swissgov presentation 23rd september 2010
TRANSCRIPT
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Gov2.0 in Switzerland: from conversation to
action
Federal Veterinary Office Event - #fibosimo
23rd September 2010
David OsimoTech4i2 ltd.
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Structure of the talk
• What is government 2.0
• Some examples
• The benefits and limits of government 2.0
• What to do
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So far ICT has not fundamentally changed
government
• 1990s: ICT expected to make government more transparent, efficient and user oriented
• 2005+: disillusion as burocracy not much different from 19th century Max Weber’s description
Supply Demand
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Relevant for key government activities
Back office Front office
RegulationCross-agency collaboration
Knowledge managementInteroperability
Human resources mgmtPublic procurement
Service deliveryeParticipation
Law enforcementPublic sector information
Public communicationTransparency and
accountability
source: “Web 2.0 in Government: Why and How? www.jrc.es
Technologies…Blogs Wordpress, Movable Type,
Blogger, Typepad Wikis Wikipedia, Twiki, Confluence,
SocialTextSyndication RSS, AtomNews feed aggregation Google Reader, Bloglines,
NewsGatorPersonal dashboards / mashups Netvibes, MyYahoo, iGoogle,
Yahoo PipesBookmarking / Tagging Delicious, Cogenz, ConnectBeam Micro-blogging/messaging Twitter, Yammer, Socialtext
SignalsInstant messaging Sametime, MSN, Skype Social Networking Platforms (Enterprise)
Facebook, Bebo, Myspace, Tuenti, Netlog
IBM (Lotus Connections), Socialtext
Confluence, Jive (Social Business Software)
Thoughtfarmer, Microsoft (Office Sharepoint Server 2007), Oracle (Beehive), Incentivelive, Salesforce Chatter
Prediction Markets Consensus Point, InklingIdeas banks Uservoice, Ideascale
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Values, not only tools
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Examples of gov20 adoption by government
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Policy blog
• Maintaining conversations with key stakeholders, and reaching out beyond the usual suspect
• http://blogs.ec.europa.eu/innovationunlimited/
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The wikipedia of FBI and CIA
• Created to prevent a new 9-11• Used by 16 US security agencies – on a super-secure intranet
(not public)• Based on wikipedia software• Used by two-thirds of the analysts, esp. ever younger
workforce. Flat, informal cooperation• Each day, 50 to 100 new articles posted and 3,000 to 6,000
articles edited by users.• Makes collaboration by individual and agency traceable and
measurable• Also: mash-up tools enable analysts to bring together different
applications and data• Successes:
• Main tool used in constructing a National Intelligence Estimate on Nigeria
• Quickly detected how Iraqi insurgents were using chlorine in explosives
• Risks: • too much information sharing, and cultural resistance• BUT it’s “worth it”: "the key is risk management, not risk
avoidance."
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Bottom-up self-organisation
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Citizens reporters
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Open data
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Open Innovation in public services
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Innovating government from the outside in
Jose Alonso, W3c
Analysis
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Source: IPTS estimation based on Eurostat, IPSOS-MORI, Forrester
4.Providing attention, taste data
3.Using user-generated content
2.Providing ratings, reviews
1.Producing content
100%3% 40% of Internet users (50% of EU population)10%
It’s not about total participation
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Why does gov20 matter?
Because it does not impose change (e-gov 1.0) but acts on leverages, drivers and incentives:
•reducing the cost of collective action: innovation without permission
•building on unique and specific knowledge of citizens and civil servants: the “cognitive surplus”
•the power of visualization
•reducing information and power asymmetries
•peer recognition rather than hierarchy
•changing the expectations of citizens
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Views from the field• “There are more smart people outside government than
within it” (Bill Joy)
• “the coolest thing to do with your data will be thought of by someone else” (Rufus Pollock)
• “A problem shared is a problem halved ...and a pressure group created” (Paul Hodgkin – PatientOpinion.com)
• “it’s about pressure points, chinks in the armour where improvements might be possible, whether with the consent of government or not” (Tom Steinberg, Mysociety.org)
• “many participants in the process dilute the effect of bad apples or unconstructive participants” (Beth Noveck, Peertopatent.org)
The risks and governance of gov20
• Between no participation and information overload
• Conflictual content? The role of moderation
• Representativeness vs relevance
• The bosses: do we need permission?
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The limits of transparency
• Most countries don’t have MySociety.org or Sunlightfoundation.org
• Government 2.0 services and websites are used by a minority of citizens
• Without attention and civic culture, transparency is unlikely to generate change
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We should design gov 2.0 for Bart, not only for Lisa
Hat tip: Carter and Dance, Nytimes.com
“with the ideal of naked transparency alone--our democracy, like the music industry and print journalism generally, is doomed. The Web will show us every possible influence. The most cynical will be the most salient. Limited attention span will assure that the most salient is the most stable. Unwarranted conclusions will be drawn, careers will be destroyed, alienation will grow.”
Lawrence Lessig, 2009. Against Transparency
It’s a gradual process: from a static to a dynamic vision
• Attention and civic culture are not fixed
• Visualisation increases participation
• Conversations increase trust
• Game and social dimension increases participation
• Transparency builds civic culture
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What to do?
• Do no harm
• Open data
• Competitions for innovation
• Education, education, education
• Start playing with it
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Thank you
@osimod
http://egov20.wordpress.com
Further information:Osimo, 2008. Web2.0 in government: why and how? www.jrc.es
Osimo, 2008. Benchmarking e-government in the web 2.0 era: what to measure, and how. European Journal of ePractice, August 2008.
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Maplight.org
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Jose Alonso, W3c