Open data: More standards, more useful : McGill Reporter

Amyluv's bookmarks 2017-12-12

Summary:

"The open data movement – in which governments make data publically available in machine-readable format –can not only increase transparency and accountability, but boost creative public participation. The city of Montreal’s Portail données ouvertes, for example, has resulted in citizen-coded apps that turn reams of government-generated data into tools that improve urban life. Want to know the ice quality of your local outdoor skating rink before pouring the kids into snowsuits? Wondering whether that vacant parking spot still has money on the meter? Thanks to open data, there are apps for that. But not all data is formatted equally. Ergo the need for open data standards, which allow a data set – be it about public transit or road construction, budgets or building permits – to be more readily put to use. To this end, McGill’s GeoThink research group collaborated with Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Government Excellence to build the first-ever international data standards directory."

Link:

http://publications.mcgill.ca/reporter/2017/12/open-data-more-standards-more-useful/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » Amyluv's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.transparency oa.canada oa.psi oa.geo oa.international oa.standards oa.interoperability oa.government oa.data

Date tagged:

12/12/2017, 19:31

Date published:

12/12/2017, 14:31