Top Banner
38

Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Jun 22, 2015

Download

Technology

Laurel Ruma

This is a presentation was for 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference and the panel session: "Data into Action"

Thu, 06/17/2010 - 11:00am - 12:30pm

"Our lives are increasingly mediated by computers and data – a shift that is becoming more and more natural to us. From Data.gov to real-time municipal bus information, data in many forms from many sources is being made available and recombined in ways we could not have anticipated just ten years ago, when everyone used the phone book, and when restaurant and movie reviewers numbered in the tens not the tens of thousands."

http://civic.mit.edu/conference2010/event/plenary-data-into-action
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 2: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

O'Reilly Media

Page 3: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Government as a platform

Page 4: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Open Government

TechnologyPeople Policy

Page 5: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 6: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

San Francisco, CA

Page 7: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

SFBART Blog Response

Repsonse to rider

BART Foursquare Feedback

SFBART Blog Policy

Page 8: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Colorado

Page 9: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

North Dakota

Page 10: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Manor, TX

Page 11: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Miami, FL

Page 12: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Washington, DC

Page 13: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

OpenMuni.org

Page 14: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Engagement

Internal External

Citizen

Developer

Page 15: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Application contests get traction

Page 16: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Innovation Economy

EveryBlock (MSNBC)

CrimeReports.com

SeeClickFix

Page 17: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

MassDOT: 10 Steps to Glory

Page 18: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 1: Hold regular meetings

Page 19: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 2: Create relationship principles

Page 20: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

MassDOT Developers Relationship Principles1) Respect resources

2) Succeed together3) Expect change

4) Communication is key5) Open, open, open

Legalese: - Building applications does not increase the likelihood you will be

awarded a contract by MassDOT now or in the future. - The MassDOT will make all efforts to keep data

open once it's been released.

Page 21: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 3: Become part of the community

Page 22: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 4: Release some data

Page 23: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 5: Assess results

Page 24: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 6: Host a developer day/contest

Page 25: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 26: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 27: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 7: Reward innovation

Page 28: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 8: Ask community what data they want

Page 29: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 9: Release live data

Page 30: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 31: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 32: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 33: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Step 10: Become the example

Page 34: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 35: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)
Page 36: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

From a government CTO:We have open data, people just don't use it.

You have to campaign to get people to use it.

Page 37: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Police don’t add to gang database

Page 38: Gov 2.0 at the 2010 Future of News and Civic Media Conference @ MIT (#fncm)

Solution = Crowdsourcing?

Sophie08 wrote:I would have been happy to help out with the data entry.

Police should be doing what they are trained and hired to do.

polyhedron wrote:Let's be creative: There are other sources of data entry volunteers who can themselves be 'vetted' for security purposes:

All those ministers who have community meetings and say "something must be done"; AARP members looking to 'do good' in the community;

Retired court or criminal justice personnel.Divide up the work--let the police on the front lines do their part, let reliable others handle the computer database entries.

Once data are entered, it will be far easier to maintain it.

AllForADeuce wrote:Alcala3 is dead on. It's called an internship, it's required by Northeastern to graduate and it can be,

oh what do they call it...FREE!

homerhuskey wrote:This is NOT a resource issue. Anyone familiar with policing know that regardless of what police officers or police chiefs say,

there is CULTURAL RESISTANCE AGAINST SHARING INFORMATION.