ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Michael Riedyk is CEO of DotGov, Inc. We're developing YouTown: a mobile platform for local government that will change the way how we interact with govt.
Gov 2.0 is the newest buzzword in government; a term referring to a whole group of new innovative things governments can do with the web. Lately, discussion has centered around what Gov 2.0 is and whether the term should be even used, since most citizens don’t understand it.
First, the term Gov2.0 is not meant to be used by citizens, but rather an industry term to define a group of technologies and web-based e-government solutions.
But how does Gov 2.0 differ from e-government? And, how does it differ from Gov 1.0, if that, in fact, ever existed?
The 2.0 term refers to Web 2.0, a term that increased in popularity in 2004 and, according to Wikipedia, “is commonly associated with web applications that facilitate interactive information sharing, interoperability, user-centered design, and collaboration on the World Wide Web”
The most important difference was a paradigm shift from a read-only web to a read-and-write web illustrated in the following diagram:

(From: Web 2.0 Definition)
With Web 1.0 in 1996, a relatively few websites were publishing content for 45 million global users. User generated content was barely on the radar.
Ten years later, the number of sites exploded to 80 million, content generated by more 1 billion users was roughly one-third of all content. A sizeable collective intelligence emerged.
This whole new view was powered by – at that time – a new technology called Ajax and combined with a total different approach of what to do with the web. It resulted in YouTube, Flickr, Digg, Facebook and other great apps. These apps moved the creating process to the public, massively changing our world.
The same shift is happening with government nowadays. Gov 1.0 meant one-way publishing and communication. Whereas, Gov2.0 is a massive paradigm shift towards the same ideas as seen in Web 2.0, but with citizens talking with government and other citizens. Like Web 2.0, Gov 2.0 will move the creation process to the citizens.
Some noteworthy changes include:
Although Gov 2.0 lags behind Web 2.0 by 5 years, the results will be as mind boggling.
We have only seen the beginning.
Comments
Excellent post, thanks for sharing! Creating an accessible language to talk about Gov 2.0 with the average citizen is important, because Gov 2.0 is fundamentally about giving citizens more and better connections to the process of governance.
Also, can you please repost the source for the great graphic you included? Thanks again!
Hi Nick,
Here is where I found the image: http://blogs.voices.com/thebiz/2006/09/web_20_definition.html
Great post, thanks!
Although Gov2.0 is a natural by product from Web 2.0, it still will have some restrictions.
Gov is already an elected body by the people – so in this case I think people will want more content in the old fashioned ‘from-the-creator’.
But of-course social media integrations and user-generated content will enrich it.
Cheers!
so the public will have more a more access to the government via facebook twitter and so on, so we should have no reason why we keep people in office that are not doing anything^^