Open Data: From the Information Age
to the Action Age
Tim O’Reilly
O’Reilly Media
OpenUp
November 13, 2012
Thursday, November 15, 12
§ something about transparency and gov data
Thursday, November 15, 12
When people talk about open government data, they often start by thinking about government transparency. Sites like
mysociety’s TheyWorkForYou, or OpenCongress in the US, are indeed important.
Thursday, November 15, 12
In the US, this strain of the open government movement is perhaps best exemplified by the Sunlight Foundation.
Thursday, November 15, 12
Another mysociety project, fixmystreet, was among the first to highlight the possibility of opening up a two way channel, using
open data to create a context for better citizen engagement.
Thursday, November 15, 12
Startups like SeeClickFix have sprung up to help citizens give feedback to civil servants about what needs doing.
Thursday, November 15, 12
What’s encouraging that there are now emerging standards like 311 that allow applications and the back-end systems that
governments use to manage their workflow to speak the same language. This is the beginning of a new way of thinking about
how government data and the private sector can interoperate, creating new interfaces for government services.
Thursday, November 15, 12
In the US, Code for America is a leader in providing new kinds of engagement, working with local governments to build simple,
beautiful and easy-to-use interfaces to government services and challenging government to reinvent the way it engages with
citizens. Jen Pahlka talked a bit about their work earlier this morning.
Thursday, November 15, 12
The UK government digital service has done a fantastic job of thinking about how to put citizens at the center of government
rather than at the periphery. Their Design Principles are a manifesto for open government everywhere.
Thursday, November 15, 12
The Government Digital Service Design Principles are probably the most important design document since the Macintosh Human
Interface Guidelines of the 1980s. They, and the GDS Digital Strategy, should be the template for government services around
the world. I particularly like that they’ve embraced the notion of APIs, which allow third parties to build new services. But I
would go further, and argue that APIs should be open to third parties by default, and closed only when necessary.
§ google home page / information age
Thursday, November 15, 12
But even the thinking behind GDS doesn’t give the full range of impact of open government data.
I’ve always found myself wondering why people aren’t more aware of how government data powers non-governmental services
that citizens take for granted, many of them never taking the time to think how much government investment went into building
the infrastructure that makes it possible for the private sector to offer services like weather predictions
GPS: A 21st century platform launched in 1973
Thursday, November 15, 12
Now consider Global positioning satellites. Here government investment in a hard, long term project, is paying off in uncounted
new private sector developments.
A huge project with uncertain return, started in 1973 and now showing enormous fruit in the 21st century, with huge value add
from the commercial sector. Everything from maps and directions on your phone to
future self-driving cars spring from this platform investment, and the key policy decision to open the data and
make it available for commercial use. No one dreamed of the unexpected applications that became possible by opening up this
data. That’s why we need open web services by default.
Thursday, November 15, 12
Mapping services have taken data developed at great expense by government and turned it into hugely powerful experiences for
citizens. Here are my public transit directions from my hotel to this venue today, courtesy of Google, but also of centuries of
government investment in mapping services. Not to mention that Google Transit directions got its start with the government of
Portland, Oregon, who in classic internet style, proposed a data specification for transit timetables that could be consumed by
third party applications.
§ Health datapalooza
Thursday, November 15, 12
This same kind of “developer outreach” has characterized Todd Park’s work on open data at HHS. Rather than just opening
the data, he proactively sought out partners who could consume government data. For example, HHS had a huge database of
hospital and nursing home quality and user satisfaction metrics, which now helps to power Bing’s hospital search, and not just
the HHS Hospital Compare application.
The HHS open data initiative now features a thriving developer conference,
hundreds of apps, and numerous funded startups.
Thursday, November 15, 12
The Obama administration is now trying to replicate this playbook in other areas like energy
Thursday, November 15, 12
and Education.
What happens when you throw open the doors to partners
More than 50,000 iPhone
applications in less than a year!
