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How the government is using open source web to revolutionise public data sharing

ProspectBy Alex Smith / @alexsmith1982

"It all began with a lunch. Tim Berners-Lee, the father of the world wide web, was invited to Chequers in spring 2009. A government taskforce had just published a report aimed at making Britain a digital world leader and technological reform was in the air. Even so, Berners-Lee was surprised at what came next. “The Prime Minister asked me what Britain should do in order to make the best use of the internet,” he told Prospect in early January. “I said, you should put all your government data onto the web. And he said, let’s do it.”

So begins the intriguing story, in this month's Prospect Magazine, of how Gordon Brown and the government "gets" the web and is using open source tools to revolutionise the publication of public information in this country.

Within twelve months of the meeting, the government had launched its website data.gov.uk, bringing together over 2,500 public data records, ranging from abandoned vehicles to hospitals statistics, and made them available online to the public.

Berners-Lee's pitch to Gordon Brown was simple:

"That if this data exam results, postbox locations, weather reports, and most crucially, [Ordinance Survey] maps was put online, people would find a use for it. If you build it, they will come."

The opportunities for open government were made clear by President Obama's publication of how taxpayer dollars are spent on the US government website Recoery.gov last year.

In Britain, Prospect's James Crabtree and Tom Chatfeild are exicted by the opportunities for how this will affect British information:

"In 2008 Channel 4 set up 4ip, an internet division led by internet expert Tom Loosemore, designed to do “public service data mashing.” Initial projects include a website to compare schools, which combines exam results, government reports, and even measures on pupil happiness and teacher ability drawn out of ofsted reports. the site could quickly demystify the decisions, and tradeoffs, inherent in picking a good school. Also under 4ip’s banner, in partnership with the charity Mysociety, is Mapumental a site that mashes together maps with data on  commuting times and house prices. Users can answer in seconds the question: “if I have this much money to spend, and want to live this far away from my office, where can I live?” As Loosemore explains, moreover, this is only the beginning: both the schools and houses sites could soon include other data, like crime levels and os maps, taken from data.gov.uk."

The full article is only available behind Prospect's paywall, or in this month's magazine. The conversation Berners-Lee had with Prospect, however, is available to read in full here.

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Posted on Jan 28, 2010 at 09:23am


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I'm not surprised that Labour are so web obsessed. The spectacular way in which the Party's membership rolls continue to fall indicates that New Labour may well become the first virtual political party within fifteen to twenty years, i.e., a political party with minuscule financial resources, possessing a few members scattered throughout the UK, that exists predominantly only as a website hosted in cyberspace.

It's the dilithium crystals Gordon!
John Bull @ 31 weeks ago
Well I think this is exiting anyway!
diana smith @ 31 weeks ago
The only people interested in government tractor factory statistics are the payroll vote. No-one else believes or cares about a word or digit of them. The information people use to make choices comes from the real world: the reputation of local schools, the reality of crime, the experience of public transport.
"Measures on pupil happiness" typifies it beautifully. Pupil happiness will doubtless turn out to be 100% and increasing year-on-year, except in Tory areas where it will be zero and still falling. Piffle.
Bill Lockhart @ 31 weeks ago
Very true Bill, no Government has been flawless in announcing statistics, but this one has been more than shameless about massaging its figures and the internet opens a whole new avenue for 'erroneous' presentation.
Rufus Farnsworth @ 31 weeks ago
Dave, you're right! The whole policy is clear!
Rufus Farnsworth @ 31 weeks ago
Hi David

Like it :)

Danny
ricki lake @ 31 weeks ago
hi labourlist

Does this also tie in with the free laptops and broadband policy/promise made by Mr Brown ? And can someone tell me how the goverment will pay for the broadband? will it be a bulk but contract of a provider or will people chose there own and the goverment will pick up the bill?

danny
ricki lake @ 31 weeks ago
Eureka! The answer to terrorism is to give potential terrorists a free laptop and then monitor what they do with it! ;-)

Well, it's more sensible than the ID-cards policy...
David H @ 31 weeks ago
It would appear that the Government has already decided the best use of the internet is to track the browsing habits of UK citizens and record who sends email to whom.

Like ID cards, only shelved for the present

http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/broadband/218052/government-proposes-email-and-internet-tracking
Rufus Farnsworth @ 31 weeks ago
To be honest I am fairly relaxed about this-the simple use
of internet proxies and ssh encrypted mail means that this
would be irrelevent as far as I am concerned.The goverment
may get the "web" but does not seem to understand the
internet.
ID cards are more of a threat along with police Drones...

ian jordan @ 30 weeks and 6 days ago