The Cass County commissioners said "not so fast" (corrected per comment; originally said "no," ABS, 8/25/08) to the Indiana Geological Survey in response to a request for access to its parcel data. The article confuses me since at one point it says it'll cost $7000/year for the county to pay for the Web software: "for setting up and maintaining the Web-based technology." A grant would cover two years.
At another point the article says the state wants a copy. "It is always the citizens of your county who own that information," [State GIO Jim] Sparks said. "We're asking for a copy of it." The former implies (to me) the county serving up its own data (that would have a cost). The latter implies (to me) the state would take a copy (which would have a limited, if small, cost).
From what I read at the
IndianaMap site actual copies of the vector data are hosted at the The Indiana Geological Survey, so it is a copy. The "Web-based technology" is elsewhere described as "data transfer technology."
The unfortunate part of this story (and many parallel ones) is that it's still tough to convince the data providers of the benefit of sharing.
-
Pharos-Tribune via TMCNet
Comments
January 9
I think that this is an excellent [...]
Bern Grush about Patent Watch: Tracking People Via Cell without Compromising Privacy
January 9
Location privacy re GPS tracking will be [...]
Daniel Cuende about Patent Watch: Tracking People Via Cell without Compromising Privacy
January 9
OK. Now I see and understand.
Well, [...]
Jeremy Wood about Patent Watch: Tracking People Via Cell without Compromising Privacy
January 9
Thanks for asking.
Figuring out how [...]
Daniel Cuende about Patent Watch: Tracking People Via Cell without Compromising Privacy
January 9
Sorry, i dont catch it.
I look at the [...]
Jeremy Wood about Patent Watch: Tracking People Via Cell without Compromising Privacy
January 9
Daniel,
Yes, GPS-like technologies [...]
elbrens about Update: Google Earth Enterprise Hits the Road
January 9
thxxxxxxx