Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Computerworld Australia reports that Gov 2.0 is overly focused on internal benefits and not on public use. But Andrea DiMaio argues that making government more efficient is the outcome.
HHS is just months away from awarding federal funds for health IT, but in order to earn the money, health providers will first have to prove that they are using electronic health records in a meaningful way. We get details from HHS CTO Todd Park.
Best of show includes snapshot of October TSP fund returns, Sunlight apps and leadership styles in the military.
An executive order from President Obama orders agencies to use the label of \"Controlled Unclassified Information\" for documents that are safeguarded but not classified.
Cary Coglianese, a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, tells the DorobekINSIDER it is still difficult to assess how effective these e-government initiatives have been.
Nick Schwellenbach, director of investigations at POGO , joined the DorobekINSIDER to explain the potential impact of a decrease of DoD audits of smaller contracts.
IBM Center for the Business of Government describes improvements to Recovery.gov.
Lovisa Williams writes in her blog that Gov 2.0 is not in a slump but in metamorphosis.
For the first time ever, the chief of the United Kingdom\'s foreign spy agency delivered a public speech, The Wall Street Journal reports.
In a first, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs calls on Twitter for the first question in a press briefing.
A team from Google and YouTube spent a week in Iraq studying Internet penetration and experimenting in e-government.
Sen. Jim Webb (D-Va.) said he will place a hold on all Defense Department nominations for civilian and flag or general officers, saying the Pentagon has not been forthcoming with information about its decision to close the Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Va.
A Nextgov study finds government is not getting high marks for transparency. Nextgov\'s Aliya Sternstein and Project on Government Oversight\'s Bryan Rahija, joined the DorobekINSIDER to discuss how agencies can become more open.
The Wall Street Journals reports on Congressional staffers\' trades begs the question: Why do people in power risk losing so much for a little more gain?
Weekly interviews with federal agency chief information officers about the latest directives, challenges and successes. Follow Jason on Twitter. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Podcast One.