|
|
By Michael Netter on
Friday, February 10, 2012
Online Social Networks allow for simplified communication and easy networking on the one hand and lead to privacy issues on the other hand, which are two sides of the same coin. While the numbers of social network users is rapidly increasing, it seems that privacy improvements cannot keep pace with this rapid evolution. One reason for that is that privacy is a difficult concept, which is influenced from various domains such as social sciences, law, architecture, urban design, health sciences, and computer and information sciences. Law professor Robert C. Post notes that ”privacy is a value so complex, so entangled in competing and contradictory dimensions, so engorged with various and distinct meanings, that I sometimes despair whether it can be usefully addressed at all.”
Therefore a major step for implementing privacy in PADGETS is to structure the concept and evaluate the impact coming from its different dimensions. To address this challenge, we have created a framework that allows for...
Read More »
|
By Enrico Ferro on
1/22/2012 11:07 PM
Social media, have been under the spotlight for a few years now. In March 2010 an issue of the European journal of ePractice was devoted to understanding whether the use of such tools in a government setting was - as the title suggested - hype, hope or a reality to come.
At that time, I contributed to the debate on the journal with an article co-authored with Francesco Molinari in which we attempted to frame the use of web 2.0 in government within a wider process of public sector innovation. In that article we inteded to convey two main messages: the first was that the use of social media by public administration could have contributed to the construction of a more open, transparent and collaborative government. The second message was that social media could help tackling some of the problems encountered in the first wave of government digitalization, such as: the lack of orientation towards creation of value for the final user, the focus on automation rather than on innovation, and the consequent low levels of take up/participation.
...
Read More »
|
By Iosif Alvertis on
Tuesday, October 18, 2011 12:23 AM
This article is a study on XMPP capabilities under the scope of PADGETS project. We do believe PADGETS follows the ideal architecture and approach to meet project’s goals, but with this post we just try to expose our ideas, thoughts, concerns and worries about the openness of a Social Web, and how we feel XMPP could help in that direction.
Read More »
|
|
|
By Padgets Administrator on
Monday, July 12, 2010
The "Samos Declaration" on the Future of ICT-enabled Governance
Read More »
|
By host on
Thursday, July 01, 2010
A tag cloud is available in the sidebar of the website
Read More »
|
By host on
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Follow the padgets social links
Read More »
|
By host on
Thursday, April 15, 2010
The updated version Padgets website goes live today!
Read More »
|
By Padgets Administrator on
Thursday, April 15, 2010
PADGETS: “Politics ask citizens”, an Interview of the Project Coordinator at the Greek Newspaper “Eleftheros Typos”, on 14th April 2010
Read More »
|
By Padgets Administrator on
Thursday, April 01, 2010
The current FP7 projects under the objective 7.3 " ICT for Governance & Policy Modelling
Read More »
|
|
|
|