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Ordnance Survey maps to go free online (guardian.co.uk)
15 points by stakent on Nov 18, 2009 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments


This is a pretty big deal, if it goes through. It means free-even-for-commercial-use mapping data for the whole of the UK, rather than having to pay royalties to the Ordnance Survey or guess what Google considers acceptable use of their API.

There's another gem nestled in the article: "It is thought transport providers, such as train, tube and bus companies, will lose the right to demand a hefty fee from companies such as independent travel websites and firms devising programs for mobile phones, who want to publish such information."

The wording is a bit unclear, but it seems to suggest the UK Government will pressure transport companies to lower their license fees for data about public transport services. That would be a bonanza for any number of exciting startups.

(For example, there's a journey planner website for trains across the country, but it doesn't know about other forms of transport. In London there's a journey planner for all modes of transport, but it doesn't go outside London. Bus routes, for example, are mostly available only as unscrapeable PDFs. It would be incredibly convenient to have a single service that could just get you from A to B by whatever means.)


There are some integrated travel sites for the UK - for example http://www.traveline.info/index.htm


OpenStreetMap was started to solve this problem: the lack of free (as in speech) map data for the UK.

We have excellent data in most of Europe and it's got an open license. Check it out: http://openstreetmap.org/


"The government is to explore ways of making all Ordnance Survey maps freely available online from April,'

Note not make the data available - but start a consultation process to look at possible ways in which the issue might be addressed, in the fullness of time, once all the facts have been considered .....


I'd be much happier if the UK government made it clear in law that you can't copyright facts. I know this isn't trivial but travel times, tv listings government gathers statistics are all facts (within a broad definition of fact) and should be placed in the public domain for the good of the public.


Unlikely since they introduced the "Copyright and Rights in Databases Regulations 1997 " making databases copyrightable.

On the other hand they have done a lot to make data freely available on USB keys and cdroms in every pub car park and train seat.




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