I think you've struck the central issue here: if it is on the ground, it
will get mapped again, and again and again by editors who think that the
path is merely missing, not consciously removed.
It should be recorded, in some way, so that the illegality of the path
is stored. I can imagine a use case where a hiker sees a path, checks
the map and sees that it is an illegal path and therefore shouldn't be
used.
I would be in favour of a tagging system that accurately reflects the
status of the path, even if it is not supported by renderers. It's
primary use is land being rehabilitated, secondary to its illegitimate
use.
something like:
access=no
informal=yes
rehabilitation:highway=path
source:access=parks agency name
Dian
On 2021-10-29 22:11, osm.talk...@thorsten.engler.id.au wrote:
OSM is the database.
If there are things incorrectly tagged in the database, they should be
fixed. Nobody is saying otherwise.
So yes, if in the example you gave below the legal authority has
specified
that you are only allowed to use specific marked trails with specified
modes
of transport, then the tags should reflect that and need to be fixed if
they
don't.
Simply completely deleting features clearly visible on the ground does
not
do that, and just invites the next person who comes past to map them
again,
possibly with wrong tags once more.
OSM is NOT how any particular consumer decides to use and present the
information from the database. That includes Carto.
I don't think it's acceptable to compromise the database because you
don't
like how a particular data consumer uses it.
If you are unhappy about how something is being presented:
a) ensure that the database correctly reflects reality
b) engage with the data consumer (be it Carto or any of the countless
other
consumers of OSM data) to convince them to represent the data the way
you
want.
This is the nature of an open database like OSM, you don't control how
data
consumers use the data.
-----Original Message-----
From: fors...@ozonline.com.au <fors...@ozonline.com.au>
Sent: Friday, 29 October 2021 20:34
To: Frederik Ramm <frede...@remote.org>
Cc: talk-au@openstreetmap.org
Subject: Re: [talk-au] "Removing closed or illegal trails." (in Nerang
National Park)
Hi Frederik, Thorsten
1. "a park manager would prefer them not to, and therefore deletes the
track
in order to keep people from exercising their rights".
Does this happen, has it ever happened? I would be surprised if it
happened
here. Anyway its not what I thought we were talking about, illegal
trails.
2. 3. and 4. "knowing which informal trails they might have taken can
be
helpful, might even save lives" possible but very unlikely. I could
equally
argue that the types of illegal trails that I am seeing, the "I rode my
mountain bike down this way" type of trail (see #951362516
later) can reduce map utility, they are often barely visible but are
rendered the same as the type of trail a lost person would follow.
Neither Frederik's nor my argument is particularly strong.
I mentioned women's refuges earlier. Its irrelevant that we map the
polygon
but not the label. Its not because they are not verifiable, I could
ground
truth them by knocking on the front door and asking. We do not map
women's
refuges because that is the right thing to do. We search for
justifications
later.
Finally Frederik and Thorsten stress the importance of lifecycle
tagging,
access tagging and rendering by the data users. I agree with them.
We at OSM are not doing a great job of rendering. Go to
https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=19/-37.93168/145.30667
There are 3 trails,
Way: 476219417 which is access=no
Way: Granite Track (56176535) which is legal These 2 tracks are
rendered
similarly, very few map users would notice that one of them was closed
We are not doing a great job on tagging either The third track Path
#951362516 is illegal but not tagged as such. The editor should know
that it
is illegal they say "Probably unofficial but reasonably well used"
there is
a good chance they knew. It was clearly signed at every entrance to
"stay on
formed trails" and there are lots of maps on sign boards showing all
the
legal trails.
Now this trail is mapped, it is going to attract lots of traffic. Its
never
going to save a lost walker's life. Its going to take many many hours
of
volunteer labour to keep it closed for long enough to revegetate and
get
deleted from the map. That's the consequence of the Parks Service
respecting
OSM's consensus policy.
I support OSM's consensus form of government and as a consequence
support
the consensus position on illegal tracks. But it causes others a lot of
problems and I think we can be more responsible and nuanced within the
consensus position.
Tony
Hi,
On 29.10.21 09:08, fors...@ozonline.com.au wrote: You could map a track
under the "if it exists then map it" rule but
you don't have to. We do not map women's refuges and they exist. We
don't have to map every informal trail.
This is true, and we shouldn't go out of our way to thwart the efforts
of park managers. Having said that,
1. Sometimes the matter can be a civil rights issue - depending on the
legal situation, people might have the *right* to use a path but a
park manager would prefer them not to, and therefore deletes the track
in order to keep people from exercising their rights. In that
situation, while the park manager might want the best for the
environment, the park manager would have to work to change the legal
situation instead of trying to mislead people about what they are
allowed
to do.
2. In similar discussions we had people working with search and rescue
teams say that they prefer to use OSM maps because those show the
informal trails, and if you're searching for someone who got lost,
knowing which informal trails they might have taken can be helpful -
might even save lives.
3. If you have an emergency out in the wild, knowledge about informal
or even prohibited/closed tracks can be helpful and again, might even
save lives.
4. If you are navigating without a GPS, you might use trails for
orientation ("take the second left after entering the forest" or
whatever). In these cases if there's a trail that exists and is
visible but is not shown on the map, you will mis-count.
Therefore I would like to agree with Paul and Thorsten, and stress
that we should (a) map access tags properly, and (b) lobby web sites
and apps using OSM data to properly process these access tags, by not
including access-restricted trails in routing or route suggestions,
and by clearly marking these restrictions on maps.
Bye
Frederik
--
Frederik Ramm ## eMail frede...@remote.org ## N49°00'09"
E008°23'33"
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