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HOW TO OPEN UP DATA
This section forms the core of this handbook. It gives concrete, detailed advice on how data holders can open up data. We’ll go through the basics, but also cover the pitfalls.WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data is OPEN DATA BUSINESS MODELS AND VALUE DISCIPLINES The problem. Open data holds considerable economic and social value beyond the walls of the governments and institutions that share their data. However, there are still many open data-driven organisations that are struggling to comprehend how to generate revenue and survive by adapting to the changes brought on by the ubiquitous growth of open data and ‘Big Data.’ OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATA The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly. SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryEU PSI IRÁNYELV
A közszféra információinak további felhasználásáról szóló irányelv, 2003/98/EK. “részletezi, hogy a közigazgatási szervek hogyan segítsék az információs erőforrásaik újrafelhasználását” AZ EURÓPAI PARLAMENT ÉS A TANÁCS 2003/98/EK IRÁNYELVE THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. WHAT IS OPEN DATA?GLOSSARYWAT IS OPEN DATATHE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKHOW TO OPEN UP DATADEAPPENDICES For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
HOW TO OPEN UP DATA
This section forms the core of this handbook. It gives concrete, detailed advice on how data holders can open up data. We’ll go through the basics, but also cover the pitfalls.WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data is OPEN DATA BUSINESS MODELS AND VALUE DISCIPLINES The problem. Open data holds considerable economic and social value beyond the walls of the governments and institutions that share their data. However, there are still many open data-driven organisations that are struggling to comprehend how to generate revenue and survive by adapting to the changes brought on by the ubiquitous growth of open data and ‘Big Data.’ OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATA The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly. SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryEU PSI IRÁNYELV
A közszféra információinak további felhasználásáról szóló irányelv, 2003/98/EK. “részletezi, hogy a közigazgatási szervek hogyan segítsék az információs erőforrásaik újrafelhasználását” AZ EURÓPAI PARLAMENT ÉS A TANÁCS 2003/98/EK IRÁNYELVEINTRODUCTION
The notion of open data and specifically open government data - information, public or otherwise, which anyone is free to access and re-use for any purpose - has been around for some years. In 2009 open data started to become visible in the mainstream, with various governments (such as the USA, UK, Canada and New Zealand) announcingnew
OPEN DATA BUSINESS MODELS AND VALUE DISCIPLINES The problem. Open data holds considerable economic and social value beyond the walls of the governments and institutions that share their data. However, there are still many open data-driven organisations that are struggling to comprehend how to generate revenue and survive by adapting to the changes brought on by the ubiquitous growth of open data and ‘Big Data.’ GLOSSARY - OPENDATAHANDBOOK.ORG API Application Programming Interface. For data, this is usually a way provided by the data publisher for programs or apps to read data directly over the web.The app sends the API a query asking for the specific data it needs, e.g. the time of the next bus leaving a particular stop. This allows the app to use the data without downloading the whole dataset, saving bandwidth and ensuring thatFILE FORMATS
Text Document. Classic documents in formats like Word, ODF, OOXML, or PDF may be sufficient to show certain kinds of data - for example, relatively stable mailing lists or equivalent. It may be cheap to exhibit in, as often it is the format the data is born in. The format gives no support to keep the structure consistent, which often meansthat
PROVIDE PSI AT ZERO CHARGE The problem. In order to unlock the maximum commercial and non-commercial potential of public sector information, organisations should strive to publish as much data for re-use as possible at nocharge.
SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. DAS OPEN DATA HANDBUCH Das Open Data Handbuch. Dieses Handbuch beschäftigt sich mit den juristischen, sozialen und technischen Apsketen offener Daten. Es richtet sich vor allem an alle, die eigene Datenbestände öffnen wollen. Es beschäftigt sich mit dem warum, was und warum beim öffnen von Daten – wieso Daten öffnen, was ‘offen’ eigentlich bedeutetund
THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. WHAT IS OPEN DATA?GLOSSARYWAT IS OPEN DATATHE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKHOW TO OPEN UP DATADEAPPENDICES For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data isHOW TO OPEN UP DATA
Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section. OPEN DATA BUSINESS MODELS AND VALUE DISCIPLINES The problem. Open data holds considerable economic and social value beyond the walls of the governments and institutions that share their data. However, there are still many open data-driven organisations that are struggling to comprehend how to generate revenue and survive by adapting to the changes brought on by the ubiquitous growth of open data and ‘Big Data.’ OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATA The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly. SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data). THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. WHAT IS OPEN DATA?GLOSSARYWAT IS OPEN DATATHE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKHOW TO OPEN UP DATADEAPPENDICES For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data isHOW TO OPEN UP DATA
Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section. OPEN DATA BUSINESS MODELS AND VALUE DISCIPLINES The problem. Open data holds considerable economic and social value beyond the walls of the governments and institutions that share their data. However, there are still many open data-driven organisations that are struggling to comprehend how to generate revenue and survive by adapting to the changes brought on by the ubiquitous growth of open data and ‘Big Data.’ OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATA The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly. SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).INTRODUCTION
The notion of open data and specifically open government data - information, public or otherwise, which anyone is free to access and re-use for any purpose - has been around for some years. In 2009 open data started to become visible in the mainstream, with various governments (such as the USA, UK, Canada and New Zealand) announcingnew
HOW TO OPEN UP DATA
Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section.VALUE STORIES
Value Stories. Open data businesses - an oxymoron or a new model? Building a business based on open data may seem counterintuitive, but new models are emerging with greater frequency and demonstrating how to integrate open data into a business operation in a useful andprofitable manner.
FILE FORMATS
Text Document. Classic documents in formats like Word, ODF, OOXML, or PDF may be sufficient to show certain kinds of data - for example, relatively stable mailing lists or equivalent. It may be cheap to exhibit in, as often it is the format the data is born in. The format gives no support to keep the structure consistent, which often meansthat
SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation. PROVIDE PSI AT ZERO CHARGE The problem. In order to unlock the maximum commercial and non-commercial potential of public sector information, organisations should strive to publish as much data for re-use as possible at nocharge.
FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).MACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietary DAS OPEN DATA HANDBUCH Das Open Data Handbuch. Dieses Handbuch beschäftigt sich mit den juristischen, sozialen und technischen Apsketen offener Daten. Es richtet sich vor allem an alle, die eigene Datenbestände öffnen wollen. Es beschäftigt sich mit dem warum, was und warum beim öffnen von Daten – wieso Daten öffnen, was ‘offen’ eigentlich bedeutetund
THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOK The Open Data Handbook. This handbook discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses the why, what and how of open data – why to go open, what open is, and the how to ‘open’ data. To get started, you may wish to lookat the
WHAT IS OPEN DATA?
For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
OPEN DATA RESOURCES
Open Data Resources. The resource library gathers a variety of resource that relate to open data and are produced by the community. For academic research about open data, please refer to the web foundation bibliography. To add a resource to the library, followthese steps.
WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data is HOW TO OPEN UP DATAHOW TO OPEN DATA FILEHOW TO OPEN DATA FOLDERHOW DO I OPEN APPLICATIONSOPEN DATA DEFINITIONCHANGE DATA AND TIME SETTINGSETTINGS DATA AND TIME Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section.FILE FORMATS
OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATAOPEN CAR TRANSPORT SERVICEDATA TRANSPORT PROTOCOLSDATA TRANSPORT SERVICESDATA TRANSPORT SYSTEM The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOK The Open Data Handbook. This handbook discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses the why, what and how of open data – why to go open, what open is, and the how to ‘open’ data. To get started, you may wish to lookat the
WHAT IS OPEN DATA?
For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
OPEN DATA RESOURCES
Open Data Resources. The resource library gathers a variety of resource that relate to open data and are produced by the community. For academic research about open data, please refer to the web foundation bibliography. To add a resource to the library, followthese steps.
WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data is HOW TO OPEN UP DATAHOW TO OPEN DATA FILEHOW TO OPEN DATA FOLDERHOW DO I OPEN APPLICATIONSOPEN DATA DEFINITIONCHANGE DATA AND TIME SETTINGSETTINGS DATA AND TIME Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section.FILE FORMATS
OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATAOPEN CAR TRANSPORT SERVICEDATA TRANSPORT PROTOCOLSDATA TRANSPORT SERVICESDATA TRANSPORT SYSTEM The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOK The Open Data Handbook. This handbook discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses the why, what and how of open data – why to go open, what open is, and the how to ‘open’ data. To get started, you may wish to lookat the
INTRODUCTION
The notion of open data and specifically open government data - information, public or otherwise, which anyone is free to access and re-use for any purpose - has been around for some years. In 2009 open data started to become visible in the mainstream, with various governments (such as the USA, UK, Canada and New Zealand) announcingnew
HOW TO OPEN UP DATA
Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section. CONTRIBUTING TO THE HANDBOOK Contributing to the handbook. Thank you for your interest in helping to build The Open Data Handbook. We warmly welcome comments, corrections and additions, as well as suggestions for additional sections and areas to examine. For general discussion about the Handbook, please get in touch. To jump in with improvements andadditions, read on.
