- Anthill Magazine - http://anthillonline.com -
Victorian government adopts Creative Commons as its default information licensing system
Posted By Scott Winning On 24 February, 2010 @ 9:00 am In Blogs,Marketing & Media,narrow,News Desk,Tech & Innovation | No Comments
In an Australian government first, the Victorian parliament has adopted Creative Commons (CC) licensing [1] as its default licensing system for access to public sector information [2] (PSI).
Not all information will be covered by CC licensing and the government has been advised by the Economic Development and Infrastructure Committee [3] to implement a hybrid scheme where restricted data will be covered by other licenses. However, based upon evidence by provided by the GILF [4] project, the Committee has proposed that around 85 percent of material could be appropriate for CC licensing.
Creative Commons Australia [5] believes the most salient recommendations were:
In a further move to showcase and endorse the Government’s dedication to information access and innovation, the Minister for Information and Communications Technology John Lenders has invited Victorian Innovators to compete for $100,000 and develop applications that make use of the new licensing system.
The online competition, entitled ‘App My State [6]‘, is designed to encourage innovators to create applications that will benefit residents, visitors, businesses and government. Website, social networking and smart phone applications will be judged on “their innovation, design and development, usefulness, accessibility and general excellence.”
Article printed from Anthill Magazine: http://anthillonline.com
URL to article: http://anthillonline.com/victorian-government-adopts-creative-commons-as-its-default-information-licensing-system/
URLs in this post:
[1] adopted Creative Commons (CC) licensing: http://www.creativecommons.org.au/node/279
[2] access to public sector information: http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/edic/inquiries/access_to_PSI/final_report.html
[3] Economic Development and Infrastructure Committee: http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/edic/
[4] GILF: http://www.gilf.gov.au/
[5] Creative Commons Australia: http://www.creativecommons.org.au/
[6] App My State: http://www.premier.vic.gov.au/premier/app-my-state.html
Click here to print.
Copyright © 2009 Anthill Magazine. All rights reserved.