Hey everyone,

Wondering if people have SXSW proposals they want to share and generate
votes, discussion, etc. Here's one the International Amateur Scanning League
has prepared (and described below):

http://panelpicker.sxsw.com/ideas/view/6747

I'm interested in hearing about and supporting others' too.

tvol





Yes We Scan: Making Government Information More Accessible
*Description*
*
*
As the Gov 2.0 movement sweeps across the nation, there’s an increasing
focus on meaningful access to data and rich content funded with taxpayer
dollars. Powerful digital tools and a renewed sense of civic engagement have
ignited new partnerships between citizens and government agencies. This
panel will show examples of new ways that technology, volunteerism, crowd
sourcing, and collaboration can increase access to public information and
media. In this session, panelists will provide a brief overview of various
citizen-to-government partnerships. One example is the collaboration between
the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and the
International Amateur Scanning League (IASL). IASL is the brainchild of
public information advocate Carl Malamud, and its volunteers are working to
copy and upload to the Internet 5,000 public domain videos held at the NARA
facility outside of Washington, D.C. Many of these interesting (and often
pleasantly obscure) videos are being made publicly available for the first
time. The panel will invite participation from groups and individuals
working to increase public access to government information, such as
initiatives like Data.gov, Law.gov, FedFlix, Flickr Commons, Smithsonian
Commons, and others. Panelists will explain the benefits that these and
other initiatives are providing to the public, and explore some of the
legal, technical, and institutional challenges to making government
information more accessible and useful.

*Questions to be discussed*

   1. What are some interesting uses of technology that aid in supporting
   public access to government information and multimedia resources online?
   2. What is the public domain and why is it important?
   3. What are the legal, technical, and cultural hurdles to getting
   government information online?
   4. What are individual, community, and institutional incentives to
   participate in collaborating in projects supporting public access to
   information?
   5. What are the best practices in organizing and executing projects that
   make government information and resources more accessible?
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