On 14 January 2011 21:05, Mark Goodge <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> It works reasonably well for the land registry. The information is available
> to anyone who needs it, but the costs of creating a full database would be
> prohibitive even for large corporations.

Its available, but its _expensively_ available. Sometimes you need to
search a lot of titles to be able to reconstruct information that
really ought to be available under one. In practical terms this means
a lot of downloads, and the cost adds up. Fine if its a big
conveyance, but not everyone is in that position.

But that's just from a normal user's perspective. There's a lot of
information locked up in these databases that can't be got out in any
easy way. For example, any kind of study of the nature of land
ownership in England would want to cover a lot of the land registry,
but would be prohibited by cost.

Also, reverse searches _are_ sometimes sensible. Finding out that X is
the director of a lot of other companies is (I think) something that X
should not be able to hide, even if X can hide their address.

>
> I'm not suggesting that price-rationing is an ideal solution. But it is one
> option, and may possibly be more effective than some others.
>

Anonymising the data properly? Or removing particularly sensitive information.

Really, this is about deciding what should be made public and what
should not. The idea that only organisations with the money or effort
to circumvent security-by-infeasibility is not (in my view) a good
one.

Eg, the liberal democrats once bulk mailed (as in posted via the Royal
Mail) all electors in the City of Cambridge (I think it was). They did
this without breaking any rules about getting a computer readable
database of the electoral roll or scanning it or anything, but the
_hard_ way by having lots of volunteers go through it by hand.

So, in my view, either data is something that you are happy with being
public or not. There really isn't room for a middle way.

The debate then becomes about what is and is not suitably public
(sorry if I'm repeating myself - I plead having been to Southampton
today). In the case of the land registry, we don't really need to know
names of owners, just whether two owners are the same or not, or are
the same as some other person somewhere else in government data (both
impossible questions to answer with the data as it is currently
recorded of course). When conveyancing you want to check that the
person you are dealing with has title, but there's no way of doing
that anyway.

For Companies House, its reasonable that the fact that a particular
person is a director of a company should be public, but maybe their
address not.

-- 
Francis Davey

_______________________________________________
developers-public mailing list
[email protected]
https://secure.mysociety.org/admin/lists/mailman/listinfo/developers-public

Unsubscribe: 
https://secure.mysociety.org/admin/lists/mailman/options/developers-public/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to