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#opengovernment

1 Beitrag1 Beteiligte*r0 Beiträge heute

"Thousands of documents are produced and handled by the EU institutions daily — yet only a portion of those end up in the public register of documents, due to a culture of secrecy rooted in the EU’s tradition of behind-closed-doors decision-making.

Transparency veterans such as Emilio de Capitani, an Italian former senior official in the European Parliament known for his work on transparency and civil liberties, are trying to tear down this model.

Access to documents is guaranteed in Article 42 of the EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights and Article 15 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). Regulation 1049/2001 was meant to operationalise and implement these constitutional provisions and increase the openness of the European policy-making machinery — but over time, this piece of legislation has been eroded by delays, loopholes and broad exemptions.

Legal battles in European courts and complaints to the European Ombudsman by rights groups, MEPs, academics, journalists, and ordinary citizens, have sought to ensure compliance with EU law.

And a familiar face in those EU courts is De Capitani, who tried to become the European Ombudsman last year. De Capitani has regularly challenged EU institutions that refused to provide or hindered access to documents."

euobserver.com/The%20EU's%20Un

EUobserver · Emilio De Capitani — The lone legal battler fighting ‘confidentiality by default’Von Elena Sánchez Nicolás
#EU#OpenData#OpenGovernment
Fortgeführter Thread

#OpenData & #OpenSource sind zentrale Bausteine für #OpenGovernment, #Demokratie #DigitaleSouveränität.

Beim #CreativeBureaucracy Festival zeigten Max Melle und Luisa Lamm / Bayerische Digitalagentur Byte & Olaf Neumann / Digitalagentur Brandenburg, wie erfolgreiche Nachnutzung funktioniert - Brandenburg nutzt jetzt das Open Data-Portal Bayerns 🔗@ocbydata!

💡Die Stadt #Augsburg nutzt übrigens auch das bayerische Open-Data-Portal unter augsburg.bydata.de.

Surveillance for you but not for us...: "A day after ICE agents swooped into San Francisco Immigration Court to take four people into custody, the federal government sent an unusual email to The Standard.

“I have a request to ask if you would consider blurring the faces of our officers and agents,” ICE spokesperson Richard Beam wrote Wednesday. “Out of a concern for the safety of our personnel I wanted to simply ask.”

Beam was referring to photos and videos The Standard published Tuesday, showing ICE agents loading a handcuffed immigrant into a van along Montgomery Street in the heart of the Financial District. Experts have called the operation at the courthouse a significant escalation of federal immigration enforcement.

“While we always weigh legitimate concerns around privacy and safety, we believe that censoring images from this news event would set a harmful precedent for the media’s right to report and the public’s right to know,” managing editor Jeff Bercovici said.

ICE later defended the request, writing that the agency “takes the safety and security of its personnel as a priority.”"

sfstandard.com/2025/05/29/ice-

The San Francisco Standard · The ICE agents disappearing your neighbors would like a little privacy, pleaseAfter taking four people into custody at SF’s immigration court, ICE wanted The Standard to conceal agents’ faces.
#USA#Trump#ICE

"More children ages 1 to 4 die of drowning than any other cause of death. Nearly a quarter of adults received mental health treatment in 2023, an increase of 3.4 million from the prior year. The number of migrants from Mexico and northern Central American countries stopped by the U.S. Border Patrol was surpassed in 2022 by the number of migrants from other nations.

We know these things because the federal government collects, organizes and shares the data behind them. Every year, year after year, workers in agencies that many of us have never heard of have been amassing the statistics that undergird decision-making at all levels of government and inform the judgments of business leaders, school administrators and medical providers nationwide.

The survival of that data is now in doubt, as a result of the Department of Government Efficiency’s comprehensive assault on the federal bureaucracy.

