"While we've made extensive use of the Internet for some time, posting material on YouTube and Twitter offers new possibilities to inform people about our efforts to promote accountability and transparency in federal programs and operations," Gene Dodaro, acting comptroller general for the United States, said in a statement Tuesday.
Two Twitter accounts launched in April, "usgaolegal" for legal decisions of contracting protests and "usgao" for analytical reports, act much like RSS feeds, informing readers of the latest releases. As of Wednesday afternoon, the two accounts had 931 followers, a far cry from the 627,000 followers of the official White House Twitter account.
The public has similarly been slow to latch onto the GAO's YouTube channel, which was launched on February 25. It has only 72 subscribers and has seen its page opened a total of 2,408 times, with videos getting as few as 25 views.
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