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An Open Source Resistance Takes Shape as Tech Giants Race To Map the World (factordaily.com)

Shadma Shaikh, reporting for FactorDaily: Chetan Gowda, 27, was speaking to a room full of students in IIIT Hyderabad for a workshop on OpenStreetMap for beginners organized by Swecha, a non-profit organization to support free software movement last month. There were close to 40 students in the room. Beginners often ask him: Why use open source maps when we already have Google Maps? For Gowda, it was the fact that Google Maps is a global, commercial product and did not capture local detail. Like the old banyan tree that was a major landmark in his hometown Hassan or public benches just outside the town where pedestrians could stop to catch a break or fire catchment areas in Bellandur lake in Bengaluru, India.

"It was fascinating to add little but important details of my town to open maps," says Gowda who was introduced in 2013 to OSM or OpenStreetMap, a global community of mappers formed as a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world in 2004. Since then he has been an active contributor to OpenStreetMap and has conducted many workshops in colleges and institutes to induct more people in the community. Gowda has made 8500 edits in the OpenStreetMap, mainly covering areas in Bengaluru, Hassan and Hyderabad. Gowda and a few other contributors from India are part of a tiny yet growing resistance movement which doesn't want giant corporations to own all the mapping data. For the average consumer, this may not seem like a big deal. But mapping is big business.

The market opportunity for suppliers of mapping to the autonomous car industry is going to be worth over $24 billion by 2050, according to one estimate [PDF]. And that's just one industry. A study commissioned by Google in 2015 estimated that industries that run on top of the Global Positioning Satellite Systems and mapping generate nearly $73 billion in annual revenue. Worldwide, that industry is was estimated to generate $150- $270 billion in revenues. Although new research isn't available, with growing smartphone usage and the birth of companies such as Uber and many others it is safe to assume that the industry has only grown bigger. All the more reason why map data can't be held by only a few companies.
With Google Maps beginning to charge small and medium-sized businesses and indie developers more for access to its platform, many have started to explore and switch to open source alternatives of Maps, and commercial services such as Here Maps.

Further reading: What OpenStreetMap Can Be, and Ten Years of Google Maps, From Slashdot to Ground Truth.

36 of 90 comments (clear)

  1. So, it will be like Wikipedia for maps? by El+Cubano · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For Gowda, it was the fact that Google Maps is a global, commercial product and did not capture local detail. Like the old banyan tree that was a major landmark in his hometown Hassan or public benches just outside the town where pedestrians could stop to catch a break or fire catchment areas in Bellandur lake in Bengaluru, India.

    "It was fascinating to add little but important details of my town to open maps," says Gowda who was introduced in 2013 to OSM or OpenStreetMap, a global community of mappers formed as a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world in 2004. Since then he has been an active contributor to OpenStreetMap and has conducted many workshops in colleges and institutes to induct more people in the community. Gowda has made 8500 edits in the OpenStreetMap, mainly covering areas in Bengaluru, Hassan and Hyderabad.

    This sounds like a really neat idea. However, I quit contributing to Wikipedia because of the nonsense that comes with it. It was very frustrating to see the constant edit wars on even semi-controversial content. To say nothing of really controversial pages. Or of the people who think they are "experts" on some topic trying to "correct" people who are actual experts.

    Then there is legion of "we must add every detail of everything, no matter how minor" pitted against the legion "everything in Wikipedia must meet some arbitrary high standard of significance." And of course, everyone has to put up with the admins (I won't even get into everything that can go wrong there).

    I can't help but think that while this will in the macro sense be a good thing for society and for democratizing information, part of the cost will be that you have to actually investigate the history of every thing that actually matters to you. I can also see how over time it will become increasingly difficult for people who want to make just one or two small contributions when there are others with nothing better to do than to "police" their favorite content full time.

    1. Re:So, it will be like Wikipedia for maps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I have been an active contributor to OSM now for about 1.5 years. I started these edits since neither Google Maps nor local public transit route planner recognized my home address, which resided on a "road" on top of a shopping mall, not connected to the actual road network. My edits concentrate mostly on my neighborhood which tends to be under constant flux due to massive construction sites, but also extends to the general capital area of a small European country. Amount of edits on this area hovers around couple dozen a day. Of these, maybe once a month I see an edit which might be considered somehow antisocial or unprofessional in nature, and usually they're corrected quite quickly.

      I think it works out quite well at least on my region. OSM has a stance to accept as much information as possible as long as it has general usefulness and it's factually correct (and not opinion-based, which shouldn't be that hard on maps!). Removing such information is not welcome; the product of OSM is data, not a specific visualization of it.

