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NY Bill Would Require Online State Records

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Micah Kellner, the New York State assemblyman who last year submitted a bill to provide a tax credit to open source developers, has now proposed the 'Open New York Act,' a law that would make it mandatory for state agencies to put almost all of their public records on the Internet. According to Kellner's office, the law would 'revolutionize the relationship between New Yorkers and their state government, requiring all state agencies to make their records available through a central website — where the data can be used by activists, entrepreneurs, and others to create a host of applications useful in everyday life.' The Open Government Foundation, Citizens Union, and New York Public Interest Research Group all support the bill."

2 of 76 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Oh my, the possibilities for disaster by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All of that data had been available to large corporations who track that sort of thing.
    All of that data is already publicly available - you just have to drive down to the individual offices.

    Will it cause problems? I don't know.

    Will it make government more transparent? I think so.

    Well said. This is all publicly available stuff that would be available under the Freedom of Information Law. It just means that getting the stuff will be less dependent on (a) having money to spend and (b) having money for lawyers. I.e., it makes the process more democratic.

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    Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  2. Re:Oh my, the possibilities for disaster by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or what about the "victim finder" app for child molesters? Just take the data on family occupancies and compare to local crime statistics and police coverage and voila! Thanks Victim Finder!

    This may be the most absurd "think of the chiiildren" argument I've ever heard ... and that's saying something.

    First of all, the vast majority of molestation victims are attacked by family members, who don't exactly need demographic information to find their targets. Second, even in the very rare case of stranger-abduction attacks, do you really think they're going after children at home? Take a walk outside -- there's a good chance there's an elementary school within a few blocks of where you live.

    As for your hypothetical "Negro avoider" bigot ... well, let him do what he wants. There are already lots of people who won't drive through "that part of town" where "those people live." As long as they're not burning crosses on people's lawns, who gives a damn?

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    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.