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Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Augusta Gets Free Wi-Fi

Six communities in Georgia are going high-tech with free wireless internet service, even making hotspots out of of homes.

Augusta has gone online with its internet.

Augusta's mayor says the service will cover a four mile area, including much of the city's downtown, as well as universities, and some schools and businesses. He says some low-income residents will also have access to the service in their homes.

Mayor Deke Copenhaver:


"Basically our world has shifted and access to information is of the utmost importance."

Many cities have zones providing free access to wireless internet, but they often subsidize the costs. Augusta's wi-fi is subsidized by a grant from the state.

People in the wi-fi zone will get two hours of free service a day, and additional hours at what Augusta officials call a competitive rate.

The state provided funding for similar projects in Decatur, Dublin, Gwinnett County, Milledgeville and Thomasville in a first round of grants in 2006. Savannah, Statesboro and Hapeville were awarded grants in 2008.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Survey: State of Georgia Scores High in Web-Access

The state government is making progress in providing "sunshine law" public information on the Internet, but conditions are still partly cloudy in Georgia, according to a survey by The Associated Press.

The survey of 20 categories, ranging from death certificates to political campaign contributions and expenses, was part of a national campaign by the American Society of Newspaper Editors to gauge Online access of public information in all 50 states. It was conducted in February as a runup to Sunshine Week, March 15-21.

It did not include the Web site www.open.georgia.gov, which was unveiled at the beginning of the year as a gateway for information and documents concerning state expenditures to provide services to its citizens.

That site "speaks to the level of transparency that state government is trying to achieve," said Michael Clark, communications director of the Georgia Technology Authority.
The AP survey found some excellent Online resources in some cases, and stumbling blocks on other agency Web sites.

For example, the State Ethics Commission site was found to have "exemplary" search engine technology to find personal financial disclosure reports from state officials. It is easy to search, understand, download or print information such as campaign contributors and lobbyist reports.

On the other hand, reports on inspections of hospitals, nursing homes and child care centers are available through the Office of Regulatory Services in the Department of Human Resources -- only not online. Visitors to the site, http://ors.dhr.georgia.gov, are directed to write to the offices at an Atlanta address to obtain the information at 25 cents per page.

The survey found a lot of comparable statewide school test data at the Department of Education site, http://www.gadoe.org, but it was difficult to find without some familiarity.

But anyone seeking internal and external audit reports can find a search engine that is top notch and easy to navigate at the Georgia Department of Audits and Accounts' http://www.audits.state.ga.us/index.html.

State Department of Transportation records of projects and contracts were equally easy to find at the GDOT Office of Contract Administration, http://tomcat2.dot.state.ga.us. The site offers detailed descriptions of proposals, bids and awards for both contractors and consultants.
Authors of the survey report said Sunshine Week surveyors "discovered some states that are doing a fantastic job of providing information to the public; some are outstanding only in certain categories. The survey teams also found some states weren't so good, and others that are working on getting better."
Georgia was ranked in the top third among the 50 states with its Internet access to public information. With data supplied in 14 of the 20 categories, the state tied with five others in 10th place. Texas ranked the highest, with all 20 catergories, followed by New Jersey with 18.

The information least likely to be found online were death certificates and gas pump overcharge records, each found on the Web sites of only eight states. Also infrequently posted online were schools' building inspections and/or safety ratings, which are posted by only nine states, and school bus inspection reports, 12 states.

Clark, of the Georgia Technology Authority, said one obstacle to complete disclosure is that there is no one agency in charge of what information must be displayed online.
"For some agencies, we provide the content management system," Clark said. "You're looking at the IT infrastructure, and we don't have authority over the content. We provide the tools. What they do with it is up to them."
He said he has found "there's a great deal of information out there on the state Web sites. I don't know if I have a strong sense of what gaps exist. That's not something that I've researched."
Overall, Clark said, the agencies are doing a better job of providing services online than they did when he started with the Technology Authority in 2000.

In a national survey by the Brookings Institution that grades state Web sites in overall design and efficiency, Georgia improved from a rank of 38 two years ago to No. 2 in the nation in the latest, Clark said.
"It's a continual evolution in making more available," said Bert Brantley, spokesman for Gov. Sonny Perdue.

"There's a push and a pull between having information and records available" and the use of taxpayer money to make it available, Brantley said.
He said the Open Georgia Web site contains things like salaries and payments to contractors that always has been available but difficult to access. But it costs money to select information that can be uploaded easily to a site that can be searched by the public.

(AP)

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Statewide Sweep Nets Arrests In Child Porn Ring

A three-month investigation into distribution of child pornography on the Internet led to the execution of more than 40 search warrants and a series of arrests statewide Tuesday. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation has been assisted by local and federal authorities in the sweep, which so far has netted 18 arrests and the seizure of 60 computers. The GBI says Operation Shattered Innocence used software tools to find Internet users sharing computer files with child porn.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Ga. sex offenders must hand over online passwords

A law is set to take effect in Georgia Thursday that requires sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords, screen names and e-mail addresses.

Georgia joins a small band of states complying with guidelines in a 2006 federal law requiring authorities to track Internet addresses of sex offenders. But the state is among the first to take the extra step of forcing its 16,000 offenders to turn in their passwords as well.

A federal judge ruled in September that a similar law in Utah violated the privacy rights of an offender who challenged it. That ruling applied to only one offender who had a military conviction
on sex offenses but was never in Utah's court or prison system.

No one in Georgia has challenged the law yet. But critics say it threatens the privacy of sex offenders and places an additional burden on law enforcement officials.

State Sen. Cecil Staton, who wrote the bill, says the measure is designed to keep the Internet safe for children. Authorities could use the passwords and other information to make sure offenders aren't stalking children online or chatting with them about off-limits topics.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of similar issues.

(AP)

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

AT&T internet outage affects southeast

A massive internet service outage affected customers of AT&T last night for several hours. The company says digital service line subscribers in the southeastern U.S. were affected because of an equipment problem. DSL service was restored around 11pm according to AT&T. The outage affected customers in Georgia and eight other states.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Georgia updates child predator law

Today Georgia has an updated law that makes it easier for police to track down Internet child sex predators.

Governor Sonny Perdue signed additions to a previous law today and they're effective immediately.

The measure allows state authorities to subpoena cell phone records, video games, and other devices from Internet service providers.

The devices were added because they could have potentially incriminating photos and text messages.

GPB News Team: