Sep 13, 2016
Chelsea Collier (@ChelseaMcC) is dedicated to fostering collaboration across the public and private sector in order to connect and engage communities to solve civic challenges. Her current focus on Smart Cities unifies her experience in tech, policy, social impact, civic engagement and entrepreneurship.
Chelsea is a Zhi-Xing Eisenhower Fellow and will travel to China this Fall to study Smart City innovation. She documents her research on a community platform she created, Digi.City, and is a contributor to RCR Wireless and Industrial IoT 5G. Chelsea is a Co-Founder of Impact Hub Austin, a local co-working and community space for social and civic enterprises that is a part a global network of more than 80 Impact Hubs around the world.
She is also co-Founder of two other start-ups, Wake Up, a professional and personal development company and Mable, a social enterprise that produces modular furniture from sustainable materials manufactured in the USA. Through her consulting company, Intercambio, she advises multiple startups and projects that seek to make a positive impact on the world.
From 2012-2015, Chelsea was the Executive Director Texans for Economic Progress (TEP) and now engages as a Strategic Advisor where she continues to facilitate dialogue between the statewide technology community and elected officials, advocating for greater access to tech education, entrepreneurship and infrastructure. Prior, she served as the Founding Director for RISE, an annual Austin-based entrepreneurs conference, Marketing Director at Rev Worldwide. a mission-focused fintech start-up; and served in the Texas Governor’s Office in Economic Development.
She is active in several organizations that encourage economic solutions to global challenges including St Edwards’ University’s Dean’s Advisory & Development Council for The Bill Munday School of Business, an Executive Committee member of The Seton 50, Advisor to the World Economic Forum Global Shapers, UnltdUSA and Food + City. She served as Vice Chair and Commissioner for the City of Austin Community Technology & Telecommunications Commission from 2013 - 2015. She is a Leadership Austin graduate (2010); Austin Under 40 Award recipient in Science & Technology (2015) and a BPE Ascendant Award recipient (2013), and an ABJ Profiles in Power Finalist (2013). Chelsea has masters and bachelor degrees in Advertising from the University of Texas at Austin.
In this episode, we discussed:
Resources:
YouCanBook.me (scheduling app)
Full Contact (contact management)
Give and Take by Adam Grant
TECH POLICY NEWS
US officials are investigating a potential Russian effort to disrupt this year’s US presidential elections, according to Dana Priest at the Washington Post. The investigation was precipitated by alleged Russian hacks into the Democratic National Committee and Wikileaks release of 20,000 hacked DNC emails. Russia has denied the accusations, although, as Bloomberg notes, Russian President Vladimir Putin did say the DNC hacks were a public service.
Julian Hattem at The Hill noted
last week that
Department of Homeland Security
Chief Jeh Johnson attempted to downplay the Russian
threat. Johnson said the
vastness of all of the nation’s dispersed local and state voting
systems would make it difficult for any hack to alter the ballot
count. But officials are still worried that even a hint of the
ballots being compromised could cause unrest.
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The
FCC has proposed rules that would
open up the set top box market to
competition. Currently,
subscribers are paying an average of $231 per year to lease set top
boxes from cable providers. And these set top boxes aren’t required
to list content from over-the-top competitors like Netflix. The new
rules would clear the way for cable subscribers to buy a set top
box of their choice, they would also require cable providers to
develop free apps that enable consumers to download all their
programming to their chosen devices. The cable industry is
obviously incensed. The Commissioners will vote on the new rules at
the next Open Meeting on September 29th at the FCC. If you want to
file comments, it’s proceeding 16-42. In the meantime, you can
check out my interview with Brian Woolfolk on episode 36 to get
caught up on the basics of this proceeding.
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According to a new FBI report, Hillary Clinton
and her staff were lackadaisical about keeping confidential
communications secure while Clinton served as Secretary of State,
even though Clinton herself had authorization to decide which
communications were confidential and which weren’t. But former
Secretary of State Colin Powell also indicated last week that his
communications weren’t kept all that secure either, stating that he
had used a separate internet connection over a private phone line
to communicate about State Department business off the State
Department’s servers.
Sean Gallagher at Ars
Technica and
Quartz have the coverage here.
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President Obama has
announced the appointments of the
nation’s first Chief and Deputy Chief Information
Officers. Retired
Brigadier General Gregory J. Touhill, who currently serves as a
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Cybersecurity and Communications at
the Department of Homeland Security, will take the helm as CISO and
Grant Schneider, current Director of Cybersecurity on the National
Security Council staff at the White House will serve as
Deputy.
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Finally, another Obama administration staffer is leaving the White House to join the tech sector. Rachel Racusen, who last week ended her stint as White House strategic communications adviser, will join Snapchat’s New York team next week to serve as Director of Communications at the growing social media company. Juliet Eilperin at the Washington Post notes that Racusen joins a long line of former White House officials to join the tech sector, including former press secretary Jay Carney who went to Amazon and Dan Pfeiffer at GoFundMe.