[OSM-talk] UK gov't considers opening up Ordnance Survey?
Steve Chilton
S.L.Chilton at mdx.ac.uk
Thu Jul 26 15:49:14 BST 2007
Things move pretty fast sometimes...
The blog version: http://www.freeourdata.org.uk/blog/index.php
They key point though is that he wants Free Our Data to work with the
Office of Public Sector information to set up a web channel through
which the public can request public data, and what form they want it.
A space to watch methinks....
STEVE
Steve Chilton, Learning Support Fellow
Learning and Technical Support Unit Manager
School of Health and Social Sciences
Middlesex University
phone/fax: 020 8411 5355
email: steve8 at mdx.ac.uk
Chair of the Society of Cartographers: http://www.soc.org.uk/
SoC conference 2007:
http://www.port.ac.uk/special/soc/
Mind the (Map) Gap:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/5413010.stm
-----Original Message-----
From: talk-bounces at openstreetmap.org
[mailto:talk-bounces at openstreetmap.org] On Behalf Of Richard Fairhurst
Sent: 26 July 2007 11:32
To: talk at openstreetmap.org
Subject: [OSM-talk] UK gov't considers opening up Ordnance Survey?
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/publicservices/story/0,,2134372,00.html
Interview with Michael Wills, new minister for technology. Very
tentative, but potentially chimes with Steve's posting of the other
day. A few excerpts:
Wills said that it was time to re-examine the trading fund model used
by organisations such as Ordnance Survey, the UK Hydrographic Agency
and others, under which they receive no direct tax funding but cover
costs by charging for data and services. "The world has changed
dramatically since the 1970s [when trading funds were first set up;
Ordnance Survey became a trading fund in 1999] and we have to
re-examine it, that's absolutely clear."
[...]
An independent study commissioned by the government will report to
Wills by December on the effectiveness and efficiency of the trading
fund model, which will be used to decide whether it should still be
applied to various public-sector organisations. Among the findings
that Wills expects is a clear definition of the public task of
Ordnance Survey: "[I hope] we do get clarity of purpose from the OS.
It's important if we want these [commercial] markets to flourish, and
we do, and we want creativity and innovation to flourish, we have to
know what the rules of the game are."
[...]
The decision on how to fund public sector data organisations was
essential to get right, Wills emphasised. This left the impression
that he is excited by the potential that free reuse of data offers to
entrepreneurial organisations - he compared it to the explosion of
independent TV production companies in the 1980s and 1990s, which he
was directly involved in, following the deregulation of the TV sector
- but that he is also understandably wary of being the minister who
approves a change that in the worst case might turn out to have
destroyed the huge value that resides in organisations like Ordnance
Survey. "We have to be very clear that we're setting up a model that
is going to be sustainable," he said.
As Wills notes: "The presumption is that you let people follow their
own instincts, let them make some money; if it works, great. That's
the way you're going to get the creativity and the energy. If you
start saying what should happen, you won't get something wonderful."
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