VALUE STORIES
Value Stories. Open data businesses - an oxymoron or a new model? Building a business based on open data may seem counterintuitive, but new models are emerging with greater frequency and demonstrating how to integrate open data into a business operation in a useful andprofitable manner.
MAKING DATA SOCIAL
In case you need some ideas to gather your local community, an event is a great way to do so. Throughout the years, the Open Knowledge International Network have developed a bunch of different events around open data and open knowledge. PROVIDE PSI AT ZERO CHARGE The problem. In order to unlock the maximum commercial and non-commercial potential of public sector information, organisations should strive to publish as much data for re-use as possible at nocharge.
SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).FAILŲ FORMATAI
Atviri failų formatai. Net jei duomenys pateikiami elektroniniu, mašininiam skaitymui pritaikytu formatu, ir labai smulkiai, vis tiek gali būti problemų, susijusių su pačiu formatu. Formatai, kuriais informacija skelbiama - kitaip tariant, ta skaitmeninė bazė, kurioje saugoma informacija - THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOK The Open Data Handbook. This handbook discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses the why, what and how of open data – why to go open, what open is, and the how to ‘open’ data. To get started, you may wish to lookat the
WHAT IS OPEN DATA?
For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
OPEN DATA RESOURCES
Open Data Resources. The resource library gathers a variety of resource that relate to open data and are produced by the community. For academic research about open data, please refer to the web foundation bibliography. To add a resource to the library, followthese steps.
WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data is HOW TO OPEN UP DATAHOW TO OPEN DATA FILEHOW TO OPEN DATA FOLDERHOW DO I OPEN APPLICATIONSOPEN DATA DEFINITIONCHANGE DATA AND TIME SETTINGSETTINGS DATA AND TIME Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section.FILE FORMATS
OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATAOPEN CAR TRANSPORT SERVICEDATA TRANSPORT PROTOCOLSDATA TRANSPORT SERVICESDATA TRANSPORT SYSTEM The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOKGUIDEVALUE STORIESRESOURCESSOLUTIONSCONTRIBUTECREDITS Open Data Guide. This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data. Start Reading. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOK The Open Data Handbook. This handbook discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses the why, what and how of open data – why to go open, what open is, and the how to ‘open’ data. To get started, you may wish to lookat the
WHAT IS OPEN DATA?
For our purposes, open data is as defined by the Open Definition: Open data is data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone - subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike. The full Open Definition gives precise details as to whatthis means.
OPEN DATA RESOURCES
Open Data Resources. The resource library gathers a variety of resource that relate to open data and are produced by the community. For academic research about open data, please refer to the web foundation bibliography. To add a resource to the library, followthese steps.
WHY OPEN DATA?
