Beth Noveck on Open Government at PdF 2009

Hear what Beth Noveck White House Office Science and Technology wants to know about how the government can create useful feedback loops with crowdsourcing. Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, a graduate student at Columbia University who studies the use of new technology in politics, offers his response. At PdF 2009 in New York we asked "If you could ask the PdF audience one question, what would you ask?" We would like to hear your answers to the insightful questions that were asked at our 2009 conference. Please post your comments below.
Interested in hearing more from Beth Noveck? Hear what she said to PdF 2009 in her keynote titled Innovation in Government, Obama-Style: Participation and Collaboration.

SxSW Whitehouse.gov 2.0 Afterthoughts

At the South by Southwest Interactive conference, Nancy Scola and I facilitated a session at entitled "Whitehouse.gov 2.0: Upgrading to Open Source Government." We were impressed by the turnout for what was defined as a Core Conversation - essentially a brainstorming session on how to help government achieve broad goals of transparency. The idea behind the meeting was to take what came out of it and produce a report to people in the White House about what was discussed. Nancy and I both felt that this, like Transparency Camp, Government 2.0 Camp and other recent and coming events, are just the beginning of the discussion.

Transcript from South by Southwest Whitehouse.gov 2.0 Session

What is written here is a rough account of the session taken from our note taker during South by Southwest, and from this information we will be submitting a report to the White House on recommendations for the future growth of Whitehouse.gov as well as for open government and transparency in general. We appreciate feedback and additions if there's anything we missed in this article that occurred during the conversation.