Open Government Data Roundup
News and ideas on open government data from around the web:
- The Open Knowledge Foundation published 5 recommendations on how Obama can promote open-ness:
- Open government data. Make core government data open (as in opendefinition.org) - so that it can be re-used in mashups, visually represented, used in semantic web applications and so on! This idea is currently in 5th place on the Obama CTO site with over 5,800 votes.
- Open access to publicly funded research. As suggested by Open Knowledge Foundation Advisory Board member, Peter Suber: “Require open access to the results of non-classified research funded by taxpayers. Extend the exemplary policy now in place at the NIH to all federal agencies.”. Currently in 12th place on ObamaCTO with over 1,600 votes.
- Publish public information in way which makes it easy to re-use. For example, publish in XML or Text/CSV, not PDF files which data must be extracted from. Allow direct, bulk downloading, rather than access through an API or piecemeal access via a web service. (For more on this see our post Give Us the Data Raw, and Give it to Us Now.)The Data Catalogue of Vivek Kundra’s Office in the District of Columbia is a great example of this.
- Legal and licensing clarity. Be clear about what can and can’t be done with public content and data - with explicit legal and licensing statements, terms of use, and so on. Be clear what is in the public domain and what is free for re-use as long as attribution is given. Be clear about what is not available for use - including material where copyright is held by third parties. Fine grained permissions - with clear terms for each document and dataset - are better than blanket statements, which require each case to be investigated individually!
- Make it open by default. Make public content and data - whether its government data, or publicly funded digitisation of cultural heritage artefacts - open by default. Though this is not appropriate for everything, consider allowing as much as possible to be re-used. Think of the ‘Principle of Many Minds’ - there are lots of interesting things that can be done with a given document or dataset that you may not have thought of!
- In a similar vein, Tom Steinberg of MySociety published his top 5 ideas for creating a technology-savvy government. Two particularly interesting ideas:
- Free the data that people ask for, without asking questions: they likely have a use for it you haven't thought of.
- Create opportunities for anyone using your services to share and collaborate. Users of your service may be able to provide more value than you can.
Read the full list here .
- Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, posts his ideas on technology and government for Obama here.
- Miller-McCune published a thought-provoking article on how investigative journalism could be improved by better political data mining tools. (by way of the OpenHouseProject )
- Everyblock has released its local civic data publishing and mapping system as open source, following the terms of its Knight Foundation grant. Read how this is affecting the company here.
- The Economist discusses the demand for web tools that track government spending. A choice quote:
“Smart politicians realise this is a winning issue whether you’re on the right or the left,”(Thanks to Martin Carel for forwarding).


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