id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_yojii7retbf6rppn3ee3t72j4a Debbie Rabina Social Media Use by the US Federal Government at the End of the 2012 Presidential Term 2013.0 22 .pdf application/pdf 7718 591 52 media is enabling high levels of collaboration between government and citizens, which was a goal stated in Obama's Transparency Memorandum. dot gov domain or through third-party social media providers is not considered official government information, and therefore not subject to legal This led to widespread use of social media by the government, which caught the attention of the web archiving team as it prepared prior example, there is little preventing a social media provider from highlighting government agency information that is amendable to advertising A fifth issue is that social media platforms pose a challenge for government agencies because they are difficult to archive. Social media, if adequately mined for data, has the ability to provide selfreferential information on the responsiveness of government policy to technological change (Bertot, Jaeger and Hansen, 2012) and how best to use these branch of government, agency, and social media provider (e.g. Facebook, Table 2: Social media use by government agency ./cache/work_yojii7retbf6rppn3ee3t72j4a.pdf ./txt/work_yojii7retbf6rppn3ee3t72j4a.txt