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Push for More Transparency.gov

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Posted on Jan 22, 2010

In a push for increased government transparency, the Obama administration has announced it will require each Cabinet-level department to post online three collections of “high-value” data—covering everything from tire safety ratings to workplaces where injuries have occurred—previously undisclosed to the public.

The effort aims to fulfill a promise made by President Obama, in his first days in office, for greater openness in government. —JCL

MSNBC.com:

The Obama administration on Friday is posting to the Internet a wealth of government data from all Cabinet-level departments, on topics ranging from child car seats to Medicare services.

The mountain of newly available information comes a year and a day after President Barack Obama promised on his first full day on the job an open, transparent government.

Under a Dec. 8 White House directive, each department must post online at least three collections of “high-value” government data that never have been previously disclosed.

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By Miko, January 23, 2010 at 2:11 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

So in other words, Obama will continue using the States-Secrets privilege to hide the details of government-sponsored torture and most of the facts about “suicides” at Gitmo will not be released, but at least we have a new age of government transparency in which we can view data about tire-safety ratings.

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By samosamo, January 22, 2010 at 5:44 pm Link to this comment

Ah, the emperor’s new clothes.

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By elmer's glue, January 22, 2010 at 12:23 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

a point of interest insofar as how these claims are received:

the citizen’s briefing book, originally touted as an experiment in open
government, is no longer online.  all that is available is a whitehouse-edited
version:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/Citizens_Briefing_Book
_Final2.pdf

there are lots of submissions and lots of discussion that are no longer available.

maybe in 40 years, some foia request will let us know what we said.

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