On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 12:05 PM, Mike N <nice...@att.net> wrote: > I map in OpenStreetMap for fun, but when it comes to talking to local > governments or the media, I don't have a good idea of how to justify open > data. I'm thinking in terms of being able to tell local government how > open Geodata would benefit them. > > Are there any resources that discuss the benefits of open Geodata or open > transportation data (GTFS), as well as the best license - Public Domain? > Other License?
The Toronto Open Data pilot saved the city a half a million dollars in the first year. iirc, the quote from the Toronto CTO. The "right license" is a more complex issue to discuss. In part, because the concepts are new to most people. In part because this area of law appears to be both new and rapidly evolving. This summary will be shot to ribbons, no doubt. In general, "Public Domain" can't be assigned. Instead Copyright has to expire, then a work enters the public domain. One noteworthy exception to this is the US Federal (not State or local) government publications (not all of them) that fall in the Works of the US Government[1]. This exemption does not extend to you and me being able to say, "my document is public domain". Any government body other than the US Federal government is unable to take advantage of the Works of the US Government PD-loophole. So Open Data publishers need to select a license with which to license their rights to the data. When I speak to government bodies and other potential Open Data publishers, I recommend the Open Data Commons, Public Domain Dedication and License, ODC-PDDL[2]. I do so because it is drafted and maintained by experts in the evolving field of international open data law. It is drafted and maintained in consultation with Open Data communities. It is drafted with portability and inter-operation in mind. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Work_of_the_United_States_Government [2] http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/summary/ _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk