More Open Data for Britain
BY Nick Judd | Thursday, July 7 2011
The Prime Minister has today committed to publishing key data on the National Health Service, schools, criminal courts and transport.
This represents the most ambitious open data agenda of any government anywhere in the world.
The new data will reveal clinical achievements and prescribing data by individual GP practices, the performance of hospital teams in treating lung cancer and other key healthcare conditions, the effectiveness of schools at teaching pupils across a range of subjects, criminal sentencing by each court, and data on rail timetables, rail service performance, roadworks, current road conditions, car parks and cycle routes in an open format for use by all.
In a letter to his cabinet, Prime Minister David Cameron outlined the transparency move in more detail. According to the release from Downing Street, the data will be published in an open, standardized format and free to re-use under Britain's Open Government License. Because of how copyright works in the UK, the government previously had to come up with new licensing to allow government works to be legally shared, reused, and remixed.
I'm curious about the prime minister's claim that it is the most ambitious open data agenda of any country in the world — readers, could you let me know if you know of a more comprehensive plan? (You can also use the comments below.)
This news comes at the height of another UK scandal: Amidst allegations that the News of the World hacked mobile phones to get information and possibly bribed police officers, the paper, the most widely read in the English language, will print its last edition on Sunday.