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Nick Sinai was the Deputy Chief Technology Officer of the United States.〔(The White House: OSTP Leadership & Staff )〕 He assumed this role under the second Chief Technology Officer of the United States, Todd Park, and continued under Megan Smith. Sinai was formerly a Senior Advisor to Park as well as to the first U.S. CTO, Aneesh Chopra, starting in 2011.〔(White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: Building a Strong, Lasting Economy With Energy Innovation )〕 Nick is currently a Venture Partner at Insight Venture Partners,〔(Insight Venture Partners: Insight Team )〕 a global technology venture capital and private equity firm, and an inaugural Walter Shorenstein Media and Democracy Fellow at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School.〔(Harvard Kennedy School: Aneesh Chopra and Nick Sinai announced as the inaugural Walter Shorenstein Media and Democracy Fellows )〕 ==Deputy Chief Technology Officer of the United States== As U.S. Deputy CTO, Nick led President Obama’s Open Data Initiatives to liberate data to fuel innovation and economic growth.〔(NYU project touts 500 top open-data firms )〕〔(White House hails new study on open data )〕〔(Could research data be lost soon? )〕 A prominent advocate and frequent speaker for Open Data,〔(Aspen Institute FOCS Participants )〕〔(Panelists talk tech, say government can get it right )〕〔(Politico Outside, In Launch Event )〕〔(G8 World Bank Open Data for Agriculture Agenda )〕 he has said “government data is a valuable asset and should be available wherever possible”〔(Ideas Lab Open Data: Power to People, Projects and Prosperity )〕 and that data “should be thought of as infrastructure."〔(Shorenstein Center: Data as Infrastructure )〕 He contributed to President Obama’s Executive Order 13642,〔(Data.gov: White House: Open Data Round Up )〕 the re-launch of Data.gov,〔(Information Week: White House Launches More Open Data Initiatives )〕 Project Open Data,〔(FedTech Magazine: Open Data: An Interview with U.S. Deputy CTO Nick Sinai )〕 the U.S. Digital Services Playbook,〔(NextGov: Why Can't Government Websites Be More Like Amazon? )〕 the G8 Open Data Charter,〔(Nick Sinai Github: G8 Metadata Mapping )〕 the White House Big Data report,〔(White House: Big Data, Open Data, and Federal Agencies )〕 and the U.S. Open Data Action Plan. Nick led Administration efforts to give Americans easier access to their own data and to advance the idea that Americans deserve secure access to their own healthcare (Blue Button),〔(Leading Pharmacies and Retailers Join Blue Button Initiative )〕 energy, student loan, tax, and other personal data in machine-readable formats. Nick launched the White House’s Green Button Initiative,〔(Green Button Q&A with Nick Sinai of the White House Office of Science and Technology (OSTP) )〕 a public-private effort to provide electricity customers online access to their own energy usage data.〔(White House Interview on the New Open Data Policy )〕 He led the Open Government Initiative〔(White House Open Government Initiative )〕 and developed the second U.S. Open Government Plan,〔(United States Releases Its Second Open Government Plan )〕 to ensure that the federal government is more transparent, participatory, and collaborative. Improvements underway as part of the plan include greater fiscal transparency,〔(USASpending.gov )〕 opening up the We the People online petition platform, and improving service for Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests.〔(18F: A New Look at the Freedom of Information Act )〕 Nick was part of the U.S. delegation at the Open Government Partnership Head of State event,〔(Open Government Partnership )〕 where President Obama unveiled new transparency commitments to improve accessibility to federal financial data, improve federal digital services, strengthen patient privacy in the health care system, and develop a federal open source software policy.〔(White House: Celebrating Open Government Around the Globe )〕〔(Reuters: Obama at U.N. pledges steps to more open government )〕 Nick also helped start and grow the Presidential Innovation Fellows program, which brings tech-savvy entrepreneurs into the federal government for year-long "tours of duty", with a particular focus on data innovation projects.〔(U.S. Deputy CTO Looking for a Few Good Data Fellows )〕〔( White House: Presidential Innovation Fellows Projects )〕 He also played a key role in developing the Administration’s $4.5B grid modernization strategy〔(White House: A Policy Framework for the 21st Century Grid: Enabling Our Secure Energy Future )〕 to build a smarter and more secure electric grid,〔(White House: Taking Action for a Stronger, Smarter, Cleaner Electric Grid )〕 and helped develop President Obama’s ConnectED initiative〔(White House: ConnectED Initiative )〕 to bring fast broadband and digital learning to 99% of students.〔(Harvard Kennedy School: Aneesh Chopra and Nick Sinai Announced as Inaugural Walter Shorenstein Media and Democracy Fellows )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Nick Sinai」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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