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30min: CityBikes, data policies and the big elephant

CityBikes, data policies and the big elephant

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Many years ago we built a FOSS Android application for our local bike sharing system. After realizing global bike sharing information was not publicly available we ended up going after the task of solving the problem for once and for all: a free and open API for others to create applications, visualizations and research on bike sharing data. Fast forward today and thanks to the community, the CityBikes project supports more than 400 cities all around the world and our API powers most bike sharing transportation apps on all platforms.

The CityBikes [1] project is a good example of the benefits on the so-called "open data". When data is made available, the community is eager to contribute to and improve public services. We are usually regarded as an "open data project", even though less than 10% of our data feeds come from properly licensed, documented and machine readable feeds. Our project showcases the need of a better policy than the PSI Directive [2] regarding re-use of public sector information, and some common misconceptions between representation and data. The main problem with the PSI Directive is that it does not take into account Public-Private partnerships (PPP). If data ownership or re-use is left out of the deal, the company kidnaps the data and leaves both the city council and its citizens at the mercy of the company providing the service. That is, only the company (or any other company in agreement with the "umbrella company") is to provide applications to use their systems. We as citizens should demand that any project that comes as a result of a public-private partnership should put the data right where it belongs: the public.

Info

Day: 2016-09-02
Start time: 14:00
Duration: 00:30
Track: Beyond Code

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