Reaction to those cuts has focused understandably on the hundreds of thousands of civil servants who have lost their jobs or are on the verge of doing so and the harm that millions of people could suffer as a result of the shuttering of aid programs. Overlooked amid the turmoil is the fact that many of DOGE’s cuts have been targeted at a very specific aspect of the federal government: its collection and sharing of data. In agency after agency, the government is losing its capacity to measure how American society is functioning, making it much harder for elected officials or others to gauge the nature and scale of the problems we are facing and the effectiveness of solutions being deployed against them."

propublica.org/article/trump-d

ProPublicaTrump’s War on Measurement Means Losing Data on Drug Use, Maternal Mortality, Climate Change and More
Mehr von ProPublica
#USA#Trump#DOGE

"A DSIT spokesperson told New Scientist: “No one should be spending time on something AI can do better and more quickly. Built in Whitehall, Redbox is helping us harness the power of AI in a safe, secure, and practical way – making it easier for officials to summarise documents, draft agendas and more. This ultimately speeds up our work and frees up officials to focus on shaping policy and improving services – driving the change this country needs.”

But the use of generative AI tools concerns some experts. Large language models have well-documented issues around bias and accuracy that are difficult to mitigate, so we have no way of knowing if Redbox is providing good-quality information. DSIT declined to answer specific questions about how users of Redbox avoid inaccuracies or bias.

“My issue here is that government is supposed to serve the public, and part of that service is that we – as taxpayers, as voters, as the electorate – should have a certain amount of access to understanding how decisions are made and what the processes are in terms of decision-making,” says Catherine Flick at the University of Staffordshire, UK.

Because generative AI tools are black boxes, Flick is concerned that it isn’t easy to test or understand how it reaches a particular output, such as highlighting certain aspects of a document over others. The government’s unwillingness to share that information further reduces transparency, she says.

That lack of transparency extends to a third government department, the Treasury."

newscientist.com/article/24781

New Scientist · Is Keir Starmer being advised by AI? The UK government won’t tell usVon Chris Stokel-Walker
#UK#AI#GenerativeAI

"Attorneys suing the United States government over its use of vanishing Signal messages to coordinate military strikes last month in Yemen allege that new court filings by the government reveal a “calculated strategy” by Trump administration officials to evade transparency laws through the illegal destruction of government records.

US defense and intelligence agencies on Monday submitted supplemental declarations in court outlining their individual efforts to preserve the messages at the center of the “SignalGate” scandal. American Oversight, a watchdog organization whose attorneys are suing the government, claim the declarations reveal “troubling inconsistencies” in efforts by US officials to archive the material, with the Central Intelligence Agency in particular alleging that it had archived no messages of any substance.

“Using encrypted, disappearing messages on Signal for official government business violates the Federal Records Act and represents a calculated strategy to undermine transparency and accountability,” claims the group’s interim executive director, Chioma Chukwu."

wired.com/story/heres-what-hap

WIRED · Here’s What Happened to Those SignalGate MessagesVon Dell Cameron
#USA#Trump#Transparency
Antwortete im Thread

#OpenGovernment steht für einen kulturellen Wandel im Verhältnis von Bürger und Staat, der zu mehr #Transparenz, mehr Teilhabe und einer intensiveren Zusammenarbeit führen kann. Offene Daten sind Teil und notwendige Voraussetzung für diesen Prozess der Öffnung. Das kann zu mehr #Rechenschaft und #Pflichtbewusstsein der Amtsträger gegenüber der Allgemeinheit führen. Transparentes Verwaltunghandeln ist außerdem das beste Mittel gegen #Korruption. bpb.de/themen/daten/opendata/6

bpb.debpb.de - Open Data - Was sind offene Daten?Welche rechtlichen und technischen Voraussetzungen müssen geschaffen sein, damit sich Daten 'offen' nennen dürfen? Was für Lizenzen sind notwendig, um Daten offen nutzen zu dürfen?
Fortgeführter Thread

Reduzierung der Abhängigkeit von Softwareanbietern: Die Marktanalyse des Bundes zeigt Strategien für mehr digitale Souveränität in der Verwaltung. Fokus auf Open Source, offene Standards und Diversifizierung von IT-Lösungen.
cio.bund.de/SharedDocs/downloa
#DigitaleSouveränität #OpenSource #ITStrategie #DigitaleVerwaltung #PublicSector #OpenGovernment #CIOBund #unplugtrump

"The Trump administration has begun its purge at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services by dismissing 10,000 employees, with agency Freedom of Information Act offices being among the casualties.

