Free our data
Ordnance Survey challenged to open up The inventor of the world wide web wants access to Ordnance Survey data - and the freedom to manipulate it as he sees fit http://society.guardian.co.uk/e-public/story/0,,1737011,00.html SA Mathieson and Michael Cross Thursday March 23, 2006 The Guardian Another excellent article on the topic of freeing ordinance survey data. The article refers to Berners-Lee speech given at Oxford last week, where he argued that to develop the semantic web one needs data! The article can be found here: See the new Free our Data Campaing for the UK: Free Our Data: Make taxpayers' data available to them http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/ Free Our Data: the blog A Guardian Technology campaign for free public access to data about the UK and its citizens http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/blog/index.php |
This is amazing. Jo Walsh wrote to alert the people on the list of
geo-discuss about it too: http://lists.okfn.org/pipermail/geo-discuss/2006-March/000142.html He makes a very interesting point: """ Noncommercial means that public geodata won't be able to generate added economic value through reuse. The late Peter Weiss' study on pricing public sector information is very strong on this point: http://www.primet.org/documents/Weiss%20-%20Borders%20in%20Cyberspace.htm Economic Potential of PSI in Europe and US In EUROs EU US Investment value 9.5 billion 19 billion Economic value 68 billion 750 billion """ (PSI here stands for Public Sector Information) This to me is a very strong argument for making data free, even for commercial uses. 750 Billion in economic activity should raise enough taxes to recoup the investment by a wide margin. Even dividing these numbers by 10 to reflect the Canadian economy's size, we could assume following the US example would produce EUR 75- 6.8 (say, 7) = EUR 68 Billion dollars. That's how much economic growth we're missing out on because of counter-productive cost-recovery policies. (We're not 1/10 of Europe, the growth is not automatic, etc... there's a lot of factors but still, even if it's off by a wide margin, that's a LOT of money). For those of you interested in such matters, Jo is trying to round people up to work on geodata licensing. Cheers, Daniel. On 3/23/06, Tracey P. Lauriault <[hidden email]> wrote: > Free our data > Ordnance Survey challenged to open up > The inventor of the world wide web wants access to Ordnance Survey data - > and the freedom to manipulate it as he sees fit > http://society.guardian.co.uk/e-public/story/0,,1737011,00.html > SA Mathieson and Michael Cross > Thursday March 23, 2006 > The Guardian > > Another excellent article on the topic of freeing ordinance survey data. > The article refers to Berners-Lee speech given at Oxford last week, where he > argued that to develop the semantic web one needs data! The article can be > found here: > > See the new Free our Data Campaing for the UK: > Free Our Data: Make taxpayers' data available to them > http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/ > > Free Our Data: the blog > A Guardian Technology campaign for free public access to data about the UK > and its citizens > http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/blog/index.php > > > _______________________________________________ > CivicAccess-discuss mailing list > [hidden email] > http://civicaccess.ca/mailman/listinfo/civicaccess-discuss_civicaccess.ca > > > |
:-)
Daniel Haran wrote: This is amazing. Jo Walsh wrote to alert the people on the list of geo-discuss about it too: http://lists.okfn.org/pipermail/geo-discuss/2006-March/000142.html He makes a very interesting point: """ Noncommercial means that public geodata won't be able to generate added economic value through reuse. The late Peter Weiss' study on pricing public sector information is very strong on this point: http://www.primet.org/documents/Weiss%20-%20Borders%20in%20Cyberspace.htm Economic Potential of PSI in Europe and US In EUROs EU US Investment value 9.5 billion 19 billion Economic value 68 billion 750 billion """ (PSI here stands for Public Sector Information) This to me is a very strong argument for making data free, even for commercial uses. 750 Billion in economic activity should raise enough taxes to recoup the investment by a wide margin. Even dividing these numbers by 10 to reflect the Canadian economy's size, we could assume following the US example would produce EUR 75- 6.8 (say, 7) = EUR 68 Billion dollars. That's how much economic growth we're missing out on because of counter-productive cost-recovery policies. (We're not 1/10 of Europe, the growth is not automatic, etc... there's a lot of factors but still, even if it's off by a wide margin, that's a LOT of money). For those of you interested in such matters, Jo is trying to round people up to work on geodata licensing. Cheers, Daniel. On 3/23/06, Tracey P. Lauriault [hidden email] wrote:Free our data Ordnance Survey challenged to open up The inventor of the world wide web wants access to Ordnance Survey data - and the freedom to manipulate it as he sees fit http://society.guardian.co.uk/e-public/story/0,,1737011,00.html SA Mathieson and Michael Cross Thursday March 23, 2006 The Guardian Another excellent article on the topic of freeing ordinance survey data. The article refers to Berners-Lee speech given at Oxford last week, where he argued that to develop the semantic web one needs data! The article can be found here: See the new Free our Data Campaing for the UK: Free Our Data: Make taxpayers' data available to them http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/ Free Our Data: the blog A Guardian Technology campaign for free public access to data about the UK and its citizens http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/blog/index.php _______________________________________________ CivicAccess-discuss mailing list [hidden email] http://civicaccess.ca/mailman/listinfo/civicaccess-discuss_civicaccess.ca_______________________________________________ CivicAccess-discuss mailing list [hidden email] http://civicaccess.ca/mailman/listinfo/civicaccess-discuss_civicaccess.ca |
In reply to this post by Tracey P. Lauriault-2
> See the new Free our Data Campaing for the UK: > *Free Our Data: Make taxpayers' data available to them* > http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/ This news has also been published in France : http://www.internetactu.net/?p=6404 Stef |
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