Now at 688,000
Thursday, November 15, 12
Apple showed us the power of this kind of entrepreneurial explosion when they turned the smartphone into a platform with the
introduction of the iPhone app store. We went from phones that had twenty or thirty apps cooked up in a back room deal to a
platform that allows anyone to come up with new features.
This is the kind of platform I’d like to see for government.
Government as a platform means an end to the
design of only complete, closed “applications.” Instead
the government should provide fundamental services
on which we, the people, (also known as “the market”)
build applications.
Thursday, November 15, 12
That’s why...
Thursday, November 15, 12
At Code for America, we’ve capitalized on this idea by launching a startup accelerator, finding and nurturing creative startups
who are re-using or opening up government data, creating new interfaces to government services, or building tools that will
help governments to engage with their community.
Thursday, November 15, 12
Since I know this conference is focused on International Development, I want to mention one of these startups in particular.
Captricity grew out of a project in Tanzania and Uganda to digitize medical records. It is a now a powerful tool combining
machine learning and crowdsourcing to convert any kind of paper document into structured data.
Thursday, November 15, 12
While we’re on the subject of Africa, I want to remind all of you that technology for international development isn’t all digital.
One of the most remarkable frontiers of technology today is in something we call the Maker Movement, which involves
everything from sensors and robots to advanced 3D printing, digital design and manufacturing, but also includes old fashioned
mechanical engineering and ingenuity. At O’Reilly, we run an event in California that draws over 120,000 people. But one of our
most exciting Maker Faires happens in Nigeria.
Thursday, November 15, 12
You can get a great sense of how “makers” are solving everyday problems with local ingenuity on the Afrigadget blog. Many of
the people featured there also appear at Maker Faire.
Sulaiman Famro is a cheerful, 65 year old engineer, and a master of branding. He built the prototype “Farmking” three years ago
and claims he can save the country $1 billion a year, just in savings on starch importation.
The Farmking is a one-stop processing plant for cluster and farm-site processing of root crops and grains. It has a diesel
powered engine that allows for remote processing, with power out connections for lighting so that it can work all night, if
needed.
On one end you have 3 devices, for chipping, grating and milling. In the middle is the power plant, and in the rear is a large steel
drum that can hold 50kgs of milled cassava, that uses a spin filter to process up to 2.5 tons of milled cassava into starch.
It’s used for processing of cassava, soya beans, maize, sweet potatoes, yam and many other roots and grains.
Thursday, November 15, 12
In an odd way, there’s also a connection between the maker movement and hot silicon valley startups like AirBnB. Both are
deeply rooted in a trend towards decentralized activities and peer-to-peer markets. With maker marketplaces like Etsy, people
around the world can sell their goods to each other. With sharing marketplaces like airBnb, people can share their homes.
Government should support these peer economies, and not get in the way with too much regulation. At the Opening
Government meeting the other day, we had a fascinating conversation about the interplay between regulation and reputation,
and how reputation systems can replace some of what we now do with centralized regulation.
Thursday, November 15, 12
I also want to give a shout out to efforts like the UN Global Pulse, as well as Ushahidi, the Global Virus Forecasting Initiative, and
other groups that are using new approaches to big data and predictive analytics to literally build a new early warning system for
the planet.
Data is the currency of most modern apps, and particularly important is data that helps you to “close the loop.”
“What I learned from Google is
to only invest in things that
close the loop.”
- Chris Sacca
Thursday, November 15, 12
Efforts like this are completely aligned with the “big data” focus of Silicon Valley companies like Google.
Investor Chris Sacca, who used to run special projects for Google, once remarked “What I learned...”
“Perl should make easy things
easy, and hard things possible.”
- Larry Wall
Thursday, November 15, 12
I want to end with a few further thoughts about the role of government in sparking innovation in the private sector. Larry Wall,
the creator of the Perl programming language, once said...
