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Tag Archives: Painful

Ex-Uber exec Brian McClendon wants to make Kansas’ voter registration site less painful to use

January 25, 2018   Big Data

While much of Silicon Valley is keeping its eyes on a Mark Zuckerberg run for president, other Silicon Valley luminaries are exploring ways to get more involved in politics. This week, former Google and Uber executive Brian McClendon was the latest to throw his hat into the political ring, announcing his intentions to run for Kansas Secretary of State.

McClendon spent nearly 30 years in Silicon Valley, where he founded Keyhole, a visual mapping that Google acquired in 2004 and became the basis for Google Earth. McClendon became Uber’s VP of Maps and Business Platform in 2015 and left the company in March 2017, telling USA Today that he was compelled to move back to his home state of Kansas after the 2016 presidential election.

McClendon will have to compete in the Democratic Primary first, which takes place on August 7.

In an interview with VentureBeat, McClendon outlined his vision for the secretary of state office should he win. He also criticized current Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. Under Kobach, voter files from the Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program, a voter registration database used by 27 different states to weed out voter fraud, have been exposed multiple times. McClendon claims that his background can help him design a more secure and accessible voter registration process in Kansas.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

VB: Why did you think you could have a bigger impact in the public sector vs. the private sector?

McClendon: Well I think the challenge has been that there hasn’t been enough participation in the public sector, and there haven’t been tech savy-problem solvers involved in government. I think that’s led to a situation where we’re not making good decisions about who should be in office.

VB: Since you’ve moved back to Kansas, have your contemporaries in Silicon Valley have also expressed interest in doing something similar to you and either moving back or doing more work with thier home state?

McClendon: I know of some instances of people…who are looking at how they can have a career while still living in the states that they grew up in. And they’re doing that at an earlier stage of their life than I am. It’s easier for me because I don’t have to have the same career that I did before.

VB: Do you think there’s still some concern about people who live in Silicon Valley who want to move back that they can’t have as fulfilling careers in tech in the Midwest versus in Silicon Valley?

McClendon: I think there are some very challenging and interesting careers in tech in the Midwest — the only advantage that Silicon Valley has is density. If you don’t like one company or one company fails, you can just hop to the next one. Whereas in some places in the Midwest you don’t have the density of job choices, so you are tied to the fate of your technology company.

VB: What prompted you to run specifically for the position of Kansas secretary of state?

McClendon: When I came back to Kansas and I talked to people about what was going on in the state, one of the things that people had seen problems with was voter registration. And the secretary of state that Kansas had for seven years [Kris Kobach] has made voter registration harder for eligible citizens.

I helped build an app called KSVotes.org. It’s an online registration service that is much faster and easier to use than the one that the secretary of state offers, and we were able to do this very quickly with a small amount of effort.

Above: The homepage of KSVotes.org

Image Credit: Screenshot via KSVotes.org

I think there’s an opportunity to use both my big data, software development, and my experience building good user interfaces in Google Maps, and apply that kind of experience to government. The citizens are the customers of the government, and if [their website] isn’t easy to use, that’s a problem.

VB: Can you talk about the improvements you made on the voter registration form offered on KSvotes.org versus on the secretary of state’s website?

McClendon: First we focused on mobile — I’ve certainly learned that the majority of [website] usage throughout the world and in the U.S is mobile first, and building KSVotes as a mobile-first app was step one. Being able to take an electronic signature on your phone turns out to be even easier than doing anything on a desktop, because signing a signature with your finger actually makes a small amount of sense.

We made it seamless where once you submit the form, it automatically emails the county clerk, which is something the secretary of state site does not offer without additional steps. In many cases, many of the online systems will actually generate a form that you print and then you mail [or email] in with additional documentation.

VB: What other features you would want to add to help make the forms on the Kansas secretary of state’s website more secure and accessible?

McClendon: One of the challenges is the secretary of state’s site is not well organized, and it’s hard to find many of the documents that they’re officially responsible for publishing. So obviously improving search would be good, but I think just in general the way that documents are organized on the site could be greatly improved. But the secretary of state position is not just about the website, there’s a lot of internal operations about how data is brought in and what the secretary of state’s office does with it that could be improved.

