies to better analyze their mentions across social networking sites. and Code for America, a San Francisco-based non-profit, helps governments work better for everyone by throwing its data open to enterprising programmers. They built the app discoverBPS.org, which asks parents for a set of data and calculates what school their kids are zoned for.
The new US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which aims to make government more transparent, is quickly becoming a model of what government 2.0 might look like. It announced publicly: “We use open source software, and we do so because it helps us fulfil our mission.”?
Open-Source Problem Solvers Creating Government 2.0
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Open-Source Problem Solvers Creating Government 2.0
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Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Re: Open-Source Problem Solvers Creating Government 2.0
I wonder if those systems are set up to field reports of violations of the Constitution.
That would be a great tool.
Wouldn't it be cool if you reported that the governmental entity that set up the reporting system didn't actually have the constitutional authority to perform any of its functions and it caused the reporting system to self-destruct.
That would be a great tool.
Wouldn't it be cool if you reported that the governmental entity that set up the reporting system didn't actually have the constitutional authority to perform any of its functions and it caused the reporting system to self-destruct.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”