“Government should make easy
things easy, and hard things
possible.”
-Tim O’Reilly
Thursday, November 15, 12
Since he’s an open source developer, I’m going to take his maxim, and as we say in the open source world, “fork it” so it now
reads... I was with the UK Government Digital Service the other day, and we did a Q&A with reporters. Someone from the Wall
Street Journal asked if the new approach was just about saving money. We answered that it wasn’t at all, that it was about
creating new kinds of engagement between government and citizens. Saving money is a byproduct. But there’s another way in
which the cost savings of open data and government doing less by enabling the rest of us to do more is really important.
Critical Issues Facing the World
• Natural Disasters
• Jobs
• Energy
• Food
• Water
• Creating a vibrant, just, and bountiful economy for all the
world’s citizens
Thursday, November 15, 12
I suspect that in the next few decades we’ll have many, many hard problems to solve - wicked problems even. One of the great
urgencies of the open government movement is to make easy things easy so that we can make hard things possible.
The private sector can do a lot, but there are some problems of a scale that we need to tackle them all together.
“The legitimate object of government is to
do for the people what needs to be done,
but which they cannot, by individual
effort, do at all, or do so well, for
themselves.”
-Abraham Lincoln, July 1, 1854
Thursday, November 15, 12
Or as Abraham Lincoln put it...

More Related Content

PDF
Datos abiertos costa rica open innovation 2
PDF
A year in public data, a view from within...
PPTX
GIS and Asset Management Moving to the Future :
PPTX
Analytics revolution and democratization of data
PPTX
Accademia Nazionale della Politica - Intervento sull'Open Government
PDF
"Big Data" by Steve Bryan, Vigillo
PDF
ATX Hack 4 Change Presentation
PPT
Open Data Newthinking
Datos abiertos costa rica open innovation 2
A year in public data, a view from within...
GIS and Asset Management Moving to the Future :
Analytics revolution and democratization of data
Accademia Nazionale della Politica - Intervento sull'Open Government
"Big Data" by Steve Bryan, Vigillo
ATX Hack 4 Change Presentation
Open Data Newthinking

What's hot (20)

PDF
What does “BIG DATA” mean for official statistics?
PDF
21st Century Cities, Technology & Innovation - An Overview
PDF
data, big data, open data
PDF
Kenney & Zysman - The Rise of the Platform Economy (Spring 2016 IST)x
PDF
Why Big Data - the data rush
PDF
How data is renewing and reshaping rio de janeiro
PDF
Ottenere e visualizzare i dati. Open Data e Big Data
PDF
Transformation
PDF
Smart Citizens - Populating Smart Cities / IoTShifts
PDF
The new flow of information
PDF
Cloud Trends for Government
PDF
The Future of Recruiting is in the Cloud (ERE Fall 2008)
PDF
A Glimpse Into the Future of Data Science - What's Next for AI, Big Data & Ma...
PPT
EMBD2018 | Humanos y máquinas: Un futuro con inteligencia artificial.
PDF
Uncle Sam Wants Coders To Leave Silicon Valley For D.C.
PDF
Big Data and the Future of Journalism (Futurist Keynote Speaker Gerd Leonhard...
PDF
Ona 2013 data journalism no excuses with la nacion data
PDF
PPTX
Is Open Data enough for business?
PDF
Utrecht Open Data, 19 juni 2012
What does “BIG DATA” mean for official statistics?
21st Century Cities, Technology & Innovation - An Overview
data, big data, open data
Kenney & Zysman - The Rise of the Platform Economy (Spring 2016 IST)x
Why Big Data - the data rush
How data is renewing and reshaping rio de janeiro
Ottenere e visualizzare i dati. Open Data e Big Data
Transformation
Smart Citizens - Populating Smart Cities / IoTShifts
The new flow of information
Cloud Trends for Government
The Future of Recruiting is in the Cloud (ERE Fall 2008)
A Glimpse Into the Future of Data Science - What's Next for AI, Big Data & Ma...
