transparency


Press Gazette: Sky News Supreme Court feed ‘attracts 90,000 a day’

Monday, 5 September 2011, 15:15

"Sky News’ live video stream from the Supreme Court attracts an average 90,000 visitors a day, according to the channel’s head of news John Ryley. The figure was cited in an open letter sent by Ryley to Justice Secretary Ken Clarke in which he…

Continue Reading Add comment

ReadWRiteWeb: Data.gov & 7 Other Sites to Shut Down After Budgets Cut

Friday, 1 April 2011, 16:16

"Today the Sunlight Foundation and Federal News Radio reported that the public projects Data.gov, USASpending.gov, Apps.gov/now, IT Dashboard and paymentaccuracy.gov as well as a number of internal government sites including Performance.gov, FedSp…

Continue Reading Add comment

Computer Weekly: Government to launch a Public Data Corporation

Thursday, 13 January 2011, 14:42

"The government is to create a Public Data Corporation to bring together public bodies and house datasets to be made available to the public and for commercial use."

Continue Reading Add comment

BBC Open Secrets: Council objections to publication of spending data

Thursday, 6 January 2011, 12:45

"Ministers have given local authorities a deadline of the end of January to issue online the details of their expenditure on items over £500. The Communities and Local Government department maintains a timeline to display progress towards this. ….

Continue Reading Add comment

Daily Mail: Clegg pledges to expand freedom of information

Thursday, 6 January 2011, 11:42

"Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg told the Daily Mail … hundreds more taxpayer-funded and charitable bodies should be subject to the transparency of the Freedom of Information Act, which currently applies only to most public authorities. … Oth…

Continue Reading Add comment

countculture: Videoing council meetings revisited: the limits of openness in a transparent council

Thursday, 9 December 2010, 18:10

"Last night, I headed over to Maidenhead for the scheduled council meeting to test this out, and either provide a shining example for other councils, or show that even the most ‘transparent’ council can’t shed the pomposity and self-importance that characterises many council meetings, and allow proper open access."

The video below, less than two minutes long, is the result, and as you can see, they chose the latter course

Continue Reading Add comment

Grey Cardigan: Extract from the November column

Monday, 29 November 2010, 11:55

Grey Cardigan applauds Greater Manchester Police's Twitter incident feed but asks the correct question of chief constable Peter Fahy: "Why not set up a permanent, 24-hour feed of police activity to the Oldham-based Manchester Evening News and its remaining associated weeklies? Then you might not have to stage a publicity stunt the next time the government casts a stern eye over your finances."

Continue Reading Add comment

The Dan Slee Blog: Open Floodgates: What publishing Whitehall data means for local government

Tuesday, 23 November 2010, 14:58

"What's next? … Historical data will be released … More public agencies will follow … There will be a right to data … Open data will move from spending into crime… "

Continue Reading Add comment

FleetStreetBlues: The truth about ‘data journalism’: it’s still about the story, stupid

Monday, 22 November 2010, 15:21

"[A]midst all [the 'data journalism'] hype, earnestness and spreadsheet-geekery, here's the truth about so-called 'data journalism'. It's still about the story, stupid. … [S]urely what's shocking is how few stories journalists actually managed to uncover [from recent major data dumps] … No doubt we'll get better at this. Over time, journalists will learn how to pick out the stories that matter from these huge data releases – and it will help hugely whenever a single news outlet has control of the data, as the Telegraph did with MPs' expenses, so that they can drip-feed the top lines one at a time rather than see the whole lot drown in the 24-hour news cycle."

Continue Reading Add comment

Where Does My Money Go: How to explore government spending over £25,000 on Where Does My Money Go

Friday, 19 November 2010, 18:08

"But the real power of this data will become clear in the months to come, as developers and researchers – you? – start to link it to other information, like the magisterial OpenlyLocal and the exciting WhosLobbying. …"

Continue Reading Add comment

BBC: Mark Easton’s UK: Whitehall spending: Information overload

Friday, 19 November 2010, 15:44

Mark Easton: "With just a few days before today's publication, savvy colleagues worked day and night cleaning, sorting and crunching the data – the kind of effort unavailable to most households. Indeed, my rather outdated spreadsheet software was simply not powerful enough to open the Whitehall master file we built to get an overview of state spending."

Continue Reading Add comment

Comment is Free: This will be the most transparent and accountable government in the world

Friday, 19 November 2010, 15:18

Francis Maude: "The information we are publishing today is not complete and is not perfect; over time we want to give more detail on what the money is spent on and also where it is geographically spent. The information we are publishing today is a start, but we want to go further. Ultimately we want to use this data to allow citizens to have the power to make informed decisions about the public services they use and find out who is making the decisions on expenditure which affect them. We want every voter to see what choices are being made in their name and every taxpayer to see how their money is being spent."

Continue Reading Add comment

Computer Weekly: Government suppliers may be ordered to open up data

Wednesday, 17 November 2010, 15:24

"Private companies may be required to open up data and make their activities answerable to Freedom of Information (FoI) law when they are contracted to work for the public sector."

Continue Reading Add comment

Computer Weekly: Open data as disruptive to government as the internet, says Socitm

Tuesday, 9 November 2010, 18:45

"The current movement to open up public sector data could be as disruptive for government as the internet has been for the media industry, according to the Society for IT Management (Socitm)."

Continue Reading Add comment

Previous Posts