Open Government Licence v2.0 | The National Archives

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-07-02

Summary:

"The National Archives has today launched the Open Government Licence version 2.0 following consultation with users and other stakeholders in the open data community on how the Licence could be developed further to reflect new and emerging thinking on the licensing of public sector information ...  Background ... The Open Government Licence is an open licence, which means that it allows information to be used and re-used with virtually no restrictions. The Open Government Licence is part of the UK Government Licensing Framework (UKGLF) which was launched in 2010. The Open Government Licence permits the use and re-use of a wide range of government and other public sector information. This supports the government's policy on transparency and open data ...  What has changed? The basic terms and conditions of the Open Government Licence version 2.0 remain the same as the previous version in that it continues to: [1] permit use and re-use of information in any format for both commercial and non-commercial purposes without charge   [2] require re-users to publish an acknowledgment of the source of the information [3] exclude personal information from the licence [4] be compatible with other licensing models, such as Creative Commons, and is Open Definition conformant ... We have introduced a separate section of the Licence headed 'Non-endorsement'. This is designed to make it clear that the licence does not permit the re-user to suggest that their versions of the information enjoy any official status or have departmental endorsement.   The National Archives is also introducing the OGL symbol, a simple way of identifying when information can be used and re-used under the terms of the Open Government Licence. The OGL symbol was developed by The National Archives with help from the Government Digital Service. The OGL symbol, at a glance, shows that information can be used and re-used under open licensing ... How will this affect re-users? As the Open Government Licence version 1.0 is a perpetual licence, those already using information made available under these original terms will be able to continue to do so.  The move to Open Government Licence version 2.0 applies to new users of information once the relevant website and publishing copyright notices have been updated."

Link:

https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/news/855.htm

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.psi oa.policies oa.licensing oa.government oa.copyright oa.uk oa.libre oa.data oa.announcements

Date tagged:

07/02/2013, 07:40

Date published:

07/02/2013, 03:40