EMBD2018 | Humanos y máquinas: Un futuro con inteligencia artificial.
Uncle Sam Wants Coders To Leave Silicon Valley For D.C.
Big Data and the Future of Journalism (Futurist Keynote Speaker Gerd Leonhard...
Ona 2013 data journalism no excuses with la nacion data
Is Open Data enough for business?
Utrecht Open Data, 19 juni 2012
Ad

Viewers also liked (12)

PDF
How to Make Awesome SlideShares: Tips & Tricks
PDF
Getting Started With SlideShare
PDF
Multithreading & Relationship Strength
PDF
The Top Skills That Can Get You Hired in 2017
PDF
What Makes Great Infographics
PDF
Masters of SlideShare
PDF
STOP! VIEW THIS! 10-Step Checklist When Uploading to Slideshare
PDF
You Suck At PowerPoint!
PDF
How To Get More From SlideShare - Super-Simple Tips For Content Marketing
PDF
A Guide to SlideShare Analytics - Excerpts from Hubspot's Step by Step Guide ...
PDF
2015 Upload Campaigns Calendar - SlideShare
PPTX
What to Upload to SlideShare
How to Make Awesome SlideShares: Tips & Tricks
Getting Started With SlideShare
Multithreading & Relationship Strength
The Top Skills That Can Get You Hired in 2017
What Makes Great Infographics
Masters of SlideShare
STOP! VIEW THIS! 10-Step Checklist When Uploading to Slideshare
You Suck At PowerPoint!
How To Get More From SlideShare - Super-Simple Tips For Content Marketing
A Guide to SlideShare Analytics - Excerpts from Hubspot's Step by Step Guide ...
2015 Upload Campaigns Calendar - SlideShare
What to Upload to SlideShare
Ad

Similar to OPEN DATA (20)

PDF
Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age (PDF with notes)
PDF
World Government Summit on Open Source
PDF
GTEC: Government as a Platform
PDF
Technology and Trust: The Challenge of 21st Century Government
PDF
Government as a Platform: What We've Learned Since 2008 (pdf with notes)
PDF
Technology and Trust: The Challenge of 21st Century Government
PPTX
Data gov gov20la_2012
PDF
Aspen ideas Festival Talk on Gov20
PDF
Government 2.0
PDF
ReImagining Governance
PPT
What I Learned @ #G2e 2010
PPTX
Big Data, Open Data, Big Costs - tim willoughby
PDF
Tim willoughby
PPTX
ISWC 2012 Keynote
PDF
Gov + Citi-Experts
PDF
Benefits of Open Government Data (Expanded)
ODP
Open Gov and Open Data intro
PDF
Osimopolitika20v2
PDF
Benefits Of Open Government Data
PDF
Angry birds view of open data v6 public
Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age (PDF with notes)
World Government Summit on Open Source
GTEC: Government as a Platform
Technology and Trust: The Challenge of 21st Century Government
Government as a Platform: What We've Learned Since 2008 (pdf with notes)
Technology and Trust: The Challenge of 21st Century Government
Data gov gov20la_2012
Aspen ideas Festival Talk on Gov20
Government 2.0
ReImagining Governance
What I Learned @ #G2e 2010
Big Data, Open Data, Big Costs - tim willoughby
Tim willoughby
ISWC 2012 Keynote
Gov + Citi-Experts
Benefits of Open Government Data (Expanded)
Open Gov and Open Data intro
Osimopolitika20v2
Benefits Of Open Government Data
Angry birds view of open data v6 public

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
20A LG INR18650HJ2 3.6V 2900mAh Battery cells for Power Tools Vacuum Cleaner
PDF
GENERATOR AND IMPROVED COIL THEREFOR HAVINGELECTRODYNAMIC PROPERTIES
PDF
2- Physical Layer (06).pdfgshshshbsbshshshhs
PPTX
ppt to the world finance to the world in growing
PPT
Soldering technics Aerospace electronic assembly
PDF
PakistanCoinageAct-906.pdfdbnsshsjjsbsbb
PPTX
Presentation societal project DEEPIKA T.pptx
DOCX
Copy-OT LIST 12.8.25.docxjdjfufufufufuuffuf
PDF
script scriptscriptscriptscriptscriptscript
PPTX
AIR BAG SYStYEM mechanical enginweering.pptx
PDF
Topic-1-Main-Features-of-Data-Processing.pdf
PDF
Melt Flow Index Tester from Perfect Group India
PDF
CAB UNIT 1 with computer details details
PPTX
RTS MASTER DECK_Household Convergence Scorecards. Use this file copy.pptx
DOCX
internal and external hardware in Orthopedic Center
PPTX
Clauses_Part1.hshshpjzjxnznxnxnndndndndndndndnndptx
PPTX
Chapter no 8 output devices dpart 2.pptx
PPTX
Presentation (1).pptx gjkbhhjk hjjgtihkk
PDF
Printing Presentation to show beginners.
