Hi all, A couple of months ago I wrote this guest piece on the status of Open Data in Iceland: - http://blog.okfn.org/2010/03/26/iceland-from-the-financial-crisis-to-open-data/
Since then there have been at least two developments worth noting, that may even have implications for Open Data outside our tiny community. 1. Icelandic Modern Media Initiative legislation passed This one will be making the news rounds in the next couple of days I'm sure. Late last night, the Icelandic Parliament put into law a proposal that has been coined IMMI (Icelandic Modern Media Initiative). In a way this makes Iceland a haven for journalism and publishing, making several changes in legislation that strengthens free speech, protection of journalists' sources and whistleblowers. Key figures from Wikileaks, including the somewhat famous Julian Assange, have been working with the lawmakers on this project. Even though the legislation does not specifically talk about Open Data, it has many implications that are related to the topic. You can read a previous coverage of IMMI by the BBC here: - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8504972.stm Or visit the initiative's web site on: - http://immi.is/ 2. DataMarket launches an portal with public and private sector data This second one may be a little self promotional, but I'll throw it in anyway. My company - DataMarket - has recently launched a data portal that allows people to search, compare, visualize and download a lot of statistics and structured data from various public and private data sources. Currently the site holds only Icelandic data, but we're busy integrating various international data sources and hope to launch an international offering this autumn. As the site is in English and there is already a lot of data available there, it may be interesting to many of you to give the site a spin, even though you may not be particularly interested in Iceland or Icelandic data. We'd obviously love any feedback from you guys! The site is here: - http://datamarket.com/ ...and here's a blog post detailing some of the vision and showing several examples of possible uses for this: - http://blog.datamarket.net/2010/05/15/datamarket-com-is-now-live/ Our philosophy is that data that is already open and free will still be open and free through us, only easier to use, while payment may be needed to access some of the premium data. I've promised Jonathan, that I'll write another guest blog post on the OKFN blog with some general observations about "The business of keeping Open Data open" in the next couple of weeks. Hope this is of interest to you all. Don't hesitate to contact me directly if anything. Best, Hjalmar Gislason Founder & CEO, DataMarket Co-founder of Open Data site opingogn.net _______________________________________________ okfn-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/okfn-discuss