      Sometimes it *does* feel that too much is too much. Marking up every shop, every path, every tree and every traffic sign can be fine on most occassions, but I happen to live on a spot which way too many publicly traversable layers; there's a subway station, an underground logicstics hub, five levels of underground parking space, an underground bus station, one level of underground shopping mall, an underground street, a partially street-accessible, partially underground shopping mall level which extends to neighboring buildings, three over-the-ground shopping mall levels and a pedestrian path on top of the underground street, a jogging path with planting around it on top of the shopping mall, running partially under residential buildings which reside on top of two HPAC floors which also host a private plaza on top of them. There are public pedestrian paths of importance at least on half a dozen layers, streets on almost equal amount, and often they run on top of each other. What is the preferred detail to map all this?

      I have chosen to map as much as helps pedestrian, car and public transit, but leave rest of the details out for now. Map in such an environment becomes quickly so stuffed that a typical map user can't understand anything on it without a navigator interface. Why a shopping mall appears to have lawns inside grocery stores? What all these criss-crossing pedestrian paths mean? (It's typically not obvious that they're on different levels, but they are needed to provide public transit accurate and efficient walking plans.) I would actually want to stuff a lot more information on the map and nobody is really preventing me from doing it, but rendering would simply turn illegible if I did so. Thankfully for 99.9% of environments this isn't a real problem.

    2. Re:So, it will be like Wikipedia for maps? by Daralantan · · Score: 1

      Then there is legion of "we must add every detail of everything, no matter how minor"

      This reminds me of stories a friend of mine used to tell me. He was one of the RC Patrol (I have no idea why) guys on Wikipedia 10ish years ago. He said they constantly had issues of articles being added for people who were basically nobody. It was almost always about Indian men in IT or computer science of some kind. Constant articles like: "Ambish Gupta, 32 years old, is an IT worker employed by Whatever Company since a date barely 1-2 years ago."

  2. Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have and albeit being eminently usable, it clearly (and not unexpectedly) lags behind other big players alternatives when it comes to map updates and consistency in general. That detail alone ruins it for end users not engaged with submitting corrections and updates to the maps themselves (I'd say that would be 99,9% of users).

    There's a reason Google and others want to charge for maps, and that's because having properly maintained maps is a valuable service. Navigation software can be frustrating with correct maps, imagine using it with maps that aren't current: all the value of modern GPS navigation is suddenly lost and you are back to reading street signs and paper maps.

    1. Re:Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by vtcodger · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "There's a reason Google and others want to charge for maps, and that's because having properly maintained maps is a valuable service."

      And one that involves significant costs if it isn't produced by volunteer labor. Realistically, for commercial products, either someone is going to be charged money for the map or the maps are going to come with ads, or both.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    2. Re:Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It depends. My regional public transit (maybe 1-1.5M inhabitants in the region) uses it as their map and especially pedestrian/bicycle routing data backend. For these regional purposes it's unbeatable (especially as the public transit authority is quite active at maintaining anything they get as a feedback from public transit route planner users).

      Then again, if I look 80 km to the countryside, to my parents place, I can see that maps lack lots of detail and are very rarely edited in comparison the the city. I couldn't rely on OSM there. So, it depends.

    3. Re:Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by rickb928 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Perhaps the government for a certain location or country taxes their people a small fee, say $1/yr to pay for the maintenance and upkeep of their data sets. "

      That's called a tax, and already pay that, perhaps more.

      Where I live, in the USA, municipalities maintain maps for a variety of reasons:

      Flood zones so they can bill me an additional 50% on homeowner insurance because I live in a 100-year flood zone, because they designed the drainage that way, intentionally, because they just decided back in 1980, and they expected me to pay for it some day, somehow, and of course so that my flood insurance will pay for the failed commercial insurance in actual, regular, dangerous hurricane country.

      Property maps, so they can apportion taxation to me based on their arbitrary rules, and apply the same rules as they choose to others.

      Zoning maps, so they can tell me if what I want to have on my property is permissible according to their standards, derived from professional planners and fellow citizens that believe their desires are sufficiently compelling to be made law.

      And others. And they share these maps as they choose, with little concern for my interests, and sometimes for a fee. IF they choose.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    4. Re:Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      You don't have to have flood insurance if you can pay for your house. That's a requirement from your mortgage owner, not the government. And owning a house in hurricane territory is risky.

    5. Re:Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by rbrander · · Score: 2

      "They"? If you don't live in a democracy, it's "they" and you should probably leave for a place that has it.

