data.govt.nz

Image of people queuing.Today, the Department of Internal Afairs launched data.govt.nz, a beta site where government agencies can register their non-personal data sets for use by members of the public and organizations. The department has also created a Twitter account @data_govt_nz to support engagement with communities of interest around the data sets.

As I said when I posted on open data earlier this year:

It’s not about the technology. It’s not about data quality. Or privacy. Or commercial sensitivity, or any of that stuff. That should all be dealt to as part of the everyday functioning of any administration. It is about accepting that we, the government, collect and manage this information on behalf of citizens and that it is our fundamental responsibility to make it available to them in a way that supports the creation of public and economic value.

The open data site is a very positive step forward in that direction.

A not so positive step forward; indeed, more a cautionary tale for public sector managers, is the headlong rush to capitalize on the positive engagement that open government initiatives are triggering around the world. It is genuinely difficult to understand the emergence of cardigan chic, but it is a phenomenon nonetheless. Transforming government is a business that everyone wants to be in; from social media consultants whose experience in the sector can be measured in a page full of tweets to corporations blinded by a sense of their own beneficence…

Adobe’s Open Gov site is an alarming example of the latter. The site is 100% Flash based. It’s like building a website to promote philanthropy — and charging people to view the content. The site is intended to:

promote the use of Adobe technologies to achieve the goal of “opening up Washington,” as well as highlighting ways in which federal, state, and local governments have implemented these technologies. Ars Technica

Publishing data in proprietary formats alone, or as the primary media, is a very bad idea. It does not lead to openness, it does not lead to transparency and it most certainly isn’t in the public interest. As the Sunlight Foundation rightly point out:

if the data format has an ® by its name, it probably isn’t great for transparency or open data. Sunlight Labs

Currently, sixty-seven percent of New Zealand public sector agencies hold some information that they can no longer access. Publishing agency data in proprietary formats is only going to exacerbate that issue…

DIA should be applauded for building the open data catalogue. It is an important step in opening up government information. It is, however, only one step. Agencies should be looking at registering their data sets, but they should also be looking at using open standards for that data.

By way of a disclosure, I have provided a small amount of advice to DIA about this project, but certainly not enough to prevent me commending the initiative (or sufficient for me to legitimately bask in any reflected approbation).

Photo: Swiv

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4 Comments

  1. Posted November 4, 2009 at 3:13 pm | Permalink

    That Twitter account doesn’t exist.

  2. Posted November 4, 2009 at 3:19 pm | Permalink

    It does now: @data_govt_nz

  3. Posted November 4, 2009 at 4:18 pm | Permalink

    “cardigan chic”
    I like that. And the site’s not too shabby either. Well done DIA!

  4. Posted November 5, 2009 at 8:58 am | Permalink

    Cardigan chic, oh dear.

    I just hope that in the hurry to open data, we don’t inadvertantly foster and nurture information inequality by something as arbitrary as IT literacy, or even worse: scale.

5 Trackbacks

  1. By batikk (tim v) on November 4, 2009 at 8:28 pm

    Twitter Comment


    Nieuw-Zeelandse overheid lanceert site met datasets [link to post] #opendata

    – Posted using Chat Catcher

  2. By FutureGov » Useful links » links for 2009-11-04 on November 5, 2009 at 1:01 am

    [...] data.govt.nz | NPSC Blog (tags: newzealand data transparency gov20 government) [...]

  3. By SFnicko (SF's Nicko) on November 6, 2009 at 2:28 am

    Twitter Comment


    New Zealand launched their own data.gov site and twitter account “to support engagement” around new data sets – [link to post]

    – Posted using Chat Catcher

  4. [...] a discussion area for developers to talk to the site owners about what they need.  Here’s Jason Ryan on the NSPC blog, and Nat Torkington gives it a first appraisal on [...]

  5. By Bookmarks for November 5th through November 8th on November 9, 2009 at 11:03 am

    [...] data.govt.nz – "Today, the Department of Internal Afairs launched data.govt.nz, a beta site where government agencies can register their non-personal data sets for use by members of the public and organizations." [...]