Obama Announces Open Data Policy With Executive Order
In an overdue but welcome move, President Obama today issued an executive order mandating "open and machine-readable data" for government-published information. Also, kodiaktau writes "In a move to make data more readily available, the United States of America has announced the Project Open Data and has chosen GitHub to host the content." Ars has a great article on the announced policy, but as you might expect, it comes with caveats, exceptions, sub-goals and committees; don't expect too much change per day, or assume you have a right to open data, exactly, in the eyes of the government, but — "subject to appropriations" — it sounds good on paper. (I'd like the next step to be requiring that all file formats used by the government be open source.)
This is the first time that I've seen someone talk about President Obama and Executive Orders in a way that makes sense. It is my understanding that Executive Orders have to do with the internal operations of the government, not as a mechanism of usurping congress when it comes to laws that have an effect on the American public.
Sig: I stole this sig.
In an overdue but welcome move, President Obama today issued an executive order mandating "open and machine-readable data" for government-published information.
Yes, and after so much money and effort spent creating the databases and websites, they'll contain no data because it was all marked classified for national security reasons. /snark
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
This initiative has been going on for a while. Is the issue that not enough agencies are getting their data out fast enough, or comprehensively enough?
I'm also a little bit skeptical of relying on a random private company, GitHub, to be the canonical data host. What's wrong with hosting it on data.gov? Or if it's going to be hosted in the private sector, how about with a public-interest organization like the Internet Archive?
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
Clearly the Obama admin. wants all data to be open. Theirs, yours and anyone else.
When paper documents are redacted for distribution, they have to put on ugly black boxes, so that you can physically see that they have not told you shit. In a digital document, entire parts can be removed without anyone being wiser.
how about opening up about torture which is a violation of international law?
I'd like to find out how the House of Representatives manages to pick creationists and climate change deniers for the Science and Technology committee.
Oh, it's easy. They've got dozens of them.
I scanned through the order looking for the president of the USA to recommend "Git" as the tool of choice. Obama completely dodged that one and did not mention it in his release. Dang!
http://slashdot.org/submission/1062723/Cheap-mobile-data-plan?art_pos=2
You libtards are just so slanted to the left, anything even remotely resembling a centrist position to you is instantly "right-wing."
In every other nation on earth Obama is considered center-right or moderate.
This isn't about the government becoming more forthcoming.
No need for that.
Obama already gave us the most transparent Government in history. Remember?
Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
Those are both great examples.
Now I can write my Cooking in Hurricane Country book and mash up the data to illustrate how a Flavonol is like a Vlass 4 Hurricane whereas Flavones are more like a Class 3.
A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
Who? Aren't those TV stations from last century? I get my news from whoever news.google.com is linking to today.
BTW, I think Google is great and I need to buy their stock and the government is overregulating them and all of the court cases against them are unfair and all their competitors totally suck. But that's just a coincidence!
(But seriously: television news? Really? If ever I get news from TV, it's The Daily Show.mp4. I don't even watch Jim Lehrer anymore! Somehow the PVR's most recent 5 recordings always just sit there, unwatched, each one replaced a week later by a new one that I also don't spend the time to watch. I keep thinking, maybe some day I'll go back to watching TV news. Yep, I keep thinking that. And the years go by.)
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
Obama continued Bush stance's on seeking dismissal of a lawsuit to order a federal court to review the Bush administration's warrantless spying program. ACLU sued his administration. The ACLU also sued Obama for the release of government records on drone strikes that killed U.S. citizens in Yemen. The groups Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and the National Security Archive sued to access to millions of missing White House emails over Bush's two terms in office. Obama refused to reverse the Bush admin's position. A federal judge ordered the Obama administration to release secret evidence it says justifies the continued imprisonment of over 100 Guantanamo Bay prisoners. In a report to the UN Human Rights Council, Philip Alston, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions, said US secrecy around the drone program is undermining international law. Obama had responded to a question comparing Bradley Manning to Pentagon analyst Daniel Ellsberg, who in 1971 leaked the Pentagon Papers, detailing the secret history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. According to President Obama, the cases are not similar because, 'Ellsberg's material wasn't classified the same way.' In fact, the material disclosed in the Pentagon Papers was designated Top Secret'”the highest secrecy designation under law'”whereas the material allegedly leaked by Manning to WikiLeaks was marked 'secret' or 'classified,' among the lowest-level secrecy designations.
