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Siu-Ming Tam Australian Bureau of Statistics Feb 2010 Emerging trends and ABS initiatives on data communication
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Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra
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Where we are located in the world
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Emerging trends – personal observations NSOs are continually being asked to do more with less –New funding model required More NSOs are going “paper-less” and “price-less” Emerging Web and other technologies to improve communication –Social media –Data visualisation tools
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Emerging trends Micro data files become important statistical output Losing grip on who the on-line customers/clients are –New methods of harnessing intelligence –Web Analytics Investing in Statistical literacy –Influencing curriculum development –Education resources World wide growing trend for open Govt and open access to PSI
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Liberating ABS statistics for sharing, remixing and re-use - legally
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Access to information: a key to open government “Public access to government held information allows individuals to better understand the role of government and decisions being made on their behalf”
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Growing movement for open Govt and access
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Open access Means Free Based on open standards Freely reusable Open licensing grants permission to access, re-use and redistribute a work with few or no restrictions change from “All rights reserved” to “Some rights reserved”
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What is Creative Commons? Offers “flexible copyright management tools for creative work” Allows creators to choose the rights they pass on with their work http://www.creativecommons.org.au http://www.creativecommons.org.au Becoming the default standard
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Creative Commons Four licence elements : 1.Attribution - attribute the author 2.Non-commercial - no commercial use 3.No Derivative Works – no changes allowed 4.Share alike – changes allowed, but only if you put the new work under the same licence Elements combine to make up 6 licenses
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Six types of CC licenses
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ABS adopted Creative Commons BY licence in Dec 2008 for on line stats Extended to customised tables User can: freely use, re-use, change and distribute, even commercially no limit to quantity of data Creative Commons widens the use of ABS statistics ABS only asks for acknowledgement as source of the data
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Free access accelerates use The ABS website averages 1.5 million page views per week Took 5.5 years to double from 30 million page views to 60 million before 2005; and only 2 years to double after 2005
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Open licensing encourages innovation Some examples –LobbyClue - relationships between govt organisations and businesses http://team7.govhack.net.tmp.anchor. net.au/ http://team7.govhack.net.tmp.anchor. net.au/ –Know where you live – how safe are your neighbourhoods http://www.hackdays.com/2009govhack/ app01/postcodes/view/2000
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ABS has come a long way From charged access to free access From “all rights reserved” to “some rights reserved” – ABS only requires “attribution” for the use of our statistics Vital step in supporting democracy and in liberating ABS data for better decision making
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ABS has come a long way… “The ABS move is … a very significant one for Australia …. in the international movement to provide public access to publicly funded resources.” - CC Australia – Dec 2008 Also, community reaction was very positive. PS Geoscience Australia has also adopted CC 2.5 Attribution Australia licence in December 2009.
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