[open-government] Ten Open Data Guidelines launched in Tbilisi

Jonathan Gray jonathan.gray at okfn.org
Tue Feb 1 14:49:04 UTC 2011


Fantastic. I have one small comment related to point 7., which says
data should be 'license free'. I would focus this point on making sure
that users are free to use data in any way they please, rather than on
the legal mechanism used to achieve this. E.g. at the moment it might
not be clear whether or not things like Creative Commons CC0 or the
PDDL, would be permissible or not. Also its not clear to me that, a
priori, one wants to *always* deal with rights in government
information via legal reform (copyright exemptions, PSI legislation
etc) rather than at an administrative level (e.g. via licensing
policies and practices). By excluding licenses as a legitimate means
of opening up government information, you exclude 'bottom up'
initiatives from public bodies to open material up using licenses or
other legal tools (e.g. the UK's Open Government License). Some
clarification here would be great!

In general I'd be really interested to hear of other legal systems
which have copyright exemptions in public information, like §105 in
the US Copyright Act [1], to get a sense of how widespread this is
outside the US. I know that there are *some* clauses in other
copyright legislation, but don't know in how many countries.

Christina, Katleen: do you know anything about this? Or do you know
anyone who would know? Or any papers/research on this topic?

All the best,

Jonathan

[1] http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#105

2011/2/1 Victoria Anderica <victoria at access-info.org>:
> Dear all,
>
> Access Info Europe welcome the publication this week of the Ten Open Data
> Guidelines drafted by TI Georgia, in consultation with Access Info Europe.
>
> These guidelines are designed as a guide to help agency heads, IT managers,
> and web developers create open data websites. They call for data to be:
>
> 1. Complete
> 2. Primary
> 3. Timely
> 4. Accessible
> 5. Machine-readable
> 6. Non-proprietary
> 7. License-free
> 8. Reviewable
> 9. Discoverable
> 10. Permanent
>
> The guidelines provide details of how these are to be achieved. They provide
> a useful structure which Access Info recommends as a model for the
> elaboration of similar principles in other countries and at an international
> level.
>
> Please do not hesitate to contact either Dereck Dohler, copied, or myself
> for more information.
>
> All the best,
>
> Victoria
>
> --
>
> Victoria Anderica Caffarena
> Project Coordinator
> Access Info Europe
> Madrid
> +34 91 366 53 44
> +34 606 592 976
> skype: victoria.access-info
> http://www.access-info.org/
> Síguenos en Twiter, y en Facebook
> Si quieres ayudar a Access Info Europe en su campaña por una ley de acceso a
> la información en España, haz click aquí
> _______________________________________________
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>
>



-- 
Jonathan Gray

Community Coordinator
The Open Knowledge Foundation
http://blog.okfn.org

http://twitter.com/jwyg
http://identi.ca/jwyg




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