WRITTEN ON March 13th, 2008 BY Harry Metcalfe AND STORED IN Transformational Government, What do we want?

Crossposted from the TellThemWhatYouThink blog:

I had the pleasure of speaking to the assembled great and good at the Tower08 Transformational Government conference on Monday this week. I hope that video will be available at some point, and I’ll link to it if it is.

I talked, reasonably predictably, about the resusability of public data, and about why it’s important to embrace the idea that data should be made available in ways that allow people to use it, reuse it, combine it in new and clever ways and produce new, useful tools.

I also pointed out that there is an incredible amount of value to be generated from this data if it can be published in ways that allow more collaboration, and that it’ll be much cheaper in the long run if Government doesn’t try to solve all the problems. I drew a comparison between DirectGov’s fairly awful search facilities and the results produced by DirectionlessGov, which drew both heckles and laughs — an odd response. I am rather surprised to find that there actually are people out there who think that DirectGov’s search is better than Google’s. It’s a strange world we live in!

Being fairly new to the scene, I was most struck by the huge differences in people’s interpretations of what transformational government should be about. In fairness, this shouldn’t have been that surprising: everyone is interpreting it according to their vested interests, which is predictable enough.

At one end, there are people saying that everyone should own their own data, that public data is public property and should be disseminated in ways that make it as useful as possible, that massive data sharing and joined-up delivery of public services through one site is a dangerous folly.

At the other, you have people saying that we need to make identity card systems to share everyone’s data throughout government, that we should make public services usable online by having ultra-secure identification methods, that we need one place to find everything anyone might want from government, and that web 2.0, sharing and mass collaboration are merely the whimsical trends du jour.

I think it’s probably easy to tell where I stand! I’m happy to say that there is a cadre of people in government who also tend towards the former view, and that it is larger than one might think. These ideas are gaining some traction, at least, and that is quite something.

One Response to “Tower08: TellThemWhatYouThink’s perspective”

 
Paul wrote on March 13th, 2008 7:29 pm :

Govt website searches. Don’t make me laugh. They are almost unuseable. I’ve typed in exact titles of documents/policies/programmes/funding streams. I’ve even tried entering the serial number of various docs to find their online versions and it’s almost always unsuccesful. The DfES(wotever)site is also generally woeful considering the amount of anouncement and initiatives that pour forth from them (or maybe they’re not supposed to exist beyond a headline).

WIBBI they did it better.