      If you do live in a democracy, it's "WE", and you should use your vote. All the problems you describe affect your entire neighbourhood. Get organized and all vote.

    6. Re:Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by jeff4747 · · Score: 2

      Flood zones so they....

      So....you didn't do any due diligence when buying the house? Or are you now whining about something you accepted when you purchased?

      Property maps, so they can apportion taxation to me based on their arbitrary rules

      Yes....so arbitrary that they come down to $/sq foot + a factor for number of bedrooms + a factor for features such as an attached garage vs carport.

      So incredibly arbitrary that they wrote them down and I can read them if I care to actually understand them!!

      Zoning maps, so they can tell me if what I want to have on my property

      So...you didn't do any due diligence when buying the house? Or are you now whining about something you accepted when you purchased?

      Also, I really want to open a hog rendering plant next to your house and then see what you think about zoning.

      And they share these maps as they choose, with little concern for my interests

      IF they choose.

      They're required to share them if you ask and pay the cost of copying it.

      Also, you are upset that they share the maps....except when you are upset they don't share the maps. Makes perfect sense.

    7. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Yup, it's pretty common to have a mortgage. And I don't live in hurricane country, just where drainage is a problem due to geology and development.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    8. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      You did read where my property was classified as being in a flood area AFTER I PURCHASED IT, right?

      The line of such clever people asking me why I bought in a flood plain, why I didn't look into this before buying, why I live in a flood zone, are so missing the truth. After 3 years property was included in new flood mapping done by FEMA. I'm in by 6" of elevation. Most of my neighborhood is included as well.

      No one recalls any past flooding. This is FEMA's assumption that we are at a 1% risk in any year of flooding, or, as it's usually described, within a 200-year flood zone We are in an AE zone, barely 3 lots from the edge of the zone. Further, AE means the government has determined that "predicted flood water elevations above mean sea level have been established". We live several hundred miles from ocean...
      Officially, FEMA states that AE zone risks are determined by 'detailed methods'.

      If we were actually flooded we would have to rebuild according to *local floodplain zoning ordinance*, and I don't know if local ordinances are dictated by or required to confirm to federal standards...

      My premium is a little over $500/year. I'm one of 250+/- additions to the flood zone in 2015, in Gilbert AZ alone.

      And it's my personal opinion that FEMA jiggered the data to include many lower risk homes to gain premiums from a larger population and replenish the funding.

      I'll pay possibly $50,000 in premiums over 100 years, but if I suffer a flood earlier, well, all I get out of that is the opportunity to rebuild with flood prevention measures as part of the tenant rebuild - probably raising the foundation and grade, possibly by 12" or more. That's a surprisingly expensive proposal.

      Oh, please remember, I didn't buy into this, this was done to me 3 years after I purchased the property. And there are no records of any flood in this neighborhood in 20 years, and before that it was farmland, no records since the town was Incorporated...

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    9. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      20 years isn't very long in terms of floods and earthquakes.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    10. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigation? by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      True, but no records from well before that.

      Being farmland it probably didn't flood. Now that it's developed and paved, drainage is the problem. Or to put it more succinctly, drainage design has placed my home in a manufactured flood zone... First world problems.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  3. Good for navigation by Kludge · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I use OSMand, which is an Android app that uses Open Street Map. It works pretty well for navigation.

    The best part is, unlike Google Maps, I can preload the entire maps onto my phone, like an actual GPS device, so I do not need a data connection to navigate.
    Also great is the Wikipedia feature, which automatically pre-downloads Wikipedia articles related to points of interest. On vacation I can walk/drive around, click on interesting things on the map, read the Wikipedia article, and appear amazingly educated, without a data connection. It started to drive my family nuts in Athens as I described the historical significance of everything.

    1. Re:Good for navigation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The data also works on Garmin GPS systems.

    2. Re:Good for navigation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd love to ditch Google spyware completely and use Osmand only. But it's still slow as molasses, memory hungry, uses modal(!) popups(!) to prompt for downloading maps, shows useless administrative borders that look like paths, keeps forgetting waymarks, and the search function is horrible (no search as I type, no fuzzy, no proximity/frecency sorting). When I use a nav app I need it to get a fix and show me a route within seconds -- Gmaps does that, Osmand doesn't. Gmaps also has public transport timetables, accommodation prices and venue reviews which Osmand lacks (OK, that's because most of these are ads and Google sells my data, I know, but it's still handy). Gmaps on the other hand has a clunky Fisher Price UI that shows no details at all, not even village names or major hiking trails. So I keep switching between Gmaps and Osmand and am happy with neither.

