Certainly in Canada we have been having licensing issues with some levels of government to be able to include their data in OSM. Part of the problem is the open ended nature of the new license, the bit where OSM says Oh and we can change the data license to anything we want to in the future. On a practical level it makes explaining what we'd like from them very difficult indeed and I can sympathize with their point of view.
I'd say that part of the new license creates too much uncertainty to be practical and makes working with others or importing very difficult which I suspect it was deliberately designed to do. In some parts of the world such as Germany and the UK there are enough mappers on the ground so that imports are not so valuable. Even here the UK has done a very nice job importing bus tops, it sounds mundane but to some map users knowing where the bus stops are is important, especially the old fogies with free bus passes. Cheerio John On 26 November 2010 18:14, Anthony <o...@inbox.org> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 26, 2010 at 6:06 PM, Mike N. <nice...@att.net> wrote: > > I would be surprised if there is any realistic way to crowdsource 99% of > > addr:housenumber in the US. It's mindnumbing work, dangerous in some > areas > > where pedestrians and bikes are not safe. > > In most areas of the US you can crowdsource the collection of public > domain information collected by others (usually governments), though. > > _______________________________________________ > talk mailing list > talk@openstreetmap.org > http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk >
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