Philadelphia Gets an Open Data Portal
BY Nick Judd | Monday, April 25 2011
Technically Philly has a detailed rundown on OpenDataPhilly, an open data portal to all the datasets that the city has already released.
The short version seems to be that Azavea cofounder Robert Cheetham pushed for this portal to get built, put his company's resources behind it, and got it done, with support and media partnership from Technically Philly and others. The city itself didn't spend a dime, and this portal exists in part because those involved figured they could put it together in time for the Technically Philly-backed Philly Tech Week.
"All that’s needed to jump start an open data movement is a city government that doesn’t stand in the way," is the headline for the Technically Philly piece. But an open data portal does not a movement make; it's an index to existing datasets and comes with no promise of additional data. The blog's Christopher Wink reports that city officials are trying to figure out how to manage city data in a way that can make it more useful to people outside government — but "no one person owns the initiative" and "the city doesn’t yet have a consistent, secure place to host its data."
That said, Open Data Philly is designed so that other people outside government who build new APIs, datasets or open data apps can publicize them on the site — turning the open data portal into an open government community building exercise, which to my mind is fairly new and different.