Skip to main content

Home/ opensociety/ Group items tagged open data

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Johann Höchtl

Cities | Data.gov - 1 views

  •  
    Open Government Data USA gets a localized view: Cities and States .data.gov
Johann Höchtl

An Open Data Litmus Test: Is There a Download Button | Off the Map - Official Blog of F... - 0 views

  • 1) Is there a download button?
  • 2) Data should always be linked to the derivative works created with it.
  • 3) Downloading should never be more than two clicks away (ideally one).
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • 4) When you get to the data it should be available in multiple formats and be easy to use (i.e. data dictionaries).
  • 5) The data should be searchable and portable.
  •  
    Konkretere Prinzipien offener Daten: Wann kann man davon sprechen, dass eine Web Seite offene Daten anbietet?
Johann Höchtl

When is Linked Data not Linked Data? - 0 views

  • production of a briefing paper that disambiguated some of the terminology for those that are less familiar with this domain
  • Linked Data must adhere to the four principles outlined in Tim Berners Lee’s Linked Data Design Issues
  • Use URIs as names for things Use HTTP URIs so that people can look up those names. When someone looks up a URI, provide useful information, using the standards (RDF, SPARQL) Include links to other URIs. so that they can discover more things.
  •  
    Design Principles of Open Data
Johann Höchtl

Wiki:Government 2.0 | Social Media CoLab - 0 views

  • Internal (intra or inter-government) collaboration. Institutional presence on external social networks Open government data Employees on external social networks 
  • Increased government efficiency Increased government accountability Increased citizen engagement and participation Increased innovation
  • Potential loss of privacy Invalid data
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • 1) what data should the government share and 2) how does data influence the public sphere
  • The optimists decry the modern instantiations of bureaucracy and policy in which democratic governments operate as the source of democratic ills and support the normative idea of an informed and engaged public.  Pessimists counter that the normative model of democracy most accepted in the literature is a novel construction that is not grounded in the natural behavior of citizens.
  • The innocence of Americans is either explained as a rational choice under the principle of rational ignorance (Downs, 1957) or explained as something inherent in the lack of mental sophistication in humans.
  • Government 2.0 attempts to correct the problems of information diffusion by assuming that people are simply unable or unwilling to find information in the offline world.  If the barriers to information acquisition are lowered then, the theory goes, people will be more likely to find, synthesize and use information in decision-making processes.
  • Feedback loops: Who will be active in these loops? How will the public respond? 
  • People usually think about explicit citizen participation, but some of the most pwrful Web 2.0 tools aren't about that: it's about ppl who are participating w/o knowing they are participating. Google is actually one of the great engines of harnessing participation, anyone who clicks on a link is participating, a link is a vote, meaning hidden in something they're doing already. Wikipedia isn't the only place where people are contributing.
  • The amount of data being shared/collected about people is growing exponentially, old notions of privacy need to be replaed by ideas of visibility and control: give more control over who gets to see it. We are better off with more visibility and control than stopping people from collecting data. The data is incredibly useful, applicaitons depend on data, people willingly giving up that privacy about where they are all the time.
  • many programs go wrong, generically, (what worries me) government is still very much an insider's game, we have not yet really built a system that allows real participation
  • Another gov 2.0 observation: it's very hard for a government agency to start over, it's not like private sector, where companies with bad ideas go out of business. Government agencies don't go out of business. (consumers benefit from newspapers going out of business) We don't have creative destruction in gov't, the basic machinery of it just gets bigger and more entrenched. Need to figure out how to start over: what not to do
  • The toughest part about Web 2.0, Gov 2.0, etc, might be the role of management. It used to be about defining the outcome and monitoring the progress towards that outcome. In Web 2.0 you don't know what that outcome is, it's a huge leap of faith, and takes a tremendous amount of adjusting to that approach. Do we need a different set of metrics? Yes. Media is intersecting with technology, technology is a new channel for media, even Hollywood is changing: oh my goodness, we have to create entirely new financial models!
  • "The future is already here, it's just unevenly distributed." It's a cultural issue here, people are stuck in the past and we need a new wave of innovators or we should just expect slow results.
Johann Höchtl

Announcing Google Refine 2.0, a power tool for data wranglers - Google Open Source Blog - 0 views