PPTX
Malnutrition_Presentation_Revised.pptxhwjsjjsjs
20A LG INR18650HJ2 3.6V 2900mAh Battery cells for Power Tools Vacuum Cleaner
GENERATOR AND IMPROVED COIL THEREFOR HAVINGELECTRODYNAMIC PROPERTIES
2- Physical Layer (06).pdfgshshshbsbshshshhs
ppt to the world finance to the world in growing
Soldering technics Aerospace electronic assembly
PakistanCoinageAct-906.pdfdbnsshsjjsbsbb
Presentation societal project DEEPIKA T.pptx
Copy-OT LIST 12.8.25.docxjdjfufufufufuuffuf
script scriptscriptscriptscriptscriptscript
AIR BAG SYStYEM mechanical enginweering.pptx
Topic-1-Main-Features-of-Data-Processing.pdf
Melt Flow Index Tester from Perfect Group India
CAB UNIT 1 with computer details details
RTS MASTER DECK_Household Convergence Scorecards. Use this file copy.pptx
internal and external hardware in Orthopedic Center
Clauses_Part1.hshshpjzjxnznxnxnndndndndndndndnndptx
Chapter no 8 output devices dpart 2.pptx
Presentation (1).pptx gjkbhhjk hjjgtihkk
Printing Presentation to show beginners.
Malnutrition_Presentation_Revised.pptxhwjsjjsjs

OPEN DATA

  • 1. Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age Tim O’Reilly O’Reilly Media OpenUp November 13, 2012 Thursday, November 15, 12
  • 2. § something about transparency and gov data Thursday, November 15, 12 When people talk about open government data, they often start by thinking about government transparency. Sites like mysociety’s TheyWorkForYou, or OpenCongress in the US, are indeed important.
  • 3. Thursday, November 15, 12 In the US, this strain of the open government movement is perhaps best exemplified by the Sunlight Foundation.
  • 4. Thursday, November 15, 12 Another mysociety project, fixmystreet, was among the first to highlight the possibility of opening up a two way channel, using open data to create a context for better citizen engagement.
  • 5. Thursday, November 15, 12 Startups like SeeClickFix have sprung up to help citizens give feedback to civil servants about what needs doing.
  • 6. Thursday, November 15, 12 What’s encouraging that there are now emerging standards like 311 that allow applications and the back-end systems that governments use to manage their workflow to speak the same language. This is the beginning of a new way of thinking about how government data and the private sector can interoperate, creating new interfaces for government services.
  • 7. Thursday, November 15, 12 In the US, Code for America is a leader in providing new kinds of engagement, working with local governments to build simple, beautiful and easy-to-use interfaces to government services and challenging government to reinvent the way it engages with citizens. Jen Pahlka talked a bit about their work earlier this morning.
