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Sunday, 8.09.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

EU: Europäische Union / European Union

  • Die Hälfte der EU-Ämter arbeitet mit freier Software

    Laut einer Studie der Universität Maastricht arbeiten 49 Prozent aller Ämter in Europa mit Open Source/freier Software (FLOSS) - manche ohne es zu wissen.

    Leiter Rishab Aiyer Ghosh, im Vorstand der Open Source Initiative (OSI), hatte bereits 1996 eine erste Studie zu den Produktionsbedingungen unter Open Source/freier Software vorgelegt. Vor drei Jahren erarbeitete er eine der umfassendsten Untersuchungen zur Spezies der Entwickler und Anwender von freier Software. Auf der Amsterdamer EuroOSCON, der »European Open Source Convention« des O`Reilly Verlages, wartete er letzte Woche mit der Nachfolgestudie auf.

  • Die Hälfte der Europäer ist mit Highspeed im Internet

    100 Mio. aktive Internet-Nutzer in Europa

    Die Zahl der aktiven Internet-User ist in den vergangenen zwölf Monaten in Europa um zwölf Prozent auf 100 Mio. angestiegen. Das geht aus einer aktuellen Analyse des Marktforschers Nielsen//NetRatings hervor. Noch schneller als die allgemeine Internetnutzung wächst die Verbreitung von Highspeed-Zugängen zum World Wide Web. Demnach sind in Europa bereits 54,5 Mio. Menschen mit Highspeed im Internet unterwegs, also mehr als die Hälfte aller aktiven User.

  • Die Zukunft von E-Voting in Europa

    Dreitägiges Symposion in Bregenz | Experten aus ganz Europa tauschen Erfahrungen aus | Europäischer E-Voting-Standard in Arbeit

    E-Voting ist nicht nur in den USA ein viel diskutiertes Thema. Bei einem dreitägigen Symposion in Bregenz beraten nun Experten aus ganz Europa über die Erfahrungen und Möglichkeiten von elektronischen Wahlen.

  • Digital Agenda for Europe: Health data access empowers patients

    The implementation of the European Commission’s Digital Agenda was a key point during eHealth Week 2011. In his passionate speech, Ilias Iakovidis said that new resources were needed to increase the performance of the healthcare system. The two most underused resources today are information and patients, he said.

    “Squeezing more out of the doctors is not the way to go. The caregivers in the family are no longer available. Statistically there will be no people to take care of the elderly 20 years from now," Iakovidis said. "We have a problem!"

  • Digital agenda for industry: vital perspective for Baltic States

    To keep up to the global competitiveness, the EU industrial sectors, e.g. transport, services, farming, manufacturing, etc. shall use more actively modern digital technologies and ICT achievements. While Commission designs a plan for building Digital Single Market for industry the Baltic States shall be prepared to implement the plan…

    Industry is regarded by the Commission’s political agenda as the main driving force of Europe's economy: industrial farming, manufacturing, health, engineering, etc. employs a lot of people and make EU exports larger.

  • Digital Agenda: Annual scoreboard confirms need for structural economic reform across Europe

    Big trend towards mobile services and technology

    Digital Agenda: Annual scoreboard confirms need for structural economic reform across Europe and surplus of ICT jobs; big trend towards mobile services and technology

    Europe's citizens, businesses and innovato r s are generating enough digital demand to put Europe into sustainable economic growth, but failure to supply enough fast internet, online content, research and relevant skills is undermining this potential. Greater data consumption and a shift to mobile technologies (such as smartphones) and mobile services (such as 3G internet, music streaming and webmail) are the most significant trends in the information & communications technologies (ICT) sector, which now accounts for 8 million jobs and 6% of EU GDP.

  • Digital Agenda: cyber-security experts test defences in first pan-European simulation

    Europe's cyber security experts are testing their responses today in the first ever pan-European cyber-attack simulation exercise. In "Cyber Europe 2010", experts will try to counter simulated attempts by hackers to paralyse critical online services in several EU Member States. The simulation will be based on a scenario where internet connectivity between European countries would be gradually lost or significantly reduced in all participating countries so that citizens, businesses and public institutions would find it difficult to access essential online services. In the exercise, Member States will need to cooperate with each other to avoid a simulated total network crash. The event is organised by EU Member States with support from the European Network Security Agency (ENISA) and the Joint Research Centre (JRC). Today's exercise is due to be followed by more complex scenarios ultimately going from European to global level. Supporting EU-wide cyber-security preparedness exercises is one of the actions foreseen by the Digitalen Agenda for Europe (see IP/10/581, MEMO/10/199 and MEMO/10/200.

  • Digital bean counting:Measuring return on investment of European e-government

    European thinking about e-government has changed since the heady days when the priority was to e-enable existing services as quickly as possible.

    “There was a bit of hype during that period,” says Manuel Baptista, a consultant working on the European Commission’s eGovernment Observatory. “It was a new frontier. There was a big policy objective that we would move to a new era of e-government.”

  • Digital economy, long but must road to bolster sustained EU recovery

    European leaders gathered again after summer, trying to outline a new stimulating plan to enhance recovery by building a European Union (EU)-wide digital market.

    The European Council called on member states to work together to complete the digital single market by 2015 by making three pledges, which are encouraging investments in ICT service infrastructure, integrating rules and regulations at EU level and giving a vigorous push on IT skills.

    Such an ambitious initiative followed by a banking union and a single energy market, to boost further growth after the EU and the eurozone both emerged from recession in the second quarter of this year, is a crucial driver of growth and productivity across all sectors of European economies.

