A desire to increase productivity, improve contact within agencies, along with enhancing the flexibility of working conditions, were cited by government executives as the three most compelling reasons to implement greater use of mobile devices.
Download NowTracking Mobile Technologies in Government
i360Gov E-Newsletters (Sign Up Today!)
The most significant government policy, business, and technology news and analysis delivered to your inbox. Sign up for your free subscription today!
Concept tagging by the AlchemyAPI
Should the FTC Investigate Google's Safari Gaffe?
CIO: PC World — Privacy advocates and now some members of Congress say Google should answer for its practice of bypassing the default privacy settings of potentially millions of users of Apple's Safari browser.
Three members of the U.S. House of Representatives are asking the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Google's Safari workaround. The Electronic Privacy Information Center is going further, asking PDF the FTC to find that Google violated its recent settlement with the federal agency regarding its Buzz privacy practices. Google, meanwhile, says it was merely using "known functionality" in Safari and any resulting privacy violations were just a mishap the company "didn't anticipate."