  • 8. Thursday, November 15, 12 The UK government digital service has done a fantastic job of thinking about how to put citizens at the center of government rather than at the periphery. Their Design Principles are a manifesto for open government everywhere.
  • 9. Thursday, November 15, 12 The Government Digital Service Design Principles are probably the most important design document since the Macintosh Human Interface Guidelines of the 1980s. They, and the GDS Digital Strategy, should be the template for government services around the world. I particularly like that they’ve embraced the notion of APIs, which allow third parties to build new services. But I would go further, and argue that APIs should be open to third parties by default, and closed only when necessary.
  • 10. § google home page / information age Thursday, November 15, 12 But even the thinking behind GDS doesn’t give the full range of impact of open government data. I’ve always found myself wondering why people aren’t more aware of how government data powers non-governmental services that citizens take for granted, many of them never taking the time to think how much government investment went into building the infrastructure that makes it possible for the private sector to offer services like weather predictions
  • 11. GPS: A 21st century platform launched in 1973 Thursday, November 15, 12 Now consider Global positioning satellites. Here government investment in a hard, long term project, is paying off in uncounted new private sector developments. A huge project with uncertain return, started in 1973 and now showing enormous fruit in the 21st century, with huge value add from the commercial sector. Everything from maps and directions on your phone to future self-driving cars spring from this platform investment, and the key policy decision to open the data and make it available for commercial use. No one dreamed of the unexpected applications that became possible by opening up this data. That’s why we need open web services by default.
  • 12. Thursday, November 15, 12 Mapping services have taken data developed at great expense by government and turned it into hugely powerful experiences for citizens. Here are my public transit directions from my hotel to this venue today, courtesy of Google, but also of centuries of government investment in mapping services. Not to mention that Google Transit directions got its start with the government of Portland, Oregon, who in classic internet style, proposed a data specification for transit timetables that could be consumed by third party applications.
  • 13. § Health datapalooza Thursday, November 15, 12 This same kind of “developer outreach” has characterized Todd Park’s work on open data at HHS. Rather than just opening the data, he proactively sought out partners who could consume government data. For example, HHS had a huge database of hospital and nursing home quality and user satisfaction metrics, which now helps to power Bing’s hospital search, and not just the HHS Hospital Compare application. The HHS open data initiative now features a thriving developer conference, hundreds of apps, and numerous funded startups.
  • 14. Thursday, November 15, 12 The Obama administration is now trying to replicate this playbook in other areas like energy
  • 15. Thursday, November 15, 12 and Education.
  • 16. What happens when you throw open the doors to partners More than 50,000 iPhone applications in less than a year! Now at 688,000 Thursday, November 15, 12 Apple showed us the power of this kind of entrepreneurial explosion when they turned the smartphone into a platform with the introduction of the iPhone app store. We went from phones that had twenty or thirty apps cooked up in a back room deal to a platform that allows anyone to come up with new features. This is the kind of platform I’d like to see for government.
  • 17. Government as a platform means an end to the design of only complete, closed “applications.” Instead the government should provide fundamental services on which we, the people, (also known as “the market”) build applications. Thursday, November 15, 12 That’s why...
  • 18. Thursday, November 15, 12 At Code for America, we’ve capitalized on this idea by launching a startup accelerator, finding and nurturing creative startups who are re-using or opening up government data, creating new interfaces to government services, or building tools that will help governments to engage with their community.
  • 19. Thursday, November 15, 12 Since I know this conference is focused on International Development, I want to mention one of these startups in particular. Captricity grew out of a project in Tanzania and Uganda to digitize medical records. It is a now a powerful tool combining machine learning and crowdsourcing to convert any kind of paper document into structured data.