There are two things lacking in this order:
1) teeth
2) funding
Asking the civil service to "report" on something quarterly is only going to lead to a meaningless blip in the inboxes of countless government employees. Data calls like this come in endlessly. Not funding it ensures that to actually write the reports and implement the policy we'll be scraping the bottom of the barrel looking for people who couldn't get on a real (aka funded) project.
Because Faux News is such a reliable non-biased source.
Well let's look at the news breakdown shall we, and you can shove your ignorance down while we're at it. Out of all the major networks can you tell us the only one that's covered the story. Vs what was covered in other cases? Well let's see, NBC, CBS and ABC pretty much had wall-to-wall coverage on Jodi Arias and that trial. Very news worthy, unlike the massive intelligence failure, the fact that the whitehouse actively covered up and changed talking points and tried to blame a youtube video. Or the fact that they actually *took* the call, but refused to do anything and forced the exfil teams to stand down.
Yep, now you tell me, which is the more important story.
Om, nomnomnom...
So you watch something that reinforces your partisanship? Good job on that one.
Om, nomnomnom...
In every other nation on earth Obama is considered center-right or moderate.
Really? I've lived in Canada for the majority of my live having been born here. And Obama is further to the left then the NDP.
Om, nomnomnom...
Yeah, how's that hollow campaign promise workin' out so far?
... hopefully?
"Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
Really.
For example this poll conducted by the Economist. 67% of voter deemed Obama to be a centrist.
http://www.economist.com/economist-asks/barack-obama-centrist
In the partisan difference of opinion between the two different positions, "television ought to be funny" and "television ought to not be funny" it's true that I generally try to re-enforce my existing, inflexible, I-will-never-take-opposition-seriously-or-open-my-mind-to-reason partisan view.
I actually do sometimes watch non-comedies, though. Hannibal isn't funny; it takes opposite side in the partisan debate. (I'm not sure I like this show, though. Coincidence?) GoT isn't funny; that's another one from the other side; radically different than Jon Stewart's take on TV. Mad Men usually isn't funny. You know what, though? Even among these exceptions, it seems like there's always a joke here 'n' there. Holy crap, dude, I wonder if you're right. Am I only being exposed to one side of the comedy debate? Is this why I stopped watching Jim Lehrer? Honestly, his show is the only one I can think of, where I can't remember anything funny ever happening. Even David Attenborough sometimes doesn't exactly joke, but shows something funny anyway.
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
Well that's a really "well done poll" considering it was online only. I mean there's no chance of skewing on that, none at all.
Om, nomnomnom...
Well then, when you decide to look at the news you'll see that the benghazi talking points underwent 12 revisions including scrubbing all terrorist references. And that democrats have been leaning heavily on the press to try and get them to discredit the whistleblowers.
Yeah, all coming down to "it's a scandal, and a bad enough one that they're in CYA mode."
Om, nomnomnom...
In other news, Obama Administration institutes a Transparency Department, with an Openness Czar (starting salary $ 135,000 + benefits), 2 Assistant Vice-Chancellors of Openness (salary of $ 90,000 each + benefits), 4 Department Managers, 8 Assistant Department Managers, 22 full-time staffers... etc... etc.
"Hey taxpayers, you know how we promised you 'transparency'? Sure, you can haz. Here's a bill for a few million."
Just as a reminder, these are the same guys who just had a "press briefing" about Benghazi (anyone keeping track of how many months it's been since the event?) - BEHIND CLOSED DOORS. Source: http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2013/05/10/White-House-Benghazi-off-the-record