Thursday, January 24, 2013

White House creates a national day of civil piracy to solve the problems of America


The White House announced the establishment of a national day of civil piracy, to be held on the    activities of this day through on 1 and 2 June in a number of U.S. states.
He called the White House, through its official blog , the American citizens, hackers and software developers and entrepreneurs of the Union for invention and new ways and means to benefit American society using three data from the largest U.S. government institutions.
The U.S. government has opened a website entitled "Qrsn for Change" and it can be accessed via the link ( Hackforchange.org ) to the Americans for registration to participate in the activities of this national event.
The White House will access the information stored in the U.S. Department of Labor and the U.S. Census Bureau and the Aviation and Space Agency of America "NASA" during the National Day of Civil piracy.
The White House chose the slogan "build a better America through civil piracy" for the national event, which broadly 27 states out of the 50 States.
The U.S. government hopes behind this national event to demonstrate transparency and willingness to share and collaborate with the community using open data to offer the best solutions to the problems of America.
America was in 2009 adopted an initiative open data by creating site (Data.gov) mail where he published it then 57 file to a group of government data, such as the list of visitors to the White House and a map of hurricanes and records flights and continued deployment of new data regularly to many government departments States.
Noteworthy that the current U.S. administration of President Obama attaches great importance to the electronic solutions to the problems of society as well as to communicate with the Americans, and the evidence that Barack Obama was the first U.S. president to use social networking sites while publishing note, at the expense of a Red Cross social networking site Twitter in 2010.

0 commentaires:

Post a Comment

Translate