White House stuck in "technological dark
ages"<http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/patterson/34463>

Obama might be keeping his BlackBerry<http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/null/116350>,
but his tech-savvy staffers are reportedly stunned by the West Wing's
painfully antiquated gear, not to mention a constricting, Web 2.0-stifling
catalog of security and record-keeping regulations.As this funny/sad story
in the Washington Post
reports<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/21/AR2009012104249.html>,
Obama's team arrived at the White House Tuesday to find only a handful of
laptops, old PCs running outdated software, disconnected phone lines, and a
series of rules and regulations that essentially forbid anything resembling
Gmail, Twitter, Facebook, or AIM.

Indeed, as the Post points out, Obama's sleek new White House
Website<http://www.whitehouse.gov/>is looking pretty weak right now,
with only five posts (as of Thursday
morning) on the official White House blog
<http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/>(including a "Hello World" post and a
video of Obama's inaugural address,
minus comments), a couple of executive orders, no pool reports, old bios and
agenda items from the campaign, and a standard "Contact Us" Web form.

My favorite: The list of Cabinet
appointments<http://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing_room/nominations_and_appointments/>,
all displayed in a basic HTML table circa 1996.

I'm sure the sketchy gear in the West Wing came as a rude shock to Obama's
staff, which dazzled the nation during the campaign with its technical
prowess and social-networking wizardry. But then again, government is
probably one of the most tech-adverse institutions around, right up there
with schools (pretty sad) and the legal community (oh, come on,
Counselor—don't deny it).

Why? Again, as the Post notes, part of it is tradition, another part is
security. Also: What we might call an innocuous e-mail or tweet, a White
House lawyer would call evidence.

Obama and his administration have promised transparency of
government—especially though its White House Website—and I have high hopes
they can achieve it. That said, they're facing an uphill battle.

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