On 2018-09-21 12:46, joost schouppe wrote:
Op vr 24 aug. 2018 om 13:58 schreef joost schouppe <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>:

    Hi,

    The cadastral plan is now open data for the entire country!

    That's pretty big because:
    - for Wallonia, it's the first open vector data with parcels,
    buildings, roads and road names.
    - contains "underground buildings" which were not available
    anywhere AFAIK.
    - there's a dataset with roads that have some kind of
    "erfdienstbaarheid"/"servitude". This might be of use for certain
    dubious paths

    But of course, please note:
    - there is way more data where this came from - the attributes of
    the parcel are not included (like building levels, number of
    units, landuse)
    - Belgian cadastre data has a bad reputation in general so do not
    trust everything you see. The building geometry seems to be quite
    poor, especially when it comes to exact positioning, not so much
    the shape itself.
    - do not trust road name data (it doesn't follow the CRAB name, so
    not official in Flanders). Names are often abbreviated
    - the roads do not form a network, there are duplicate geometries
    and some geometries are outdated by half a century
    - there is pretty good metadata included. However, you might find
    data that does not follow the explained model

    The license file is included in any download. It seems to be
    compatible with OSM, but it would be nice if more people give it a
    good read. The first one to use it for mapping, does need to add
    it to https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Contributors

    The data is in shapefile format (boooo!), but Philippe Duchesne
    has made a download site where you can get it in geopackage
    format. There is also a "view" link. To actually see the data
    there, find the big switches to activate the layers you want to
    see. The bigger ones take a while to load!

    More details:
    * Official website:
    
https://financien.belgium.be/nl/particulieren/woning/kadaster/kadastraal-plan
    
https://finances.belgium.be/fr/particuliers/habitation/revenu_cadastral/plan-cadastral

    * Metadata:
    
https://financien.belgium.be/sites/default/files/20180626_Dataspecificaties.pdf
    
https://finances.belgium.be/sites/default/files/20180626_Specificationsdata.pdf

    * Repackaged into an open data format:
    http://data.highlatitud.es/cadaster-belgium/

    We think this data will only be usable for validation efforts. If
    you think an import could be useful for some of the data in some
    places, do not forget to follow the Import Guidelines or risk
    having your work reverted.

    Happy mapping,
-- Joost Schouppe
    OpenStreetMap
    <http://www.openstreetmap.org/user/joost%20schouppe/> | Twitter
    <https://twitter.com/joostjakob> | LinkedIn
    <https://www.linkedin.com/pub/joost-schouppe/48/939/603> | Meetup
    <http://www.meetup.com/OpenStreetMap-Belgium/members/97979802/>



--
Joost Schouppe
OpenStreetMap <http://www.openstreetmap.org/user/joost%20schouppe/> | Twitter <https://twitter.com/joostjakob> | LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/pub/joost-schouppe/48/939/603> | Meetup <http://www.meetup.com/OpenStreetMap-Belgium/members/97979802/>

On 2018-09-21 12:46, joost schouppe wrote:
Hi,

André asked to include the WMS of this service by default in the JOSM repository. A long conversation ensued. Some of the confusion is caused by the fact that the WMS probably contains outdated license info. I have now asked the FOD Finances for a second time to clarify this. The ticket was closed, which is probably a good thing, as it is probably not a good idea to show this data by default in JOSM anyway!
Whether "shown by default" or not, that WMS exists, mappers can use it anyway, and it's *very useful **as a _complement_ to be used in parallel with JOSM+PICC* (or AGIV I suppose) and *only that*. "only" because I have *extremely important* remarks (complete with images) to make about the imprecision of that WMS or is it the whole cadastre.

I removed that cadastre JOSM default layer for two reasons.
To avoid mappers jumping on it and mapping (quite generously, pitifully) the same imprecise mess that we see now in Wallonia as the result of what was started with Potlatch and ID using various inappropriate sources instead of using JOSM+PICC/AGIV, which are now in charge of correcting those errors. But before making those remarks, I have to see if that imprecision is of the 2018 shape data too or just of the 2017 WMS in which case it would be quite appropriate to ask the Finances to upgrade it. So far, I've had problems browsing the shape data. It seems that it contains the same errors as the WMS but I want to be absolutely sure before speaking.
Second reason below...
But even for the license of the downloadable files the JOSM team seemed a bit worried: https://josm.openstreetmap.de/ticket/16693#comment:7 When I read the license, I felt attribution requierement in the license was defined loosely enough that mentioning it under Contributors would be enough. It would be nice to hear from other people how they interpret this license.
... because I did not want to get involved again in the same as those discussions that lasted 2 years, and even a grand total of 8 years, to prove the obvious for the PICC. In the above ticket, I read as a proof against my quoting that Belgium released the Cadastre as Opendata that "Opendata is just a word".  And, indeed, words often lack a definition (1), like "survey, designated, terrace" etc. But what better definition of Opendata can be made than this from the government themselves <https://statbel.fgov.be/fr/open-data>?
Les open data sont des données publiques à caractère non personnel, qui sont informatisées, répondent aux normes du format ouvert et peuvent être *réutilisées gratuitement*. *T**out le monde* peut utiliser gratuitement ces open data, *à des fins aussi bien commerciales que non commerciales*.
Exactly the same language as for the PICC WMS.
I'm afraid I am not interested arguing about this with persons who cannot read. If the problem that the vigilantes claim is that the owners could complain about me and if the owners say they won't, then there is no problem and happily I map, we map. I was once accused of using Michelin. It would be very stupid because that map is extremely coarse,  and I dare say I'm not stupid. Out of curiosity, I wrote to Michelin in very good French and asked very precisely if I could do what I was accused of doing. I asked where is their copyright, the terms of it. They (she) replied (in French) "at the bottom left of the screen". That's the icon. Precision again.

(1) Someone once said that OSM has nothing to do with the dictionary.
The dictionary defines every word we write unless we make another definition.

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