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Apps Contest Winners Need Better Government Data to Sustain Innovative Services
Government Technology - A popular trend ignited in 2008 when the District of Columbia initiated
Apps for Democracy, a contest challenging citizen programmers to use
open data sets published by government agencies to make useful apps for
the public.
That year, the district offered $35,000 in cash prizes and got back an
estimated $2.3 million in apps. Similar open data programs sprouted in
New York; Philadelphia; San Francisco; Portland, Ore.; and others. Some
of the programs operated as contests, and other cities just made the
data available and promised to showcase the resulting apps. Applications
came back to help citizens navigate public transit, find parking spots,
locate government monuments — even to help map the safest routes for
stumbling from bar to bar at night.
But now, three years after Apps for Democracy’s inception, some experts are questioning how useful the strategy has been.
2007-2012
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