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Agencies of the United States government share open data for many uses. There is a robust ecosystem of civic technology, research, and business applications which rely on access to government data. [1] Individual agencies share data on their own platforms. In 2009, Data.gov was established as a central platform for even more datasharing.
The Foundations for Evidence-Based Policymaking Act of 2018 (“Evidence Act”) signed into law on January 14, 2019, emphasizes collaboration and coordination to advance data and evidence-building functions in the Federal Government by statutorily mandating Federal evidence-building activities, open government data, and confidential information protection and statistical efficiency.
Agencies of the United States government share open data for many uses. There is a robust ecosystem of civic technology, research, and business applications which rely on access to government data. [1] Individual agencies share data on their own platforms. In 2009, Data.gov was established as a central platform for even more datasharing.
Many governments publish open data they produce or commission on official websites to be freely used, reused, or redistributed by anyone. [1] [2] These sites are often created as part of open government initiatives. Some open data sites like CKAN and DKAN are open source data portal solutions where as others like Socrata are proprietary data ...
Across the federal government, webpages and datasets were removed or altered following Trump's executive orders on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and transgender identities called for an ...
data.gov is a U.S. government website launched in late May 2009 by the then Federal Chief Information Officer (CIO) of the United States, Vivek Kundra. According to its website, "The purpose of data.gov is to increase public access to high value, machine readable datasets generated by the Executive Branch of the Federal Government."
Analytics.usa.gov was launched on March 19, 2015 with data for about 300 (out of 1350) .gov domains, including every cabinet department. [2] [3] [4] [5]On February 18, 2016, analytics.usa.gov introduced agency-specific dashboards for its participating agencies: users could now filter to results only from that specific agency.
GovInfo is an official website of the United States government that houses U.S. government information. GovInfo replaces the Federal Digital System (FDsys), [1] which in turn replaces GPOAccess, [2] an information storage system to house electronic government documents with a modern information management system.