Paper presented by Jack Dangermond from ESRI at the Gov 2.0 Expo in Washington DC on Thursday 27 May 2010.
"Society is recognizing that maps and GIS are evolving into a strong Government 2.0 platform. This "GeoWeb" offers many opportunities that advance a more collaborative citizen engagement. Governments are discovering that GIS data and analysis are an effective social medium that can be georeferenced to social networks such as Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and blogs. Traditional data will be enhanced through Web 2.0 mashups, user generated content, and crowd sourced data resulting in government that is much more communicative and participatory..."
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