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US House Adopts New Third-Party Web Site Rules

GovIT Geek writes to tell us that third-party websites will no longer be off limits for members of the US House, provided that they use it for "official purposes" and not personal, commercial, or campaign purposes. "The rules are seen by House Administration Chairman Robert Brady as a compromise between several proposals under consideration in recent months and are closely aligned with those circulated by the Senate Rules Committee last week. [...] 'These new guidelines are a step in the right direction for a Congress that has been behind the technological curve for too long,' Boehner said. 'By encouraging the use of emerging and established new media tools, Congress is sending the message that we want to speak to citizens, and receive feedback, in the most open and accessible manner possible.'"

4 of 49 comments (clear)

  1. I didn't know that they were off-limits by ardle · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Even for personal purposes? What constitutes "personal"?
    If someone has, for example, a linkedIn account, do they have to close it if they get elected?

  2. Hopefully... by TheSpoom · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This could lead to us being able to get YouTube videos from Barack Obama if he's elected (adding to the 1400+ he and his campaign already have). Of course, John McCain just posts his campaign ads...

    Or maybe thinking open, ongoing communication from representatives is too idealistic.

    (Yes, I realize this applies to the House and not the Executive branch.)

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
  3. Franking regulations by AnotherScratchMonkey · · Score: 2, Interesting
    From the article:

    House Speaker Pelosi lauded the panel's effort to "modernize the antiquated franking regulations to address the realities of communications in the Internet age."

    Congressmen like to use government funds to push their next campaigns, and the campaigns of allies. Franking regulation is needed to stop such abuses.

  4. Bad news for open government by Fooby · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Allowing representatives to use third-party services for official purposes, rather than government-run official IT infrastructure, enables them to hide their operations in plain sight. This is much like gov.palin@hotmail.com and Bush using RNC services while in office.

    With these new rules in place, official goverment records that should be open to scrutiny will be spread across thousands of privately-controlled servers. Oversight will be impossible.