1 / 34

GINIE Data Policy Workshop

INSPIRE Data Policy and Legal Issues Working Group Orientation Report Stefan Carlyle and Mike Clarke. GINIE Data Policy Workshop. My presentation. Role of DP&LI Working Group Membership Our work to date Briefing paper Orientation paper Position paper Questions. First a thought.

ivan
Télécharger la présentation

GINIE Data Policy Workshop

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INSPIRE Data Policy and Legal IssuesWorking Group Orientation ReportStefan Carlyle and Mike Clarke GINIE Data Policy Workshop

  2. My presentation... • Role of DP&LI Working Group • Membership • Our work to date • Briefing paper • Orientation paper • Position paper • Questions

  3. First a thought... “6 months in the laboratory can save you 6 hours in a library!”

  4. DPLI Working Group Mandate • to consider all relevant issues related to legal aspects and data policy • to identify what matters should be addressed in the legislation • to develop proposals for a Framework Directive or Regulations?

  5. DPLI Working Group Members:

  6. Shadow Members:

  7. And...

  8. DPLI Working Group Orientation Paper Strengths: • Broad Research Base • Focused Approach • Awareness of Issues • Good Mix of Skills • Strong Advisory Support • Government (IGGI/DTLR) Assistance

  9. DPLI Working Group Orientation Paper Weaknesses • Compressed time table • Breadth & depth of subject • Shortage of pre-information • Lack of clarity in brief • Lack of funding • High workload • Language difficulties

  10. Briefing ourselves... • Vision • Data policy issues • GI initiatives • Environmental initiatives • Legal issues • EU members states

  11. The Vision...

  12. Latest developments... • DG Information Society • Aarhus Convention • New Directive on access to environmental information • UK work on trading and sharing information

  13. DG Information Society... • Green paper on “Public sector information: A key resource for Europe” June 1999 • e-Europe 2002: Creating a EU Framework for the exploitation of Public Sector Information (October 2001) • DG Information Society Working Document January 2002

  14. The Aarhus Convention • Access to Information • Public Participation • Access to Justice • to be enshrined in 2002 in a new Environmental Information regulations

  15. A new Directive on Public Access to Environmental Information • to make good the shortcomings which became apparent in implementing the 1990 Directive • to align Community legislation on the Aarhus Convention in order that the Community may ratify the latter • to adapt to developments in information technology

  16. That are the main Data Policy Issues? • Public Sector Information and Open Access • Cost models, Charging & Licensing • Data Quality & Standards • Delivery & User Expectations • Awareness & Availability - metadata

  17. Environmental Information is: “Information in any form on the state of the environment, on factors, measures or activities affecting or likely to affect the environment or designed to protect it, on cost-benefit and economic analyses used within the framework of such measures or activities and also information on the state of human health and safety, conditions of human life, cultural sites and built structures in as much as they are, or may be, affected by any of those matters”. Does not include reference data on location.

  18. Who Are the Customers ? Governments & Administrations • EU • National • Local • Academics & Researchers • Universities • Public & Private Institutes • Commercial & Professional End Users • Value-added Resellers • Application Developers • Citizens

  19. Customer for Public Sector Information

  20. Policy Recommendations • Harmonised data management • Development of licensing framework • Audit of data, data providers & users • Free flow of data between Member States • Ready availability of data to the public • Stimulation of commercial demand • Dialogue with DG Information Society

  21. What are the Legal Issues? • Intellectual Property Rights • Data Protection & Privacy • Freedom of Information • Human Rights • Competition • Liability & Fitness for Purpose • Definitions

  22. Legal Recommendations • Freedom of Information • Open access to core public sector information should be facilitated through legislation, with licensing and charging policies aimed at maximising access at all levels

  23. Legal Recommendations • A regulatory framework for licensing IPR • charging • liability • accuracy • updates • third part use • etc

  24. Other Legal Recommendations • Protection of personal privacy(options) • Transparent rules on competition and fair trading • Liability (options) • Human Rights • Adoption of common definitions

  25. Six Regulatory Principles? 1Discovery metadata will be made available on the Internet 2 Harmonised data specifications will be adopted 3 Data quality will ensure fitness for purpose 4 Open access to and free flow of data will be provided 5 Harmonised licensing policies will be introduced 6 Commercial exploitation of data will be facilitated

  26. Risks & Obstacles Insufficient clarity of purpose • Lack of direction • Shortage of essential information • Inconsistency of definitions • Different aims & objectives • Conflicts of interest • Overlapping projects • Pressure on time • Inadequate funding

  27. DP&LI Position paper • Define the scope, definitions, etc of INSPIRE • To set out the legal framework for INSPIRE implementation • A policy framework for INSPIRE implementation • Aim for transparency, clarity and simplicity

  28. Individual Country Statements National Background • NMAs & key GI players • main providers of information • academic involvement • Data Policy • PSI access regime • charging arrangements • environmental data rules • Legal Framework • IPR background • FoI • Privacy & data protection • Priorities

  29. Questions GI Data Policy Workshop? • Do the policy recommendations cover your interests adequately? • Are the legal hurdles addressed?

  30. Key Questions? • Should there be a Directive or a Regulation? • Is the link between INSPIRE & Aarhus/new EI Regulations clear? • Should the INSPIRE address commercial exploitation of public sector information as well as DG Info Society? • Does environmental information include maps? • What are the data policy consequences of public/private partnerships? (ISF issue)

  31. Key Questions? • Do Member State reports cover all INSPIRE issues? • Which are the best practicable options for: • Data Protection • Liability • Are the concepts of “open access” and “free flow” sufficiently clear? • Should INSPIRE regulate charging policies?

  32. Moving Forward... • Be realistic rather than too ambitious • Seek advice of partners • Solve the pricing debate • Complementary to the DG Inf Soc • Agree a basic common position and build on it • Assess the costs and benefits

  33. GI-nius... ...6 months of INSPIRE could save 6 years of inefficiency Thank you for listening

More Related