
The Obama administration is trying to gain back its' confidence and trust by strengthening the IT sector; together with the private sector, the White House will break away the inefficiency, fight economic recession, and provide more jobs. Thus, the Obama administration plans on building an 'innovative America'. From an interview with the America's Chief Technology Officer, Aneesh Chopra, the Technology newspaper summarizes that President Barack Obama understands that the advancement of IT will not only create more jobs but elevate private competitiveness and establish open government. Ever since Chopra took office as CTO, he has come up with various IT strategies and secured budget for research and development of the science and development sector.
The U.S. government will establish high speed Internet in the suburbs to increase the use of Internet and win back the nation's pride. To execute this, the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) will procure a specific 'nation broadband plan' and present this bill to the Assembly early next month. As soon as this bill passes the Congress, the plan will be in full swing. More specifically, the Obama administration will improve the nation's IT service; following last year's introduction of Web2.0 and open source technology the White House opened Data.gov, their online White House website, and the government expects to open more websites where people have access to their government and keep intact.