city_hall

Official websites use .boston.gov

A .boston.gov website belongs to an official government organization in the City of Boston.

lock

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

A lock or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Filter

October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month. All month long, we'll be promoting a safer, more secure, and more trusted Internet. This week’s theme is, “Today’s Predictions for Tomorrow’s...

The fund will support the City's goal of ensuring all residents have equal access to digital services.

Jeanethe Falvey brings more than 10 years of experience in web communications and digital strategy to the job.

October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month. All month long, we'll be promoting a safer, more secure, and more trusted internet. This week’s theme is, “Cybersecurity in the workplace is everyone...

October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month. All month long, we'll be promoting a safer, more secure, and more trusted internet.

We have a lot of useful information and resources at the City of Boston. The trouble is that — until recently — we’ve struggled to figure out the best way to present that to you, the public.

Equifax just reported that they had a data breach that exposed records for 143 million Americans. Here's what you can you do to protect yourself.

As kids and teens head back to school, remember to help them become good digital citizens.

We’ve learned a lot in the past year, both from our successes and our failures.

A free and open Internet is vital to the success of our City and its people. We must defend it.

The letter below, addressed to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, reinforces the nondiscrimination principles first called for in a 2014 U.S. Conference of Mayors resolution. Mayor Walsh joined 50 mayors to...

The Mayor will submit a joint letter to the FCC to call for the continuation of net neutrality.

Thousands of visitors hit Sail Boston this weekend for the chance to welcome the Tall Ships back to the City.

In our journey to re-imagine open data for the City of Boston, we took all aspects of the experience into account.

The City's request for website photos led to one family’s adventure through more than 300 of Boston’s outdoor spaces.

We’re looking for a web developer to join us in building modern, easy-to-use web apps that get used by millions of people each year.

For many of us, it's that time of year again when we give our homes a deep cleaning. We think you should take the same approach to your digital tools.

A story about how the numbers we look at lie to us all the time.

Analyze Boston curates more than a hundred datasets and pairs them with tools for data exploration and analysis.

The project will provide broadband services to Boston Public Schools, public housing and more than 100 City buildings, in addition to strengthening public safety communications.

Today marks the official release of Analyze Boston, Boston's new open data hub.

The goal of the store is to provide merchandise that aligns with the City's new digital brand on boston.gov, and that offers constituents, visitors, and employees the opportunity to buy a part of...

Hi everyone! We’re excited to share a few announcements about the launch of Analyze Boston, Boston’s new open data hub.

We’ve talked a lot about the new look and feel of Boston.gov — we even made our brand guidelines public. Today, we’re diving into a small but important aspect of the new site: our icons.

We're more broadly releasing the new platform as a preview (beta) today!

We want curious, thoughtful, and entrepreneurial students with a passion for doing impactful work.

The change makes City Hall meetings more transparent and accessible.

The new platform will be available to users by spring 2017.

We've made it so that anyone can see the code that makes Boston.gov work.

The City of Boston has open sourced the code of its official website.

Back to top