    3. Re:Good for navigation by Mordaximus · · Score: 2

      The best part is, unlike Google Maps, I can preload the entire maps onto my phone, like an actual GPS device, so I do not need a data connection to navigate.

      You mean exactly like Google Maps. This has been an option for some time, or at least you can select regions to download.

    4. Re:Good for navigation by GuB-42 · · Score: 1

      The regions you can select in Google Maps are limited in size, you can't select entire countries.
      Not good it your plan is to use it for a long road trip.

  4. Terrible argument by sjbe · · Score: 1

    For Gowda, it was the fact that Google Maps is a global, commercial product and did not capture local detail. Like the old banyan tree that was a major landmark in his hometown Hassan or public benches just outside the town where pedestrians could stop to catch a break or fire catchment areas in Bellandur lake in Bengaluru, India.

    I'm sure that matters to that person personally but that's a TERRIBLE argument in favor of open source mapping projects. If it proves important to enough people then Google could add that capability in a matter of seconds and then what is his complaint? There are excellent arguments why not having all your mapping data controlled by a few large companies is probably a good idea. They are similar to the arguments why having a decentralized internet not controlled by single entities is a good idea. There is money to be made with private control of mapping data but there is probably MORE money to be made if the data and core code is available as open source.

    The problem open source mapping projects are going to have is funding and resources (especially people) unless they can get one or more big companies with deep pockets to fund such projects. You need satellite map, an army of people to pore over and process them, a huge amount of hardware, a well coordinated team to oversee the whole thing and write the relevant code, and a shit ton of money to make it all happen. Not saying it's impossible but it's going to be very challenging and such a project is already years behind what Google, Apple, and others are already doing. You're talking about a project that rivals the linux kernel or other major software project in complexity but requires a lot more people for data processing and hardware to actually function.

    1. Re:Terrible argument by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem open source mapping projects are going to have is funding and resources (especially people) unless they can get one or more big companies with deep pockets to fund such projects. You need satellite map, an army of people to pore over and process them, a huge amount of hardware, a well coordinated team to oversee the whole thing and write the relevant code, and a shit ton of money to make it all happen. Not saying it's impossible but it's going to be very challenging and such a project is already years behind what Google, Apple, and others are already doing. You're talking about a project that rivals the linux kernel or other major software project in complexity but requires a lot more people for data processing and hardware to actually function.

      Well, you've just explained why Wikipedia "can't" work ... yet it does.

      Not saying that will be true of everything, but clearly it's possible.

      Not to mention that OSM has been around for quite awhile, and clearly does "work" fairly well.

    2. Re:Terrible argument by petermgreen · · Score: 3, Informative

      You need satellite map

      Fortunately they have found companies prepared to donate access to Aerial imagary (afaict actual sattelite imagary is usually too low resoloution to be much use), the two big ones seem to have been Yahoo and Microsoft.

      such a project is already years behind what Google, Apple, and others are already doing.

      Depends on the area.

      In the first world openstreetmap has as you say had to start from a position of trying to catch up. In some areas they have caught up and even overtaken the propietary mappers, in others they are still behind.

      OTOH my understanding is that there are places in the world where openstreetmap contributors were the first to produce a map of the streets in the area.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    3. Re: Terrible argument by xgerrit · · Score: 1

      Not saying it's impossible but it's going to be very challenging and such a project is already years behind what Google, Apple, and others are already doing.

      You do realize that Apple was years behind Google when they started their mapping project, and Apple used OpenStreetMaps as their base map to catch up.

  5. Open source resistance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I've tried OSM and I may have developed an OSM resistance. Their database is great but the search is totally unusable.

  6. Re:More is not better by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    "Fuck Google maps. There's really no need to have that much data available"

    Um, Google chooses what information show you, even depending on context.

    You think open-source mapping diminishes this? It will not, some nimrod will develop an app that shows you way more than is actually useful. You will get nauseous.

    However, open-source mapping encourages competition. Right now your choice of map apps is mostly driven by platform - Apple v Android v Web. I suspect Apple has the most to lose here, so watch them. Otherwise, encourage open-source and deal with global mapping becoming Wikipedia, with revenge edits and politicization of everything, because, you know, winning.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  7. Re:Happy October Day Every Body by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Now? You're still in 1993?

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  8. Would love for Google to charge $$ by DogDude · · Score: 1

    I would love for Google to charge $$ for Google Maps. Right now, they're completely unreliable, with API calls failing frequently. It's completely unreliable. We would love to have some mapping service that we could pay, so that we could have some sort of guaranteed level of service.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  9. Maps have always been inherently public property by rbrander · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't mean that a privately-made map is inherently public, of course, just that almost the only people who found it worthwhile to map were governments. Better put would be "inherently of low value, but to large numbers of people so that cheap access for everybody was the only way to pay for it".

