Some USA perspective:  because of where I was, happening to go to a funky 
little mountain organic food store and the proximity of this store to a 
"CalFire" station (sort of two of them, in a regional sense...CalFire being the 
California Department of Forestry, essentially the "state fire department" for 
California — in rural areas where there is no urban fire department), I once 
bumped into what I later figured out is a sort of "lieutenant general" in the 
state fire hierarchy of California — pretty far "up there" for the little 
village I was in.  White shirt, yellow-tin shield, name tag, official state car 
he was getting out of...  I mentioned OSM and what it is and he (I honestly 
think so) looked at me like he didn't know my full name, what I do on the 
project (a fair bit in the county we were both standing in) — but I have a 
feeling he knew exactly who I am — and even what I was about to ask him, but he 
acted very nonchalant.  Super nonchalant.  Very nice man.  I asked him what 
sort of GIS / mapping data the state uses for fire data:  parcels, "back 
roads," the sorts of gates where they have a key or a code (because they are 
the fire department) and it was like I was a guy holding a grenade and asking 
the combination to Fort Knox (where, supposedly, a great deal of gold is locked 
up).

Totally "we don't talk about our map data."  Just shut me down like that.  He 
knew what I was asking, and that I wanted to somehow get it into OSM and it was 
like "talk to the hand, son..." just a total wall of "yes, we might be the 
state and we might have 'open data' (sunshine) laws in California and I know 
you want me to talk about this stuff, but it ain't gonna happen."  He was as 
friendly as could be, gave me his business card and everything, but he shut me 
down so effectively it befuddled me like I've never been befuddled before.

Now, I know for a fact that CalFire has (and uses and updates and improves...) 
some serious, serious map data.  Could I, as a "simple citizen" have access to 
it?  Um, to what again?  What are you talking about?  It was surreal.  The 
answer was either "no" before I asked the question, or whenever I did ask a 
specific question it was "what are you talking about?" in such a skilled way I 
was derailed at every step.  This guy was a master of deception that such map 
data even exists (but of course it does) and he did it while smiling at me like 
the nicest guy at the grocery store, and even gave me his business card.  That 
guy is slick.  I was bamboozled totally.

Moral of the story is that I doubt OSM will ever have access to those fire / 
emergency geo data (and they are necessarily very high quality), and I don't 
know what wizardry by which that happens (as we ARE an "open data" (sunshine) 
state, with "public" data), yet this stuff seems locked up tighter than a bank 
vault.

So, it's interesting how all of this stuff works.  I have found that "some" 
bureaucracies (e.g. county GIS departments) KNOW there is going to be some 
overlap with "their" (our) data and OSM (indeed, I do keep such datasets fairly 
synced, especially as they update / improve).  But for the ultra-high-quality 
emergency-services geo data?  Those seem to be kept on the top shelf of a 
locked cabinet in a room I can't enter.  I suppose that's OK, but in some 
sense, it doesn't feel OK.  I mean, in a "public" sense, those are my (our) 
data.  Are they sensitive, and therefore out of my reach?  Wow, it sure seems 
like it, in a big, big way.

So, sometimes "we use theirs," and sometimes "they use ours" (I've seen and 
participated in the former and noticed that they participate in the latter) — 
which is cool, because over years, the data "get better towards each other" — 
but other times, "never the twain shall meet."  Quite intentionally.  I'm sure 
there are good reasons for this, and it's legal, of course.  And such people 
are trained to "talk about it" by "not talking about it" in that skilled way he 
did, it was amazing.
_______________________________________________
Talk-au mailing list
Talk-au@openstreetmap.org
https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-au

Reply via email to