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2010-03-18 13:22:07
By Chris Vallance
BBC News
Countries should be judged on their willingness to open up public data to their
citizens, the inventor of the world wide web has told the BBC.
He said "openness of data and the neutrality of the network" should be
considered as important as free speech.
Sir Tim Berners-Lee is an advisor to a UK project - data.gov.uk - that offers
reams of previously hidden public sector data for anyone to use.
Open data could now be considered a basic right of citizens, he added.
"I think obviously there are more fundamental ones, but within a democratic
society if the democracy is going to work you have to have an informed
electorate," he told the BBC.
He said this was of particular importance for developing countries.
"The openness of governments is one of the things which makes investors decide
whether to invest," he said.
"When you make the government open, when they can see what's happening, they're
much more likely to bring their money and companies into your country."
'India's gift'
Many groups around the world are now using open public data to hold public
bodies to account.
In Brazil a website that tracks the published wealth of politicians has created
many political casualties.
A season of reports exploring the extraordinary power of the internet,
including:
Journalist Fernando Rodrigues built the online database Politicos do Brasil
which contains details of the campaign finances of 400,000 politicians.
The site was started in 2000, but as the information becomes more complete, its
power increases.
He told the BBC that he believed it had contributed to the removal from office
of hundreds of politicians after the 2008 local elections.
"Only six months after the election, 343 mayors and legislators had already
lost their jobs because so much data was available about them and it became
easy to identify wrongdoings during the electoral process," he said.
Other countries are less forthcoming with publication of data, but allow their
citizens to access it in other ways.
In India, for example, the 2005 Right to Information Act has been met with
great enthusiasm. So far, around two million requests for information have been
made.
Yamini Aiyar, director of the accountability initiative at the country's Centre
for Policy Research, said that the Indian public have a strong sense of
ownership about the act.
"People are monitoring the act, looking out for it constantly, questioning the
government," he told the BBC.
"That kind of public ownership is the biggest lesson I think India can give to
the world."
Even lack of internet access is not a barrier for some determined groups.
Indian freedom of information group MKSS, based in Rajasthan, monitors
government payments to rural workers. The group has been a major force pushing
for greater openness in government in India.
It collates the information, which may have originally been stored digitally,
and then go into villages and paint the results on walls.
"The wall presents a kind of web wall because anyone can come and read that
information," said Nikhil Dey of the group.
'Just beginning'
In both India and Brazil campaigners would like to see more government data
proactively published.
But even where data is unavailable, people are proving that the internet can be
used to hold people to account.
I think it's incumbent on those who believe in a positive and healthy society
to get off their bums and produce fantastic services that are positive
Tom Loosemore
Lacking detailed information on politicians' incomes, campaigners in Vietnam
have started publishing pictures of legislators homes online. The idea is that
the size of a home gives an indication of the wealth of a politician.
"It's a way to promote transparency," said Duy Hoang of Viet Tan (Vietnamese
Reform Party).
But while there is clearly a demand for open government worldwide, some in the
UK and US warn that publishing public data alone is not a panacea.
"There's a danger in assuming that all we need are these ever increasing
volumes of information," said Nathaniel Heller of non-profit group Global
Integrity, which monitors corruption trends worldwide.
"Personally, I think it needs to be matched with other reforms."
Tom Loosemore, head of 4iP, which funds many of the new websites that make use
of the UK government data released under Sir Tim's scheme, also warned that
just publishing data in itself wasn't enough.
"I think it's incumbent on those who believe in a positive and healthy society
to get off their bums and produce fantastic services that are positive," he
said.
Websites such as Wheredoesmymoneygo.org have already leading the charge in the
UK
But Mr Loosemore said there was still a long way to go in fully harnessing the
power of public data in the UK.
"There's an awful lot to play out, but the dam has been breached," he said.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/technology/8572809.stm
Published: 2010/03/18 08:47:59 GMT