Jason Miller, executive editor, Federal News Radio

It even sounds complicated: making information resources assessible, discoverable, and usable by the public, and making open and machine readable the new defaul...

It even sounds complicated: making information resources assessible, discoverable, and usable by the public, and making open and machine readable the new default for government information. But that’s what the White House ordered in May of 2013. Now agencies are finally getting their heads around how best to meet the requirements of the open data policy. Several agencies realize what’s needed is a combination of policy and action. Federal News Radio’s executive editor Jason Miller joined Tom Temin on the Federal Drive with details about the plans of some agencies to meet this 18-month-old policy.

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Joint Chiefs Chairman

    Though the Defense Department managed to go unscathed through the Crowdstrike outage, it remains on the alert

    Read more
    USPS, EV, USPS electric vehicles

    The road to electrifying America’s personal vehicles starts with the USPS EV fleet

    Read more
    Congress, budget, budget cut, spending cuts, Capitol, Congress, federal budget

    Congress tackles spending, policy and candidate protections on the road to the August recess

    Read more