Categories: Web

Who exactly ownes fixyourstreet.ie? Not the government but South Dublin County Council

When the coalition launched its Fine Gael and Labour Programme for Government 2011 earlier this year it made a clear promise to launch a crowsourced civic management website called fixmystreet.ie.  Yesterday a similarly named site, fixyourstreet.ie was launched, but is this the same thing? Probably, but it’s complicated.

In the programme the government said, “In local services, we will establish a website – www.fixmystreet.ie – to assist residents in reporting problems with street lighting, drainage, graffiti, waste collection and road and path maintenance in their neighbourhoods, with a guarantee that local officials will respond within two working days.”

The site was first mentioned in Fine Gael’s manifesto, released before the election.

At the moment fixmystreet,ie resolves to a Register365 holding page as it has since it was registered by a Peter Cleary on November 25 2010.  But far from being the national civic site as outlined out in the Programme for Government (although the site is still in beta) the recently launched fixyourstreet.ie has been registered by South Dublin County Council itself.  According to the website ownership records the site was registered less than a month ago on July 7 2011 by Michelle Galvin, the Assistant Head of Information Systems at South Dublin County Council.

Yet, announcing the beta site, Phil Hogan T.D., Minister for Environment, Community and Local Government, said that this beta for the site will be rolled out nationally,

“The pilot of Fixyourstreet.ie will see South Dublin County Council deploy a publicly accessible web site with associated mobile technologies which will record non emergency issues such as graffiti, road defects, street lighting, illegal dumping and drainage.

It is envisaged that once the pilot is completed and evaluated, it will be rolled out on a national basis with any necessary adaptations.”

So, this begs a few questions, did Fine Gael not register fixmystreet.ie before it mentioned it in their manifesto (or if they did, why isn’t it being used)?

Why did Dublin South County Council, and not the government, resister the domain when it is planned to roll out nationally?

Either way, it’s all a bit messy.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

Meet agentic AI: Your AI agent just leveled up to teammate (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

You’ve probably been coming across the term “agentic AI” a lot more recently, and in…

16 hours ago

True robot intelligence requires a digital twin of the entire world: WEF ‘Summer Davos’ in China

In order to achieve true robot intelligence, a digital twin of the entire world would…

1 day ago

Sensors to surveil people & cities among WEF top 10 emerging technologies at ‘Summer Davos’

Autonomous Biochemical Sensing can turn human bodies into surveillance tools for monitoring and control, Collaborative…

2 days ago

AI and the Dopamine Trap: How Algorithms Are Rewiring Our Social Cravings

New research shows AI companions can lift mood and teach social skills, but only when…

5 days ago

Hate speech, deepfakes & false info undermine UN work: comms chief

Hate speech is a launching point for crackdowns on narratives that impede UN agendas: perspective…

5 days ago

Making Sense brings strategic insight to the SIM Hartford Chapter

On June 4, technology executives gathered at the SIM Hartford chapter presided over by Fariba…

7 days ago