Crosscheck is a multi-state system that Kansas created — and Kansas pays for and does all the work for — that attempts to compare voter roles across states and look for duplication. And it’s in theory a good thing to do — but the execution in Kansas right now is not very good at all. It uses very inefficient technology, that produces many, many false positives. There are alternative systems that already exist that are better — and I think we should either fix Crosscheck or replace it with some of these alternatives.

VB: What are some of the alternative systems?

McClendon: The good alternative is called ERIC — electronic records information center — and it’s a nonprofit. Twenty three states use it, and it does a much better job of securing the data that states give it, and it does a far better job at matching the voter rolls to find duplicates. It does not create near as many false positives.

VB: On a macro level, what do you think are some of the solutions needed to help government create better software — is the answer to get more tech workers in government?

McClendon: I think part of this is a problem that you see in any kind of government, or even big company specification is if you write an RFP that has no understanding of how the product you’re asking for is going to be built, then you end up asking for things that are not reasonable. So if you work much more closely with how the products are really going to be built, you can get something much closer to an industry standard that doesn’t require custom development, and therefore is going to be much cheaper and also has more suppliers.

Yes, government has some unique needs, but they’re not that much different from a big company. Big companies have found ways to buy database systems and be able to have competing bids from multiple suppliers, and they know how to get the price down. And I don’t think government does a good job of that — and I think part of this is that the specification writing process allows for overspecification.

VB: So what changes do you think could be made to that process?

McClendon: Definitely getting the suppliers involved in it sooner, and also having a more educated RFP writing process. Make sure that when somebody asks for a feature they understand how much that’s going to cost — and is that capability really worth it, or is that something from the state’s perspective, we could save money by doing it differently?

At the end of the day, all the cost in future government technology is going to be in software. Hardware is getting so cheap these days, that the reason the government is paying more for technology is this overspecified software.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

Big Data – VentureBeat

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Just What is a Privacy Shield Exactly, and Is It Painful?

May 22, 2016   CRM News and Info
David Fowler Featured Image Just What is a Privacy Shield Exactly, and Is It Painful?

While the decision on the Privacy Shield is currently being reviewed by the European Commission and a decision is due in July, the expectation that, if passed, the agreement will more than likely face a higher court ruling challenge at the Court of Justice of the European Union.

Which means there will be a delay in adopting the shield. Does this sound a little like “Groundhog Day”?

A few highlights of Privacy Shield:

Corporations:

Will be on the hook for more transparency and oversight of their practices. If you are in noncompliance expect some hand slapping (sanctions) for your misgivings. It’s a good idea to review your privacy policy and ensure you have adequate notices communicated.

Redress:

EU citizens will have the abilities to “complain” directly against a U.S. Privacy Shield participant, with a mandatory 45-day response window for resolution.

U.S. Government access:

If you recall, one of the sticking points that led to the demise of Safe Harbor was the small incident of Edward Snowden and the U.S. Government’s monitoring activities. So with the Shield in place, the United States has agreed to provide clear limitations, safeguards, and oversight mechanisms to our EU partners.

The Privacy Shield allows for U.S. companies to report the number of access requests they receive from the government, and an independent ombudsman will be able to handle and investigate individual complaints.

Cooperation:

The Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission have committed to monitor and enforce more robustly and cooperate more with the EU DPAs (data protection agencies). There will also be a joint annual monitoring of the effectiveness of the Privacy Shield and an annual report to the European Commission and the EU parliament.

Both skepticism and support for the Privacy Shield have been well-documented. I think we will get to some common ground on the agreement, but it will take some time.

My prediction* is that we have more chance of England winning the Euro 2016 tournament than the Privacy Shield becoming effective in 2016.

So what’s a privacy-committed organization to do in the meantime?

Until we get the Shield in place, Model Contracts and Binding Corporate Rules are still a legally acceptable form of transfer. (That’s what Act-On does.) As always, we’re offering a point of view here. You will need to seek a legal opinion on any compliance or regulatory issue that may affect your business.

We will be communicating updates as we get them on all things Shield-related.

Cheers,

David

*England out in the semis.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

Act-On Marketing Blog

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Unicycle Trick Turns Painful

September 25, 2015   Humor

Direct fall on the spot.

1421083485 unicycle nut shot Unicycle Trick Turns Painful

“Unicycle nut shot.”
Image courtesy of http://gifb.in/cwRV.

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Quipster

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