Posted by Aaron Titus on October 1, 2009 · 2 Comments
by Aaron Titus
“Unconferences” (hat tip to identitywoman) are great opportunities to network, gather and share information. They attract bleeding-edge leaders on emerging problems and technologies. My most recent unconference was Congress Camp 2009, organized by the Open Forum Foundation. The gathering focused (broadly) on social networking tools and Web 2.0 for government. It was well attended by advocates who want to reach Congress, and over-worked hill staffers who use IE6 and must cope with information overload. We also got a preview of GovLuv.org. If you have an interest in social networking and government, I highly recommend looking at some of the blog articles.
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Posted by Aaron Titus on July 7, 2009 · Leave a Comment
Privacy Bar Camp DC

Image based on Three Poppies by Federico Ferrari.
by Aaron Titus
In late June, 2009 I attended the Privacy Bar Camp DC (Twitter: @PrivacyCampDC) organized by Shaun Dakin with support from the Center for Democracy and Technology, and conducted at the Center for American Progress. I confess that I attended primarily to aid my job search (psst… that was a shameless, self-promoting plug), but ended up having a great time. Bar camps have an ingenious format which promotes a high degree of participation, interaction, and brainstorming. They have nothing to do with a state legal bar, nor camping. And the genius is, they don’t have an agenda. Read more