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FCC Workshop on E-Gov and Civic Engagement

The FCC is holding the first of a series of over 20 workshops on broadband matters (part of its work to deliver a national plan on broadband to Congress in February 2010).  Today's workshop is on the subject of E-Gov and civic engagement.

 

The FCC is making strides on using new technology -- the workshop is being streamed with web-x allowing anyone with an Internet connection to participate via VoIP/Video and chat.  The event is also being streamed into Second Life (although I'm not sure how interactive that will be).  I'm using the web-x stream right now and it's working great.

SC PSC Commissioner Mignon L. Clyburn Nominated for FCC Commissioner

Another nomination for the FCC:

Mignon Clyburn, currently a commissioner on the South Carolina Public Service Commission and the daughter of House Majority Whip James Clyburn, has been nominated to replace former FCC commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, who has been appointed to a position with the Rural Utilities Service. Prior to her service on the South Carolina commission, Ms. Clyburn was the publisher and general manager of a Charleston newspaper, The Coastal Times, for 14 years.

Aneesh Paul Chopra Named Federal CTO

President Obama named Aneesh Paul Chopra as federal CTO.  Here's a clip of him from the State of the Net conference this past January:

Kevin Werbach: Challenges for the FCC

An interview with Kevin Werbach, professor at Wharton and recently, on the FCC review team for the Obama transition.  Kevin is not only a smart guy, but has always been very clued in on Internet policy issues. 

It's March?

Weather report: we got a whole bunch of snow at the beginning of March.  Go figure...

Los Wholigans spring soccer season starts in a week or so. 

And I'm on FACEBOOK now where I actually do post an update now and then.

Chairman Copps Era Plus Growing Interest in Overhaul of FCC Website

I'm still not blogging here :) (*although I think I've set a record for yearly output in just this month and a bit)

Anyhow - the Chairman Copps era has started at the FCC and we'll see how long it is until a permanent Chairman is nominated and confirmed by the Senate.

There is a growing interest in getting the current FCC website revamped.  It is really needed -- the site was cutting edge in the mid-nineties.  Unfortunately it is still mired in the mid-nineties.  I think the issue and concerns are actually getting traction with a wider audience -- there was an article in the trade paper Communications Daily today ("FCC Web Site Showing Age, Visitors Say").  A few key excerpts:

Government, industry and other officials are pushing for an overhaul of the FCC Web site. It got top honors in a 2002 Brown University report on federal Web sites, but hasn’t received a significant make-over since. With a fresh government focus on transparency, and techie Julius Genachowski expected to take the FCC’s helm, many believe the site might finally see an overhaul.

The comment from Jonathan Askin below has the right idea - but at the very least, the FCC site needs to embrace basic blogging 1.0 technologies like RSS feeds, sortable archive pages, taxonomy (tags and categories), permanent URLs (so you can always find a document) and more.

The site should embrace Web 2.0 techniques, said former FCC attorney Jonathan Askin, now an associate professor at Brooklyn Law School. Upping interactivity and including a community-building application would promote public participation in government, he said. The site should permit anyone with interest in FCC issues to easily submit ideas and comments, and enable the FCC to more rapidly and directly send its proposals and other documents to the public, he said. To enhance internal collaboration among FCC staff, the agency should implement advanced wiki tools, he said. Currently, individual bureaus rarely know what other bureaus are doing, he said.

The FCC From 1934 To 2009

I suppose this post is more of a note to self, but I found at the end of this Multichannel article on current FCC Chairman Kevin Martin a timeline of signficant reforms to the FCC (included below with some editing).

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