[okfn-discuss] Recommendations on Open Government from computer scientists and computing practitioners

Jonathan Gray jonathan.gray at okfn.org
Thu Feb 5 23:04:01 UTC 2009


Interesting recommendations on open government from Association for
Computing Machinery - including on making data available for re-use:

  http://freegovinfo.info/node/2394

J.

----

The Washington policy committee of the Association for Computing
Machinery, the professional association that represents computer
scientists and computing practitioners, released its Policy
Recommendations on Open Government today.

The really important thing about these recommendations is that they
reflect an understanding that there is a difference between
"presenting" information, usually in the form of a web site, and
providing the underlying data that anyone can then "present" or use or
re-use. As David Robinson said in an earlier proposal, "[I]s a
government monopoly on 'presentations' of the data the best way...?
Probably not. If Congress orders the federal bureaucracy to provide a
web site for end users, then we will all have to live with the one web
site they cook up" (The (Ironic) Best Way to Make the Bailout
Transparent, By David Robinson, Freedom to Tinker, January 27th, 2009)

Among the recommendations:

    * Data published by the government should be in formats and
approaches that promote analysis and reuse of that data.
    * Citizens should be able to download complete datasets of
regulatory, legislative or other information, or appropriately chosen
subsets of that information, when it is published by government.
    * Citizens should be able to directly access government-published
datasets using standard methods such as queries via an API
(Application Programming Interface).

See also: New USACM Poilcy Recommendations on Open Government, By
David Robinson, Freedom to Tinker, February 5th, 2009.

    Today's statement puts the weight of America's computing
professionals behind the push for machine-readable government data.




More information about the okfn-discuss mailing list