  • 20. Thursday, November 15, 12 While we’re on the subject of Africa, I want to remind all of you that technology for international development isn’t all digital. One of the most remarkable frontiers of technology today is in something we call the Maker Movement, which involves everything from sensors and robots to advanced 3D printing, digital design and manufacturing, but also includes old fashioned mechanical engineering and ingenuity. At O’Reilly, we run an event in California that draws over 120,000 people. But one of our most exciting Maker Faires happens in Nigeria.
  • 21. Thursday, November 15, 12 You can get a great sense of how “makers” are solving everyday problems with local ingenuity on the Afrigadget blog. Many of the people featured there also appear at Maker Faire. Sulaiman Famro is a cheerful, 65 year old engineer, and a master of branding. He built the prototype “Farmking” three years ago and claims he can save the country $1 billion a year, just in savings on starch importation. The Farmking is a one-stop processing plant for cluster and farm-site processing of root crops and grains. It has a diesel powered engine that allows for remote processing, with power out connections for lighting so that it can work all night, if needed. On one end you have 3 devices, for chipping, grating and milling. In the middle is the power plant, and in the rear is a large steel drum that can hold 50kgs of milled cassava, that uses a spin filter to process up to 2.5 tons of milled cassava into starch. It’s used for processing of cassava, soya beans, maize, sweet potatoes, yam and many other roots and grains.
  • 22. Thursday, November 15, 12 In an odd way, there’s also a connection between the maker movement and hot silicon valley startups like AirBnB. Both are deeply rooted in a trend towards decentralized activities and peer-to-peer markets. With maker marketplaces like Etsy, people around the world can sell their goods to each other. With sharing marketplaces like airBnb, people can share their homes. Government should support these peer economies, and not get in the way with too much regulation. At the Opening Government meeting the other day, we had a fascinating conversation about the interplay between regulation and reputation, and how reputation systems can replace some of what we now do with centralized regulation.
  • 23. Thursday, November 15, 12 I also want to give a shout out to efforts like the UN Global Pulse, as well as Ushahidi, the Global Virus Forecasting Initiative, and other groups that are using new approaches to big data and predictive analytics to literally build a new early warning system for the planet. Data is the currency of most modern apps, and particularly important is data that helps you to “close the loop.”
  • 24. “What I learned from Google is to only invest in things that close the loop.” - Chris Sacca Thursday, November 15, 12 Efforts like this are completely aligned with the “big data” focus of Silicon Valley companies like Google. Investor Chris Sacca, who used to run special projects for Google, once remarked “What I learned...”
  • 25. “Perl should make easy things easy, and hard things possible.” - Larry Wall Thursday, November 15, 12 I want to end with a few further thoughts about the role of government in sparking innovation in the private sector. Larry Wall, the creator of the Perl programming language, once said...
  • 26. “Government should make easy things easy, and hard things possible.” -Tim O’Reilly Thursday, November 15, 12 Since he’s an open source developer, I’m going to take his maxim, and as we say in the open source world, “fork it” so it now reads... I was with the UK Government Digital Service the other day, and we did a Q&A with reporters. Someone from the Wall Street Journal asked if the new approach was just about saving money. We answered that it wasn’t at all, that it was about creating new kinds of engagement between government and citizens. Saving money is a byproduct. But there’s another way in which the cost savings of open data and government doing less by enabling the rest of us to do more is really important.
  • 27. Critical Issues Facing the World • Natural Disasters • Jobs • Energy • Food • Water • Creating a vibrant, just, and bountiful economy for all the world’s citizens Thursday, November 15, 12 I suspect that in the next few decades we’ll have many, many hard problems to solve - wicked problems even. One of the great urgencies of the open government movement is to make easy things easy so that we can make hard things possible. The private sector can do a lot, but there are some problems of a scale that we need to tackle them all together.
  • 28. “The legitimate object of government is to do for the people what needs to be done, but which they cannot, by individual effort, do at all, or do so well, for themselves.” -Abraham Lincoln, July 1, 1854 Thursday, November 15, 12 Or as Abraham Lincoln put it...