Mobile Alerts  Newsletter  Archives  About Us  Advertise with Us Twitter GMANews.TV Facebook GMANews.TV RSS GMANews.TV
Technology

US gov’t posting wealth of data to Internet

WASHINGTON – 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.

The Transportation Department will post ratings for 2,400 lines of tires for consumer safety based on tire tread wear, traction performance and temperature resistance. The Labor Department will release the names of 80,000 workplaces where injuries and illness have occurred over the past 10 years.

The Medicare database has previously been available for a fee of $100 on CD ROM. Under the Obama initiative, it can be downloaded free, providing detailed breakdowns of payments for Medicare services. The Medicare data will be sortable by the type of medical service provided.

A National Highway Traffic Safety Administration database rates car seats for ease of use, evaluating the simplicity of instruction sheets, labels, vehicle installation features and securing the child.

"We're democratizing data," White House Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra said Thursday in an interview.

Open government groups are supportive.

"There's recognition that public equals online," said Ellen Miller, executive director at Sunlight Foundation, a nonprofit group focusing on the use of technology for greater government transparency. Miller said the effort represents "a sea change in government's attitude," with newfound support for the idea that government data belongs in the hands of citizens instead of locked away in the basement of a federal agency.

All the new data collections will be added to the government's Web site, data.gov.

Required to release the three new data sets are the departments of State, Treasury, Defense, Justice, Interior, Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation, Energy, Education, Veterans Affairs, Homeland Security and the Environmental Protection Agency, the offices of the U.S. Trade Representative and the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and the Council of Economic Advisers. - AP
Other Infotech stories
Pinoy programmers highlight SF Game Developers Convention
03/21/2010 | 04:27 AM
Filipino software developers are "game" and ready to make a splash in the multibillion-dollar gaming industry, and made this clear by participating in a recent developers' convention in the... More
Intel launches fastest, first 32-nanometer chip
03/19/2010 | 07:55 PM
The Philippine subsidiary of Intel Corp. unveiled to the local market on Friday its fastest microprocessor to date, an “expensive" chip that is the first to use the 32-nanometer manufacturing... More
Viacom, YouTube air dirty laundry in legal tiff
03/19/2010 | 07:27 AM
Viacom Inc. and Google Inc.'s YouTube site began airing each other's dirty laundry Thursday, providing a tantalizing peek at the wheeling and dealing that triggered a bitter battle over the... More
Yahoo buying fantasy game firm Citizen Sports
03/18/2010 | 07:34 AM
Yahoo is buying a fantasy sports company co-founded by an MIT graduate whose card-counting skills helped him win millions of dollars in blackjack and spawned a film and a best-selling book. More
China without Google: 'a lose-lose scenario'
03/17/2010 | 01:44 PM
BEIJING – China without Google — a prospect that looks increasingly likely — could mean no more maps on mobile phones. A free music service that has helped to fight piracy might be in jeopardy.... More
Mobile commerce service taps social networking craze
03/17/2010 | 11:38 AM
When mobile commerce was introduced locally in the early 2000s, it was the remittance service that primarily drove the Filipino’s adoption of low-value electronic payment transactions on cellphones. More
RP students get chance to design hi-tech appliances
03/16/2010 | 11:07 PM
Swedish firm Electrolux, a 90-year-old manufacturer of household appliances, has swung the door wide open for Filipino students to participate in a program that will give them a first-hand exposure... More
Facebook opens office in India, first in Asia
03/15/2010 | 06:53 PM
MUMBAI, India — Social networking site Facebook is opening an operations office in India, its first in Asia, to help manage rapid growth in the number of users More
Lenovo says business will focus on mobile Internet
03/12/2010 | 03:18 PM
Lenovo Group expects wireless Internet products to account for up to 80 percent of its sales within five years as it pursues expansion in faster-growing emerging markets, CEO Yang Yuanqing said... More
Report finds online censorship more sophisticated
03/12/2010 | 08:07 AM
Repressive regimes have stepped up efforts to censor the Internet and jail dissidents, Reporters Without Borders said in a study out Thursday. More
ADVERTISEMENT
Rally reminds Olongapo folk of Gordon's 1991 style
2010-03-19 22:02:04
OLONGAPO CITY— As the red-shirted man who wants to be the next president took center stage...
ABC hires Christiane Amanpour for Sunday morning job
2010-03-19 10:58:44
NEW YORK – ABC News has hired Christiane Amanpour, one of CNN's best-known personalities for...
SBP intensifies development in Mindanao
2010-03-20 16:48:42
The Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP) divided the Mindanao region into three separate cluster...
Pinoy programmers highlight SF Game Developers Convention
2010-03-21 04:27:09
Filipino software developers are "game" and ready to make a splash in the multibillion-dollar...