The Europe Roundup: A FixMyStreet Milestone for mySociety
BY Antonella Napolitano | Monday, January 30 2012
Another milestone for FixMyStreet, open data in Finland and privacy issues in Germany. And don't miss today's tweetchat with Commissioner for Digital Agenda Neelie Kroes Read More
WhatDoTheyKnow.com, "Annoying" British Officials Since 2008, Makes Its 100,000th Freedom of Information Request
BY Raphael Majma | Friday, January 13 2012
Wednesday night, WhatDoTheyKnow.com made its 100,000th request under the United Kingdom's Freedom of Information Act. The site, a product of MySociety.org and one of its democracy and transparency websites for the citizens of the UK, has been sending out requests on behalf of its users to various government agencies since Feb. 2008. Once a user makes a request through the site, any answer received from an agency is immediately posted on the site for the public to see. Read More
MySociety Founder's Tory Support Has Some Crying Foul
BY Nancy Scola | Monday, October 5 2009
One of the biggest names in open government you may have never heard up is involved in an intriguing dust-up. Read More
E-Democracy Win: Britain Apologizes to Alan Turing
BY Micah L. Sifry | Friday, September 11 2009
This morning, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown issued an official statement of apology to Alan Turing, a mathematician who led the WWII code-breaking effort that broke Germany's Enigma codes and did pioneering work in ... Read More
UK Shows the Way Toward Public Data 2.0
BY Micah L. Sifry | Wednesday, July 2 2008
Our cousins across the pond continue to show that "government 2.0" isn't just something that we have to do "to" government, but it's something government can do "with" us. The Power of Information Task Force has just ... Read More
Qik Takes From the Road: Hamsher, Crawford, Greenwald, Zandt, Newmark and Steinberg
BY Micah L. Sifry | Saturday, June 7 2008
I've been on the road since Thursday, first at a working meeting of the Sunlight Foundation in DC with people working on collaborative governance web designing, and then yesterday in Minneapolis at the National ... Read More
Gov't is broken. Citizen scrutiny is the bugfix.
BY Micah L. Sifry | Sunday, March 16 2008
Last week at ETech, one of my favorite tech conferences, three Brits convened a delightful panel on "moving theft-based activism to the global stage." The title actually made the discussion sound a bit illicit, when ... Read More