First POST: Prizes
BY Nick Judd | Thursday, February 28 2013
Around the web
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AFSCME has GIFfed its take on the sequester.
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Ushahidi has won the MacArthur Award for Creative and Effective Institutions.
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The Virginian-Pilot: "The Assembly approved several bills to peel away provisions of Virginia's Freedom of Information Act that provide access to such documents. Among them are measures to exempt the correspondence of legislators' aides from public disclosure, and to close off public access to concealed-handgun-permit data kept at courthouses."
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Joseph Marks at Nextgov, on the sequester's consequences: "The cuts could affect some basic research into complex data analysis and advanced computing the White House hopes will make government more efficient in the future. Medicare officials, for example, are using new data analysis tools to better spot fraud before benefits checks go out rather than spending more to chase improperly paid checks."
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Govtech has announced its "top 25 doers, dreamers & drivers in public sector innovation."
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Newcastle University's Dr. Sugata Mitra has won the $1 million TED prize. The BBC reports: "Dr Mitra is most famous for hole-in-the-wall computers which he put in the slums of India ... The machines came with no instructions but children quickly learnt to use them."
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Earlier this morning, White House Chief Technology Officer Todd Park took part in a World Bank event titled "Crowdsourcing Development Solutions for a Smarter Future.
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David Sasaki — who is a contact of ours at The Omidyar Network concerning their support of our international WeGov vertical — analyzes the back and forth between authors Steven B. Johnson and Evgeny Morozov.
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MIT Center for Civic Media is hosting this write-up of research assistant Catherine D'Ignazio's attendance of a hackathon at the White House last weekend.
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A new website lets users vote in a hypothetical election to choose a new pope.
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A Republican member of Congress from Michigan has introduced legislation that he says would make other legislation easier to read. (Via Alex Howard)
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Philadelphia event alert: "Open Records 101: Your Guide to Open Government," by WHYY's NewsWorks. Tuesday, March 12, 7 p.m.; Free for WHYY members, $5 non-members.