    A map has huge value when you need to find someplace new, but the huge majority of travel is to already-known locations. Cab drivers are an exception, but consider London, where "The Knowledge" required for cab drivers, is a memorized map learned on the job.

    So there are very few indeed private companies mapping - the paper maps of your town for decades were just purchased data from the city government, sold for a tiny fraction of what it cost the city to make, because the city had to map every pipe and street anyway to maintain them. Indeed, to know where the heck the property lots were. (Land titles are generally a higher level of government, but where I worked, the Province had an agreement with the City to let the City map all lots inside its borders and provide that to Provincial Land Titles).

    Google changed that with their cool car-with-8-cameras mapping, but generally also buys the City data because it's sold so cheaply - and is maintained every year, whereas you can see on the Google maps that the photos are only refreshed after multiple years.

    For non-commercial use, City data is mostly free these days - "open data" initiatives became common years ago and they post up files in ESRI's "shape file" format (ESRI is the Microsoft of GIS, their formats are like MS office formats). There are also free standards like "KML" files.

    Bottom line, there is no reason to let any private companies take over this space. The government mapping efforts have not ceased; the "value added" from information about business and services is *easily* exceeded by the OSM editing described here: people who live there will always have an advantage at highlighting local interests. (Also, the value of a location depends on who likes it, not "who pays google" to flag it.) The streetview is one of those features that's more cool than actually useful.

    OSM is available for your phone, by the way, and works almost identically to google: uses your GPS to just show the map around you. Give it a try!

  10. I like FOSS, but... by DarkRookie2 · · Score: 1

    I yet to find something on F-Driod that is as good as Maps.
    I don't know if this an app thing or a OSM, but the apps that use it cannot find my address.

    --
    http://progressquest.com/spoltog.php?name=Son+Of+Son+Of+DarkRookie
  11. Autonomous cars? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    The problem is that autonomous cars need maps with this level of detail in the first place. A truly autonomous car should be able to integrate data from a basic map (i.e. line drawing of how streets connect converted to a node diagram in a database), GPS, street markings, and the outside environment in order to get from points A to B. After all, non-autonomous drivers do this with a set of less-than-perfect cameras and microphones, not even with IR cameras or microwave radar.

  12. Have anyone actually used it for cars? by Ostracus · · Score: 1

    Maps are becoming more important with the rise of autonomous vehicles. That's why Nokia was investigating the use of cellphones as means to keeping maps current, and accurate. One would also think with all the drones flying around the citizens mapping movement would be in high gear.

    --
    Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
  13. Re:Maps have always been inherently public propert by rijrunner · · Score: 2

    I recall back in 1988, I was working for the US Census Bureau doing something they called a "Pre-Census Survey". They had maps with all their blocks configured. These were compiled from a large number of sources. City maps, State Dept of Highway maps, Planning maps, etc, etc. Was about 85% accurate. I was in rural WV and some of the things they listed as roads had not been roads for 100 years. Other areas were where the Dept of Highways had originally planned to re-route roads to, but never actually did it. We spent a lot of time correcting that.

    A couple years later, I am in Colorado at CU working with GPS and GIS data. I recalled that the Census Bureau had done a lot of mapping and maybe it was online. And.. yes. It was. Has been online now for over 20 years.

    https://www.census.gov/geo/map...

    That is, as near as I can determine it's free as I just downloaded my county map with no issues. Pulling it apart, I see the edge info as well as the .shp shapefile.

    This usually is the starting point for mapping efforts in the US as near as I can tell. Start with the TIGER data, then add or correct as needed.

  14. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigation by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Farmland floods, too.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  15. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigatio by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Not here. High plain, good drainage, before paving it was fine. Lower elevations around here, yes.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  16. Re: Have anyone actually used it for navigati by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Annoying.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  17. Re:Flood insurance funds rebuilding for rich peopl by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    I rented an apartment in an old water-powered mill building, where even the historic flood I lived through did not cause any damage. Even the telephone wiring was above even the worst scenario flood level. I know, I helped remove load coils so DSL would work, and then clean up much old terrible Nynex craft so ISDN would work.

    Yeah. After 150+ years of operation, with no water in the working spaces, and another 30 years as an apartment complex, still it was never flooded. But I don't dare look at the flood mapping, because it's right there, next to the river, with the channel still below it, and FEMA undoubtedly used 'detailed methods' to determine the risk. That phrase is key. Remember it.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.