NASA Open Government Summit Emphasized Data Exchange

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Oct. 20, 2010

Katherine Trinidad/Doc Mirelson 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1600 
katherine.trinidad@xxxxxxxx/doc.mirelson@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-267

NASA OPEN GOVERNMENT SUMMIT EMPHASIZED DATA EXCHANGE



WASHINGTON -- NASA is working to publish more of its data sets online 
and create more opportunities to engage with the public using digital 
tools. This was a major part of the discussion during the monthly 
Open Government Community Summit at NASA Headquarters in Washington 
last week. NASA's Office of the Chief Information Officer and Office 
of the Chief Financial Officer hosted the meeting. 

The event brought leaders from both government and public sectors 
together to discuss transparency, participation and collaboration in 
an era of emerging new technologies, maturing systems and increased 
generation of open data. 

"At NASA, we understand that teams at varied locations need a way to 
engage in timely, technical conversations and collaborate remotely to 
meet mission-critical goals," said NASA's Deputy Chief Information 
Officer Deborah Diaz. "As more data is generated, we are witnessing 
the emergence of new electronic tools almost daily. Agencies must 
look ahead to anticipate change and efficient use of new technology 
tools." 

The technical conversation was centered around how agencies could 
build on the successes of the Open Government Initiative. 
Participants discussed the future of transparency catalysts such as 
the government clearing-house for digital information: 


http://www.data.gov 


Participants also recognized that the Open Government Initiative 
requires a new approach to communication. 

"Technology enables and supports one to thousands of conversations," 
said NASA's Chief Technology Officer for IT, Chris Kemp. "We're 
finding that if we don't stand in the way of that conversation, 
incredible things can happen." 

What set this event apart from previous Open Government summits was 
the collaborative element. Approximately 60 percent of the 
participants were not present in the room, but instead used several 
electronic tools to "virtually attend" the summit. 

Video streaming, cooperative note-taking, online teleconferencing and 
modification of conversational practices in the room, all attempted 
to bridge the gap between physical and virtual participants. With a 
"learning-by-doing" approach, organizers collected many lessons 
learned that will help future events be even more inclusive and 
efficient. 

"The summit generated some new, innovative ideas and suggested ways to 
put those ideas into practice that will be of immediate use at 
participants' home agencies," Diaz said. 

Remote participants from as far away as Vienna, Austria, exchanged 
their expertise with others from around the globe and around the 
meeting room, with as many as 50 people simultaneously providing 
input for discussion topics. 

The Open Government Community Summit Series is an inter-agency 
collaborative event hosted monthly by a different organization. It is 
sponsored and managed by the Open Forum Foundation in Washington. 

For information about NASA Open Government initiatives, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/open/index.html 


For information about the Open Forum Foundation, visit: 


http://www.openforumfoundation.org   

	
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