Open data, especially open government data, is a tremendous resource that is as yet largely untapped. Many individuals and organisations collect a broad range of different types of data in order to perform their tasks. Government is particularly significant in this respect, both because of the quantity and centrality of the data it collects, but also because most of that government data is HOW TO OPEN UP DATAHOW TO OPEN DATA FILEHOW TO OPEN DATA FOLDERHOW DO I OPEN APPLICATIONSOPEN DATA DEFINITIONCHANGE DATA AND TIME SETTINGSETTINGS DATA AND TIME Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section.FILE FORMATS
OPEN UP PUBLIC TRANSPORT DATAOPEN CAR TRANSPORT SERVICEDATA TRANSPORT PROTOCOLSDATA TRANSPORT SERVICESDATA TRANSPORT SYSTEM The problem. Open transport data has the potential to greatly benefit both citizens and the public sector. Public transport will only be widely used if the service is effective, efficient and user-friendly.PROPRIETARY
Proprietary. (i) Proprietary software is owned by a company which restricts the ways in which it can be used. Users normally need to pay to use the software, cannot read or modify the source code, and cannot copy the software or re-sell it as part of their own product. Common examples include Microsoft Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Non-proprietaryMACHINE READABLE
Machine readable. Data in a data format that can be automatically read and processed by a computer, such as CSV, JSON, XML, etc. Machine-readable data must be structured data. Compare human-readable. Non-digital material (for example printed or hand-written documents) is by its non-digital nature not machine-readable. THE OPEN DATA HANDBOOK The Open Data Handbook. This handbook discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses the why, what and how of open data – why to go open, what open is, and the how to ‘open’ data. To get started, you may wish to lookat the
INTRODUCTION
The notion of open data and specifically open government data - information, public or otherwise, which anyone is free to access and re-use for any purpose - has been around for some years. In 2009 open data started to become visible in the mainstream, with various governments (such as the USA, UK, Canada and New Zealand) announcingnew
HOW TO OPEN UP DATA
Choose Dataset (s) Choosing the dataset (s) you plan to make open is the first step – though remember that the whole process of opening up data is iterative and you can return to this step if you encounter problems later on. If you already know exactly what dataset (s) you plan to open up you can move straight on to the next section. CONTRIBUTING TO THE HANDBOOK Contributing to the handbook. Thank you for your interest in helping to build The Open Data Handbook. We warmly welcome comments, corrections and additions, as well as suggestions for additional sections and areas to examine. For general discussion about the Handbook, please get in touch. To jump in with improvements andadditions, read on.
VALUE STORIES
Value Stories. Open data businesses - an oxymoron or a new model? Building a business based on open data may seem counterintuitive, but new models are emerging with greater frequency and demonstrating how to integrate open data into a business operation in a useful andprofitable manner.
MAKING DATA SOCIAL
In case you need some ideas to gather your local community, an event is a great way to do so. Throughout the years, the Open Knowledge International Network have developed a bunch of different events around open data and open knowledge. PROVIDE PSI AT ZERO CHARGE The problem. In order to unlock the maximum commercial and non-commercial potential of public sector information, organisations should strive to publish as much data for re-use as possible at nocharge.
SO I'VE OPENED UP SOME DATA, NOW WHAT? Improve this page Edit on Github Help and instructions Translate this page Translation guide Donate If you have found this useful and would like to support our work please consider making a small donation. FIVE STARS OF OPEN DATA A rating system for open data proposed by Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web.To score the maximum five stars, data must (1) be available on the Web under an open licence, (2) be in the form of structured data, (3) be in a non-proprietary file format, (4) use URIs as its identifiers (see also RDF), (5) include links to other data sources (see linked data).FAILŲ FORMATAI
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* Problems (Re)use federated tools Assess holistic metrics Categorise openness of data Cross Agency strategy Develop an Open Data Publication Plan Develop dataset criteria Enable feedback channels for improving data quality Enable quality assessment of open data Encourage crowdsourcing around PSI Establish Open Government Portal Establish an Open Data Ecosystem Identify what you already publish Influx of Housing Price Increases International Aid & Transparency Open Data Business Models Open Up Public Transport Data Provide PSI at zero charge Publish Statistical Data In Linked Data Format Publish overview of managed data Ride-sharing and Public Transit Standards for Geospatial Data Tracking Modern Warfare Unveiling Incarceration Rates * Themes International Conflict Transport Civil Conflict Gentrification Health International Aid Modern Warfare Prison PolicyShare PSI Transport
* Tags Civil Conflict Crime Development Drones E-Government Foreign Affairs Housing Prices Human Rights Incarceration Rates Internal Displacement International Conflict International Security Metro Share PSI Transparency corruption development e-government foreign policy metro public transit ride-sharing Gentrification International Aid Modern Warfare Prison Policy Taxi Transparency insurance internationalaid transparency
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Open the menu Open Data HandbookOPEN DATA HANDBOOK
Guides, case studies and resources for government & civil society on the "what, why & how" of open data.OPEN DATA GUIDE
This guide discusses the legal, social and technical aspects of open data. It can be used by anyone but is especially designed for those seeking to open up data. It discusses why to go open, what open is, and the how to 'open' data.Start Reading
VALUE STORIES
Use cases, stories and case studies highlighting the social and economic value, the impact and the varied applications of open data from cities and countries across the globe.Value Stories
RESOURCE LIBRARY
A curated collection of open data resources, including articles, longer publications, how to guides, presentations and videos, produced by the global open data community.Open Data Resources
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