  • Google Refine is a power tool for working with messy data sets, including cleaning up inconsistencies, transforming them from one format into another, and extending them with new data from external web services or other databases.
  • you can read how the Chicago Tribune, ProPublica and data.gov.uk have used it
  •  
    Refine 2.0, a tool for data wranglers
Johann Höchtl

Open 311 - 0 views

  •  
    Open311 is a form of technology that provides open channels of communication for issues that concern public space and public services. Primarily, Open311 refers to a standardized technology for location-based collaborative issue-tracking. By offering free web API access to an existing 311 service, Open311 is an evolution of the phone-based 311 systems that many cities in North America offer.
Johann Höchtl

EU Calendar - The European Commission proposes an open data strategy - 0 views

  • The European Commission will adopt an Open Data Strategy - a set of measures aimed at increasing government transparency and creating a €32 billion a year market for public data.
Johann Höchtl

The economics of open data & the big society « countculture - 0 views

  • an estimation of the impact of Open Data generally, or a specific data set, on UK economic growth…
Johann Höchtl

Open Data (2): Effective Data Use « Gurstein's Community Informatics - 0 views

  • I will itemize what I think are the various elements that are required to be in place on the end user side for effective use of open data to take place
  • Internet access
  • Computer/software skills
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Interpretation/Sense making
  • Governance – the required financing, legal, regulatory or policy regime, required to enable the use to which the data would be put.
Parycek

Einwände gegen die Veröffentlichung von Open Data - 0 views

  •  
    und bewährte Antworten darauf | open3.at
Johann Höchtl

An Open Government Implementation Model: Moving to Increased Public Engagement | IBM Ce... - 0 views

  • The release of this report comes on the heels of the first anniversary of the Open Government Directive issued in December 2009.
  • Professors Lee and Kwak present a road map — the Open Government Implementation Model — that agencies can follow in moving toward accomplishing the objectives of the Directive
  •  
    Road Map towards open data in the US
Johann Höchtl

Gemeinsames-Positionspapier-Perspektiven-deutscher-Netzpolitik.pdf (application/pdf Obj... - 0 views

  •  
    Positionspapier zur dritten Dialogveranstaltung der Perspektiven deutscher Netzpolitik jetzt mit Open Data und Open Access
Johann Höchtl

The Guardian Open Platform | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  •  
    Den guardian gibt es mit Open Data Schnittstelle. Eventuell der Ausweg der traditionellen Printmedien?
Johann Höchtl

Open Data Stack Exchange - 1 views

  •  
    Open Data now has it's own Stackexchange site
Johann Höchtl

Government proposes open data 'principles' - 0 views

  • The UK government has compiled a list of 'principles' regarding its open data initiative, and is calling on the public to provide comments and feedback.
Johann Höchtl

Let's do an International Open Data Hackathon - 1 views

  • Let’s do an International Open Data Hackathon
  • It will happen on Saturday, Dec 4th
  • Anyone can organize a local event.
Johann Höchtl

Borders_report.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

  •  
    Economic added value of open data
  •  
    Economic added value of open data
Johann Höchtl

Building Tiles with PostGIS OpenStreetMap data and Mapnik: Your Own OpenStreetMap - 0 views

  • In this tutorial we will build a tile cache of the Massachusetts data we loaded in Part 1 and then render it in OpenLayers.
  •  
    Getting Open Data GIS to the Client
Johann Höchtl

The Government 2.0 Forecast For 2010: 7 Predictions | SocialComputingJournal.com - 0 views

  • Social computing will continue to grow in government, but won't hit critical mass in 2010.
  • Don't forget that there was some clamping down on social media in government during 2009 including the Marines restricting access to services such as Facebook, MySpace, Twitter. Progress in 2010 will be better in state and to a lesser extent local government. The federal government will also struggle with a consistent policy and approach for internal and external social computing, which probably won't emerge next year.
  • Open data goes back to the drawing board. I've been bullish on open data and APIs for years and the government got religion in 2009 with data.gov. But the usage is down as government workers and businesses realize that the data is often far out-of-date and not in forms that can be used operationally.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Cloud computing will go big. While many agencies will just use the technologies internally for now in order to have public options later, there is tremendous interest in the cloud
  • Government portals (rightly) continue to incorporate social media, but deep engagement will be elusive for now. I've seen many overhauls of government portals this year, including Utah.gov and the Department of Defense, prominently incorporate social media right on their home pages. To be clear, these are major advances for the government to make on the internal/external boundary and I encourage them.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 146 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page