www.govdata.de open data in germany – what happened since last october? ipsg-meeting dublin,...

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www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de Open data in Germany What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative Organisation, Modernization Programmes“ Federal Ministry of the Interior

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Page 1: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Open data in Germany – What happened since last October?

IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013

Jan-Ole Beyer

Division O1“Administrative Organisation, Modernization Programmes“

Federal Ministry of the Interior

Page 2: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

What are we talking about?

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“A piece of data […] is open if anyone is free to use, reuse, and redistribute it — subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and/or share-alike.” (opendefinition.org)

Page 3: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

What are we talking about?

“[…] 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 […]”

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Page 4: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Some reasons for open data (apart from definitions, programmes and strategy papers…)

“You can give away your data now – and

generate revenue and jobs…”

“Data and information are

essential resources in an information

society.”

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image of Neelie Kroes: http://www.flickr.com/photos/15237218@N00/3276750802/ (license: CC-BY-SA)

Page 5: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Determining factors in the administrative structure of Germany

Rule of law as basic prerequisite

Federal structure of public administration ( Autonomy of the different levels of administration)

Ministerial autonomy (Art. 65 Basic Law Autonomy of the federal ministries)

source: Wikipedia (C. Löser, D. Liuzzo)

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Page 6: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Open data in a federal republic…

…plus some platforms on municipal level…

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That patchwork doesn‘t look very user-friendly…

…plus some platforms for specific data…

…plus some platforms on the federal level…

Lower Saxony

North Rhine-Westphalia

Bremen

Hamburg

Berlin

Rhineland-Palatinate

Baden-Wuerttemberg

Bavaria

Page 7: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Therefore: We need a cross-level open government data Platform!

(innovative) re-use of

data“One-stop-access” to Open

Government Data across

Germany

standardized meta data structures

standardizedpolicies for

data usage data licenses

…cultural change…

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Page 8: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Measures and milestones – up to the present

Contest „Apps for Germany “

Report „Open Government Data Germany“ on legal, technical and organizational issues

Cross-level meta data structure to describe data and exchange it between platforms

Recommendation for a German (Open) Data license

Prototype of a cross-level Open Government Data portal

lectures, workshops, articles, information material etc. for different target audiences

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Page 9: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

The result: The prototype of “GovData – The data portal for Germany”

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Page 10: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Upcoming: The next steps…

Evaluation and enhancement of the prototype

Inclusion of new data providers

(Formal) standardization of the meta data structure, in consideration of international developments

Enhancement of the German Data License

Work on the organisational and financing model for the “production release” of GovData

Facilitate „data competence“ by developing educational/information material and training courses, with lectures, workshops, articles…

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Page 11: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Lessons learned – up to now…

There is a lot more than we know: Many things are already being tried out in individual projects. Include the experts!

A lot more works than we can imagine: Technical and legal obstacles are in most cases lower than expected.

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Page 12: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Lessons learned – up to now…

There a lot of civil servants, whole municipalities etc. who are really interested in Open Data – and just don’t know how to start!

Some advice and a few fundamental “standards” or recommendations help them to find their way.

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Page 13: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

Lessons learned – up to now…

For all the others: The mindset and culture have to be changed for a comprehensive change.

It’s a long way to go from the principle „Everything is secret, unless…“ to the principle “Everything is open, unless…“.

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Page 14: Www.govdata.de  Open data in Germany – What happened since last October? IPSG-Meeting Dublin, April 2013 Jan-Ole Beyer Division O1 “Administrative

www.govdata.de www.bmi.bund.de

QUESTIONS?!