[Sigiii-l] [Fwd: [ciresearchers] FW: World Summit on free Information Infrastructures]

Michel J. Menou Michel.Menou at wanadoo.fr
Sat Oct 8 15:38:18 EDT 2005



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*From:* owner-egip at jrc.it [mailto:owner-egip at jrc.it] *On Behalf Of 
*Christopher Corbin
*Sent:* Friday, October 07, 2005 6:16 PM
*To:* EGIP
*Subject:* World Summit on free Information Infrastructures
*Importance:* High

Recent events in London provided if one needed such a reminder that 
Civil Society has as an important role as the public and private sectors 
within the Information Society and as such should not be ignored when 
considering information age infrastructures.

Geographic Information (GI) and the use of spatial technologies was very 
much in evidence at the World Summit on /Free Information 
Infrastructures/ (http://www.okfn.org/wsfii/ ) that was held in London 
on Saturday and Sunday 1st and 2nd October 2005. The event was the high 
point of a weeklong series of hands on workshops and demonstrations, 
which could be summarised as capacity building events but at the grass 
roots level of the community. A brief synopsis of the event can be 
perused at http://www.mappinghacks.com/ dated 4th October 2005 provided 
by Jo Walsh.

The event was attended by well over 250 people of all ages and 
nationalities that had an interest in harnessing the potential of the 
Information Society to support /communities/ whether they are within the 
urban or rural environment. Examples presented during the summit 
included communities within urban areas such as Berlin, Budapest, 
London, Montreal, New York, Vienna and rural areas in Denmark (the 
Djursland broadband project), Indonesia, India, Zambia. Many of the 
individuals and groups attending were actively working voluntarily in 
their spare time on community-based projects such as free wireless 
networking, free of copyright mapping, to name but two.

As the /Community/ was the central theme for the summit the venue chosen 
was very appropriate as it has been a focus for the local Limehouse 
community for well over a century! For background interest the history 
of the Limehouse Town Hall can be found at 
http://www.limehousetownhall.org.uk/drupal/

Poverty maps of the area created by Charles Booth well over 105 years 
ago can be viewed the London School of Economics & Political Science web 
site at the following URL:
http://booth.lse.ac.uk/cgi-bin/do.pl?sub=view_booth_and_barth&m.l=0&m.d.l=0&m.p.x=12156&m.p.y=6666&m.p.w=500&m.p.h=309&m.p.l=1&m.p.p.l=2&m.t.w=128&m.t.h=80&b.p.x=21377&b.p.y=8472&b.p.w=500&b.p.h=309&b.p.l=2&m.v.x=441&m.v.y=165 
<http://booth.lse.ac.uk/cgi-bin/do.pl?sub=view_booth_and_barth&m.l=0&m.d.l=0&m.p.x=12156&m.p.y=6666&m.p.w=500&m.p.h=309&m.p.l=1&m.p.p.l=2&m.t.w=128&m.t.h=80&b.p.x=21377&b.p.y=8472&b.p.w=500&b.p.h=309&b.p.l=2&m.v.x=441&m.v.y=165> 
<http://booth.lse.ac.uk/cgi-bin/do.pl?sub=view_booth_and_barth&amp;m.l=0&amp;m.d.l=0&amp;m.p.x=12156&amp;m.p.y=6666&amp;m.p.w=500&amp;m.p.h=309&amp;m.p.l=1&amp;m.p.p.l=2&amp;m.t.w=128&amp;m.t.h=80&amp;b.p.x=21377&amp;b.p.y=8472&amp;b.p.w=500&amp;b.p.h=309&> 


Today’s demographic profile and maps for the same area today can be 
browsed at the Neighbourhood Statistics web site URL:
http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/NeighbourhoodProfileSearch.do?profileSearch=E14+7HA 


There was plenty of innovation and creativity demonstrated during the 
two-day event. The innovation in part has probably been spurred on in 
reaction to Civil Society becoming disenfranchised by today’s 
infrastructures, data and information pricing, copyright protection 
frameworks to name but a few that have been put in place by both 
Government and Private sector organisations. Interestingly the community 
projects were providing the citizens with the opportunity to regain 
their personal intellectual property rights (your current location, your 
address for example) and as such avoid having to buy back what many 
would consider as rightly belonging to them!

The implications of charging for political boundaries impeded the use of 
geographic information at the Community level. As such the voluntary 
produced information web sites that improved the usability and 
assimilation of the raw data produced and published by Parliaments for 
example were finding it expensive to include GI analysis and data search 
and location functionality within such web sites as /They Work for You/ 
http://theyworkforyou.com/ the Public Whip http://publicwhip.org.uk/ 
Write to Them http://www.writetothem.com/ Pledge Bank 
http://www.pledgebank.com/

The Open Geodata Manifesto received numerous plugs during the event and 
this can be perused at http://okfn.org/geo/manifesto.php you may well 
feel inclined to sign up to the manifesto after considering the 
manifesto and join the 400 plus that have already done so from across 
the world.

You maybe interested to visit a few of the mapping projects that were 
demonstrated during the event which used free open source mapping 
software and data that have been produced by individuals and communities 
and made freely available to all albeit under Creative Commons Licence. 
On some of these web sites you can actively add data to increase the 
quantity of information and the extent of the geographic area contained 
within the system. These basic mapping data sets when combined with 
other freely available public sector data related to the localities such 
as schools, hospitals, crime, environment (air pollution, noise 
pollution) lead to the provision of good low cost community based 
geographic information systems. The next step envisaged is to provide a 
free open sourced infrastructure that links all these free 
community-mapping projects but in the hands of Civil Society for the 
Society which may well come into being in the future.

Open Street Map http://www.openstreetmap.org/
Mumbai Free Map http://freemap.in/
Mapbender http://www.mapbender.org/
The GeoServer Project http://geoserver.sourceforge.net/html/index.php

The holistic approach of the event dealt with the issue that although 
much can be achieved using voluntary contributions there was still a 
need for financial support to enable community projects to reach a 
sustainable position especially once the Community became dependent upon 
them. Funding techniques such as Open Capital http://opencapital.net/ 
were presented and debated which interestingly are beginning to be used 
within Local Government. (Reference the EGIP intervention subject 
Geographic Information Markets 1 dated Tuesday 4 October 2005 0748 hours 
regarding in Annexe G National Land Information Service, where on page 
12 there is mentions of the creation of a Community Interest Company 
(CIC) a new publicly owned company named C-NLIS to manage the affairs of 
NLIS.)

Overall the event demonstrated how Capacity building occurs at all 
levels within society and that data sharing and trust were important 
attributes within community infrastructure projects, just as they are in 
all of the sectors that use GI infrastructures.

The event provided many examples on the need for an inclusive 
Information Society where all can contribute and partake freely and 
equally and as such was useful to any one that was intending to attend 
or to contribute to the United Nations World Summit on the Information 
Society that will take place in Tunis 16th to 18th November 2005. 
http://www.itu.int/wsis/

regards

Chris (Corbin)

Brighton
Sussex
England

Telephone: +44 (0) 1273 553110
email: corbinceh at ntlworld.com



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