This comes after HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a FOIA requester himself, promised “radical transparency” at the agency.

The entire FOIA office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was placed on administrative leave, and emails sent to CDC’s FOIA office received the response, “Hello, the FOIA office has been placed on admin leave and is unable to respond to any emails.” Most FOIA staff at the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health were also let go.

Bloomberg reporter Jason Leopold noted that CDC’s FOIA website was briefly taken entirely offline, but was restored after public outcry.

It’s important to note that even if CDC or other agency FOIA office websites are taken offline, requesters can visit FOIA.gov to find contact information for agencies and continue to submit requests. Agencies are still obligated to respond to requests even if their entire FOIA office has been sacked."

freedom.press/the-classifieds/

Freedom of the PressRFK Jr. promises radical transparency, then closes FOIA shopsPlus: Which FOIA offices might be closed next
#USA#Trump#FOIA

"Disproportionately, the datasets that are no longer accessible through the portal come from the Department of Energy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Department of the Interior, NASA, and the Environmental Protection Agency. But determining what is actually gone and what has simply moved or is backed up elsewhere by the government is a manual task, and it's too early to say for sure what is gone and what may have been renamed or updated with a newer version.

This is because data.gov doesn’t always host the data that it is indexing. Sometimes the data is hosted directly on data.gov, but other times it links to an individual agency’s website, where the data is actually hosted. This means archiving and analyzing data.gov is not straightforward.

“Some of [the entries link to] actual data,” Cushman told 404 Media. “And some of them link to a landing page [where the data is hosted]. And the question is—when things are disappearing, is it the data it points to that is gone? Or is it just the index to it that’s gone?”"

404media.co/archivists-work-to

404 Media · Archivists Work to Identify and Save the Thousands of Datasets Disappearing From Data.govMore than 2,000 datasets have disappeared from data.gov since Trump was inaugurated. But analyzing exactly what happened and where it went is going to take some time.
#USA#Trump#DigitalArchiving

Unrealized ideas: Unintentional Secrecy in the Era of Openness


by @beet_keeper

Tyler recently posted this quote:

“History unprocessed is opportunity unrealized”

It reminds me of an unrealized article I wasn’t able to get written and into the wild, but it’s an important thought I would like to share nonetheless.

Proposed for James Lowry’s ACARM Symposium in 2015, I wanted to discuss when government is unable to adequately fund day-to-day effort, and research and development in the archive sector, leading to inefficient and potentially ineffective processing pipelines for records of archival value accessioned from government agencies and commissions.

It was just an abstract, but maybe folks have thoughts about this? Have we moved on since the early to mid 2010’s? What modern metrics do we have available to us today to see the progress? What does the advent of the new US administration mean for issues like this? As well as increasing worldwide authoritarianism?

Right.
We need more of you lot to buy your tickets ASAP, and not leave it to the last minute please.

2025.everythingopen.au/attend/

Oh! So you already have a ticket? Awesome, please convince a friend, colleague or family member that they should come too!

Oh! You're speaking? Spruik your talk!!

This time next weekend I'll be gradually making my way to the fair city of Adelaide, and I can't wait to see everyone, and learn all the things!

Also - these keynotes!?! Oh my!
@sjpiper145
@daedalus
@Trishh

PLZ BOOST!
#EverythingOpen #AllThingsOpen #OpenSource #OpenGLAM #OpenScience #OpenData #OpenGovernment #OpenJustice #Linux #Apache #Drupal