  • DIGITAL HEALTH & CARE: Europe seeks the code for digital health

    The linkage between information and computer technologies inspired new hopes — and fears.

    Since computer technology can nowadays find you the best restaurant or the quickest route home, keep you in touch with friends around the globe, and help you in a job search, it seems common logic that it should become a routine part of the health care scene, too.

    Though only up to a point, as it turns out. The logic is impeccable. The logistics are less evident.

  • Digital IDs Across Europe

    It is reported that Digital IDs have been spreading across the continent in recent years. It is learnt that Estonia has had one for nearly a decade, with a slew of electronic government services, and legally binding digital signatures to go along with it. Belgium, Sweden, Spain, Portugal all currently have electronic ID cards, and there are plans in place to release such cards in Luxembourg and the Czech Republic.

    However, Germany which recently introduced digital ID cards got stuck with security vulnerabilities and had to stop issuance pending correction of security flaws. Despite the flaws which will be corrected in due course, it is clear that the world is moving towards digital ID cards and India also has to move in this direction. (Related Article)

  • Digital Pharma: E-Health and the European agenda

    The European Commission wants all European patients to be given secure online access to their medical records by 2015 and is poised to begin piloting the technology that will make this happen.

    The Commission is also eyeing a 2020 deadline for the “widespread deployment of telemedicine services”.

    The moves are part of its flagship Digital Agenda programme, which was launched earlier this year with an ambitious set of plans to drive technological progress across a range of areas, from faster broadband to narrowing the ‘digital divide’.

  • Digital Pharma: The rise of the European e-patient

    The number of people in Europe who go online to look for health information has more than doubled over the last five years.

    During that time the EU has grown in size, adding in 2007 Bulgaria and Romania – currently two of its least connected countries, but new information from the European Commission shows a steady rise in ‘e-patients’.

    Last year 34% of the European Union's population browsed for health information, up from 16.1% in 2005, but there are wide variations between individual countries.

  • Digital transformation of European Cities

    European organisations have taken the initiative to work towards digitalization of European cities

    Digitalisation has become one of the major priorities of the European Union in recent years. Since 2008, the European Commission has designated the digital agenda into the portfolio of a commissioner. Since 2018, there is also a digital agenda of the Union that sets the vision for the digital transformation of the administration up to 2022.

    The EU is not only its institutions. It is a unity of small parts, of regions and cities. A number of them have gathered to bring about their own digital transformation. The initiative is supported by the European Commission and the Committee of the Regions.

  • Digitization: how Europe can catch up

    Everyone from the CEOs of Fortune 500 companies to tiny start-ups and leading politicians gathered in Lisbon for the Web Summit conference earlier this month. Billed as a talk shop which “connect[s] the technology community with all industries, both old and new,” the event has now grown to become the largest tech conference worldwide.

    But the fact that this event, dubbed by one writer as the “Olympics for geeks,” should take place on European soil this year is perhaps a little ironic, given that the continent is certainly not at the top of the food chain when it comes to new technologies. Despite its better efforts and the size of its economy, Europe still lags behind the US and China in terms of digitization.

  • Dutch minister spells out vision for e-government

    Dutch reform minister Thom de Graaf says Europe's essential contribution to foster e-government services lies in promoting interoperability and open standards.

    Thom C. de Graaf, the Dutch Minister for Government Reform and Kingdom Relations and Deputy Prime Minister, has spelled out his vision for e-government on the Commission's IDA (Interchange of Data between Administration) website.

  • e-Accessibility in the EU: Cabinet Office publishes important report

    The Cabinet Office yesterday published "​eAccessibility of public sector services in the European Union", a comprehensive report on accessibility of government online services across the European Union (EU).

    The report was commissioned for the UK Presidency of the EU to help member states by undertaking an evaluation of eAccessibility and establishing the scope of public policy towards eAccessibility.

  • E-Gesundheit in der EU: wie ist die Diagnose?

    „Infolge der alternden Bevölkerung steht Europa vor Engpässen im Gesundheitswesen. Durch den bestmöglichen Einsatz digitaler Technik können wir Kosten senken, den Patienten mehr Kontrolle geben, die Gesundheitsfürsorge effizienter machen und den europäischen Bürgerinnen und Bürgern länger eine aktive Teilhabe in der Gesellschaft ermöglichen. Wir müssen den Finger am Puls der Zeit haben!“ – Neelie Kroes.

    Was ist die Diagnose?

    Zwei in Europa unter Akutkrankenhäusern (d. h. Krankenhäusern mit kurzfristiger ärztlicher und chirurgischer Behandlung) und praktischen Ärzten durchgeführte Umfragen haben eine zunehmende Nutzung elektronischer Gesundheitsdienste ergeben. 60 % der praktischen Ärzte nutzten demnach im Jahr 2013 elektronische Gesundheitsdienste, gegenüber 50 % im Jahr 2007. Es muss jedoch noch viel mehr getan werden.

  • E-gov to cost Europe EUR4bn plus

    This year will see rapid growth in government spend on IT across Europe, according to research from IDC, as the deadlines for the eEurope Action Plan approach.

    For the public sector, the 2005 objective is that Europe should have 'modern online public services.'

  • E-governance for EU democracy

    It has become a common ascertainment that computer mediated communication is coming to refute, annul, or at least alter the up to date communication and information structures, since it is now all the more interfering with the process of forming the message. Such a process, therefore, acts as a reformer of the concept of democracy itself, as well as of pluralism in its bosom, since it influences one of their more important ingredients, which is no other but the communication channels.
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