Category «E-Government»

Campaign Seeks Posting of Federal Legislation Online 72 Hours Prior to Vote

“…ReadtheBill.org is a narrowly focused effort to persuade the U.S. Congress to establish the “72 Hours of Online Sunshine Rule” [H. Res. 688, introduced Feb. 16, 2006: To require that legislation and conference reports be available on the Internet for 72 hours before consideration by the House, and for other purposes.]”

Subjects: E-Government, Government Documents, Legislation

Advocacy Group Proposes Legislation to Protection Online Political Speech

“CDT today offered a legislative proposal that would exempt the vast majority of individual speakers on the Internet from campaign finance laws, without creating loopholes that could be easily exploited by state political parties and large donors. CDT drafted the proposal in response to mounting efforts in the House of Representatives to pass a measure …

Subjects: Blogs, Civil Liberties, Congress, E-Government, Government Documents, Internet, Legislation

EU Plans Digital Library Portal Launch By 2010

EU press release: “European Commission steps up efforts to put Europe’s memory on the Web via a “European Digital Library” – At least six million books, documents and other cultural works will be made available to anyone with a Web connection through the European Digital Library over the next five years.” The European Digital Library: …

Subjects: Copyright, E-Government, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Libraries, Search Engines

FOIA Requests Made Easy By Advocacy Group

From People for the American Way, this new website, Make a FOIA Request: “Under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), anyone has the right to request information from the government. Last strengthened by Congress in response to the Watergate scandal, FOIA gives citizens a way to demand transparency from the Administration — and take the …

Subjects: E-Government, Freedom of Information, Government Documents

Senate Approves Patriot Act Amendments In 95-4 Vote

Statement of Senator Russ Feingold On Opposition to Ending Debate on the Patriot Act, As Read From the Senate Floor, March 1, 2006. Statement Of Senator Patrick Leahy, Ranking Member, Committee On The Judiciary, PATRIOT Act Reauthorization, March 1, 2006 AP: Senate OKs Limiting Patriot Act Powers Related postings on Patriot Act

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Congress, Courts, E-Government, Government Documents, Legislation, Privacy

Republican Critic of Port Deal Reveals No Intel Check Done For Terrorist Ties

CNN: “A review of a United Arab Emirates-owned company’s plan to take over a portion of operations at key U.S. ports never looked into whether the company had ties to al Qaeda or other terrorists, a key Republican lawmaker told CNN on Wednesday.” H.R. 4807: To require an investigation under the Defense Production Act of …

Subjects: Congress, E-Government, Government Documents, Legislation

DHS Releases Data on Port Security Funding But Concern Remains Heightened

Strengthening Port Security Through a Multi-Layered Strategy, February 24, 2006: “The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has implemented a multi-layered strategy to keep U.S. ports safe and secure. Since 9/11, federal funding for port security has increased by more than 700 percent, new technologies have been deployed, and additional technologies are being developed. To bolster …

Subjects: E-Government, Government Documents

Katrina Task Force Subcmte. Report From ABA

“The ABA Standing Committee on Law and National Security, the ABA Section of State and Local Government Law and the ABA Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice have just released a report evaluating current legal authorities available to meet national disasters and emergencies. The purpose of this study was to examine the legal authorities …

Subjects: E-Government, Government Documents, Legal Research

NSA Expands Data Mining Progam With Purchase of New Tech Tools

Follow-up to National Journal Article Claims Curtailed Gov’t Surveillance Program Still Active, from today’s New York Times, Taking Spying to Higher Level, Agencies Look for More Ways to Mine Data: “…by fundamentally changing the nature of surveillance, high-tech data mining raises privacy concerns that are only beginning to be debated widely. That is because to …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, E-Government, E-Mail, E-Records, Privacy